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Armenian holocaust meets brain disease

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  • Armenian holocaust meets brain disease

    Armenian holocaust meets brain disease

    Robert Cushman
    National Post

    March 26, 2004

    ROGUES OF URFA

    Artword Theatre, Toronto

    Araxi Arslanian's grandfather survived the Turkish massacre of the
    Armenians during the First World War. She herself has survived
    Arterio-Venous Malformation, a brain disorder that kills most of the
    people it afflicts. Her play Rogues of Urfa, which she performs
    herself, is a solo piece that tells these two stories in alternating
    slabs, narrated by protagonists whose kinship is revealed only at the
    end.

    One doesn't want to make light of so much real suffering, but the
    mixture doesn't take. The monologue form is always perilous, and here
    it has the effect of reducing an individual medical case-history and
    the virtual elimination of an entire people to the level of a couple
    of hard-luck stories. Plays about illness are always a tough
    proposition because the pain, in most cases, is nobody's fault; ergo,
    there is no conflict. If such a subject is to have any dramatic life,
    it has to be approached from other points of view besides that of the
    sufferer; otherwise, the play becomes a mere complaint.

    The Armenian holocaust obviously presents different opportunities and
    different problems. The event may be said to have set the tone for the
    20thcentury; Hitler famously said the world's amnesia about the
    Armenians made him feel safe about eliminating the Jews. The details
    are horribly familiar: the families burned alive in their own homes,
    the mass graves dug by the victims, the death marches, the war
    obscuring the whole operation. (At that, there seems to have been more
    international protest over this genocide than over the later one --
    not that it did any good.) Only the gas chambers are missing, but
    doubtless the Turks would have got around to those if they'd had the
    technology and if they'd had numbers as great to dispose of. It's a
    story that still needs telling, and it provides some duly harrowing
    moments here. But it is diminished -- not only in scale but in
    emotional impact -- in being presented so much as the story of one
    man. Arslanian's forbearer comes from the town of Urfa, identified as
    the birthplace of Abraham (and so presumably identical with the
    Bible's Ur of the Chaldees).

    "I am a young man of the city," he says, "its secret prince." Many
    times he repeats this rubric, whose first part may be unexceptionable,
    but whose second is never supported: His story supplants that of his
    granddaughter every time. It functions, in fact, as a form of aural
    ID -- one that starts out mildly irritating and ends up screamingly
    intolerable by the end. He and two friends escape from one of the
    forced marches and take refuge with the French army; returning home
    after the war they find prejudice as rampant as before -- another
    example of history, so to speak, anticipating itself. The trio are
    presumably the title's "rogues of Urfa" but there is nothing very
    colourful about themto justify the appellation -- and it also seems to
    devalue the intercut story of Arslanian herself, which is surely meant
    to be equally important.

    That it is literally her story is only made explicit at the very end,
    when her father addresses her by the author's own first name; but it
    has been plain enough all the way through. She begins by telling us
    how, as a schoolgirl in Canada, she tried to present a puppet play on
    the Armenian experience, and how her classmates laughed at her;
    initially one assumes that this was racial prejudice, but it turns out
    that she was exhibiting the first symptoms of AVM. Admitted, full of
    hope, to the National Theatre School, she is forced to leave -- by
    what seems, from her account, to have been a monstrously unsympathetic
    administration -- when she started having seizures. Then came a spell
    at university and an eventual breakthrough into the professional
    theatre, where she went through hell at the hands of colleagues who
    referred to her as "Seizure Sally." This seems to refer to her
    appearance in a Toronto production of Our Country's Good for which,
    nonetheless, she won a Dora -- an event she has recalled in interviews
    with, it must be admitted, justifiable satisfaction.

    One sympathizes, sometimes painfully, with her constant feelings of
    being excluded, but still feels that one is only hearing half the
    story; however appallingly people may have behaved to her, the laws of
    the theatre dictatethat they should be condemned out of their own
    mouths rather than hers. George Orwell said that an autobiography
    should only be believed when it shows its subject in a bad light, and
    the same applies even more to a play-length soliloquy. Everything
    Arslanian tells us may be factually true, but it doesn't make good
    drama.

    In pursuing her drive toward self-vindication (or, if jargon's your
    dish, self-empowerment) Arslanian may actually be short-changing
    herself, since she seems competent as a writer and skilled as a
    performer. A big lady, she throws herself enthusiastically into the
    angular bits of mime-to-music that her director, Rebecca Brown, has
    either devised or permitted to mark the transitions between her two
    principal personae. None of her characters is much characterized, but
    she shifts very confidently between voices.

    The conclusion, that survival runs in the family, comes across both
    hurried and sentimental; one can feel happy at the escapes of both
    generations without regarding them as more than a fortunate
    coincidence. Recurring references to "sand" and "white light" are not
    enough to unify the play's two halves. As a person Arslanian is fully
    entitled to her convictions on this score -- she has probably more
    than earned them -- but as a dramatist she needs to persuade rather
    than affirm.

    The Artword Theatre hosts this production, but did not originate it;
    all the same, despite the horrors that it relates, it's very much in
    the house's familiar folksy feel-good mould.

    Until April 4. Box office: 416-504-7529
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