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Today's the day that Armenians celebrate

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  • Today's the day that Armenians celebrate

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Wisconsin)
    June 27, 2004 Sunday ZONED EDITION

    Today's the day that Armenians celebrate;
    Food and community are focus of annual picnic

    by SHEILA B. LALWANI [email protected]


    Members of the area's Armenian community will gather today at Johnson
    Park in Caledonia to celebrate the largest and biggest event for the
    ethnic group.

    Through the annual Armenian Picnic -- admission is free -- members of
    the community hope to raise money for their church, St. Hagop
    Apostolic Church in Racine. Members hope to raise $10,000, about a
    quarter of the church's budget.

    The daylong event will feature ethnic dishes from Armenia including
    marinated shish kebab and chicken dinners, stuffed grape leaves,
    cheese puffs and butter cookies.

    Dinners are priced between $6 and $8. Vegetarian options are
    available.

    For the last several weeks, members of the church have been buying
    ingredients and baking together to prepare for the festival.

    "All the members of the church are all working together to make a
    success of this picnic," volunteer Julie Dergarabedian said. "We
    start baking in early May and go to June to prepare all the foods.
    It's all prepared ahead of time."

    Perhaps the dish that takes the most time is sarma, or stuffed grape
    leaves. Members of the church spent much of Friday rolling grape
    leaves that they picked shortly after Memorial Day. Even though grape
    leaves are getting harder and harder to find locally, members
    collected enough.

    Throughout Friday, women sat in the church stuffing the length of the
    grape leaves with a mixture made up of 40 pounds of rice and herbs.
    They then cooked the dish. The appetizer is eaten cold.

    They expect to sell as much as $5,000 worth of the appetizer, which
    costs 50 cents apiece.

    "It's wonderful," said Sara Micaelian, who helped lead the group.
    "It's back-breaking work, but everyone is chattering away."

    The festival is a day to celebrate their heritage and ethnic
    identity, said Zohrab Khaligian, who has been helping plan the event.

    "When two Armenians come together, they will start their own
    Armenia," he said. "That's what we have done."

    The focal point of the picnic will be a blessing, in which members of
    the community gather to pray. Armenia, which is in central Asia, has
    been influenced by neighbors from the Middle East and Europe. With a
    small community in the United States, Khaligian said, maintaining
    their identity and passing it on to their children has become all the
    more essential.

    "The church is not just a church," Khaligian said. "It's also our
    community center. It's the source to maintain our religion and
    language. Being politically active and socially aware is also
    necessary. The church provides spiritual guidance. It also provides
    us with a meeting place."

    The church also offers Sunday school and language classes.

    "It's important for young people to see their culture and heritage,"
    Dergarabedian said. "The blessing we do at the church ground and the
    incense and the beautiful songs that are sung -- it's like a blessing
    of the universe. We are blessing the world and thanking God for his
    blessing."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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