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Caledonia: Armenians Celebrate Culture, Tradition

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  • Caledonia: Armenians Celebrate Culture, Tradition

    ARMENIANS CELEBRATE CULTURE, TRADITION
    By Janine Anderson

    Journal Times Online, WI
    June 25 2006

    CALEDONIA - Since 1938, Racine's Armenian community has gathered
    together for the St. Hagop Armenian Apostolic Church's annual picnic
    to celebrate the culture they have in common.

    Early Sunday morning, church members came to Johnson Park to dig a
    pit and build a fire, over which they cooked beef stew and bulgar
    wheat. The "Madagh," or offering, can be traced back to Abraham.

    Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son to God, but God told him to
    spare the boy and sacrifice a ram instead. The Madagh is an expression
    of love, faith and gratitude which St. Hagop's shares with its members
    and guests. Once the stew and bulgar is cooked, families bring smaller
    pots and take the stew back to their eating area.

    "That's how the picnic starts," said Zohrab Kaligian, chairman of the
    picnic committee. "People start to come with their pots and pans to
    get their stew."

    When people came Sunday, there were families from far-flung places
    like Boston, Washington and California. The annual picnic is a time
    when people who have left Racine often come back to be a part of the
    community again.

    Here they can enjoy sarma (stuffed grape leaves), shishkabob,
    Armenian pastries, and penelee (deep-fried cheese puffs). Every
    Armenian community has a pastry stuffed with cheese, Kaligian said,
    but the penelee are hard to find unless you are in Racine.

    Women from the church spent Father's Day making more than 1,600
    penelee. Younger men and women took their turns over the deep fryers
    Sunday, cooking for the people who lined up to place orders.

    "We're doing our best to pass that on," Kaligian said. "The little
    old ladies aren't going to be around forever. We've got to pass it on,
    generation to generation."

    The band that provided music from 2 to 6 p.m. is also committed to
    passing on the Armenian folk music tradition. Members of The Mid-East
    Beat have been playing together since the early 1980s. Vahan Kamalian
    plays the oud, a fretless stringed instrument with a rounded back. He
    started playing when he was 15; the instruments were not available in
    music stores, and his grandmother helped find one overseas. He and
    the other members of the group taught themselves to play, listening
    to old records and playing together.

    "We just love the music and want to keep the tradition going of the
    music and pass it on to future generations," Kamalian said. "It's
    soulful, melodic and driven, perfect for the kinds of dancing they do."

    The Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, prelate of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church of America, oversees Armenian churches in the eastern half of
    the United States. He was in Racine Sunday for his eighth St. Hagop
    celebration. He said the Armenian church and culture are tied together
    incredibly closely.

    "The Armenian church officially is the oldest (national) church in
    the world," he said. "We embraced Christianity in 301. It's like
    a mother for our nation. Through the church the literature, music,
    art, architectures, all these cultures were kept through church. The
    church and nation can't separate."

    Armenians immigrated to the United States in the first quarter of
    the 20th century, Choloyan said, after Ottoman Turks killed about
    1.5 million of them and drove many others into the Syrian desert.

    "Wherever we established, we immediately built a church," Choloyan
    said. "They kept the church alive and the church kept them alive."

    Choloyan loves to come to Racine's picnic, where the sense of community
    runs deep. He said if he had been given a choice as a young man, where
    he would be a priest, he would have picked Racine, and now, if he
    were given a choice on where to retire, his answer would be the same.

    "I love these people," he said. "You find the true American spirit
    here in the countryside. It's simple, lovely, caring. You see the
    closeness. This is the America I know."
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