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  • The Armenian Weekly; July 12, 2008; Features

    The Armenian Weekly On-Line
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown MA 02472 USA
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]

    http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 27; July 12, 2008

    Features:

    1. All the World is Markarian's Stage
    By Tom Vartabedian

    2. Book review: 'Defending Infinity' Holds Mediocrity In Contempt
    By Andy Turpin

    3. The ARS Mother and Child Clinic in Akhourian
    By Michael G. Mensoian

    ***

    CONGERS, N.Y.-If all the world's a stage, as Shakespeare once wrote, then
    Dr. Herand Markarian is its protagonist, its leading player as far as the
    Armenian community goes.

    Over the last 50 years, his playbill has remained consummate with 25 plays
    written (unmatched by any playwright), including 20 premieres, more than 40
    productions directed, and over 50 roles performed.

    He is to Armenian theater what Ararat is to Hayastan, a mountain of culture
    and the performing arts.

    Six months are spent in the homeland forging his scripts, then it's back to
    New York where they are introduced to an appreciative Armenian-American
    audience, thanks to the New Jersey Hamazkayin and its band of thespians.

    There's something to be said about a group of ordinary youngsters refined
    enough to portray a cast of young Armenian orphans in a show called "The
    Georgetown Boys," which is being staged these days to standing ovations.

    "I don't know how to explain it," he says. "The gratitude you receive from
    taking young and unseasoned actors from Hamazkayin and turning them into
    performers is one of the most rewarding experiences of my life. These kids
    are like my own children. When they recite and act in Armenian, it gives me
    a happiness that no money can buy."

    Markarian says he feels like an ironsmith who was given a chain and asked to
    strengthen the loops.

    "It's not always easy to work with children," he admits. "In the end when it's
    showtime, you forget all the agonizing moments. I bring the stories home and
    actually try to identify them with those of the orphans."

    In Merrimack Valley, where "Georgetown Boys" made an auspicious New England
    debut this past April 24th, Markarian was honored by the local Armenian
    Genocide Commemorative Committee.

    The tribute he received that afternoon was relative. Instead, the modest
    playwright pounced off the stage and embraced the aging widow of a former
    Georgetown boy who came to see the production. To her went the real homage
    of this masterpiece theater.

    How it started was completely ironic. Markarian was invited to give a talk
    in Toronto during the 1980's where he met Jack Aprahamian, who had just
    published a collection of items related to "Georgetown Boys."

    He secured a copy of the book and was moved by it. After launching the
    Hamazkayin youth group in New Jersey, he started thinking of a play and it
    evolved from that after many years of research, rewriting, and steady
    resolve.

    Surrounded by his cast of 25, including educator Michael Mirakian, he passed
    off the credit to his "children." Whether any of them makes it to a higher
    level remains to be seen. The poise, self-esteem, and confidence becomes
    self-sustaining. To Markarian, it's a mission for his country.

    A bigger picture is his commitment to preserve and perpetuate the arts as
    opposed to personal gain. Though he has appeared many times on stage,
    Markarian's real passion rests behind the scenes. He would not recognize his
    own ego if the two were to meet on a street in Yerevan.

    "The plays are part of me," he says. "I live with every moment. I go through
    the emotional state of all the characters. When I'm on stage or in the
    wings-acting or directing-I become emotionally and physically involved to
    the extent that I don't want anyone to talk about anything else. This is my
    world beginning to end."

    Markarian feels he's done justice to the characters whose lives he's come to
    represent.

    "They deserve all the respect you and I demand," he adds. "Even when they
    portray a comic character, I tell them they have no right to laugh. It
    applies to villains as well."

    In 1922, an ecumenical organization by the name of the Armenian Relief
    Association of Canada had been formed. The Association worked to secure the
    entry of 109 Armenian orphan boys from Middle Eastern orphanages and settle
    them onto a farm. The orphans, known as the "Georgetown boys," were trained
    in all aspects of farming, possessed enough farming skills, and were sent to
    other farms in Ontario, thus learning to sustain themselves. Markarian found
    it a delightful story line and jumped on it.

    A review in one Armenian paper called it an "emotionally charged
    experience," complemented by a musical score that was "extremely touching."

    "It was obvious that the directing was meticulous, exacting, with
    discipline, and the timing in the dialogue perfect," wrote reviewer Haikaz
    M. Grigorian.

    Markarian grew up in Iraq where the performing arts was not a profession
    people sought. His daughter Yeraz is a talented actress and singer having
    been weaned in the process. She and two other Armenian women established the
    a cappela group called Zulal (pristine) which has performed all over the
    United States to rave reviews.

    "My wife in her youth used to recite," he says. "Now she reads essays at our
    cultural events. I don't know the genetics but it's beautiful."

    Markarian majored in chemistry, ultimately receiving a doctorate. He also
    holds a master's degree in technology management. For pleasure he reads the
    works of the great Greek masters.

    At Armenian conventions, Markarian was every bit as good as a Johnny Carson
    or some other stand-up comic. During a meeting break, he would regale the
    delegates with some comic relief, which was a welcomed respite from the
    mundane world of business. His Armenian tales were a howl.

    He recalls as a youngster going to the movies in Iraq and mimicking the
    stars. His first genuine role 52 years ago was that of a poet in Baronian's
    "The Gentlemen Beggars." It was an ARF Shant Student Association production
    directed by Apraham Der Ghoogasian, a local actor with a strong baritone
    voice. Soon to follow was his first directing job after moving to Baghdad.

    "The influence of American movies was so great, I remember gathering some of
    my friends and giving them a script I had written," he recalled. "Movie
    theater operators had made a business of cutting film strips and selling
    them to us frame by frame. These were the pictures of great actors. I
    established my first movie theater in the town of Margil."

    After arriving in America in 1962, Markarian set down to business writing
    plays, his first being "Cycle" which found its way to the Diaspora Theater
    Festival in Yerevan where he captured "best playwright" honors. A notable
    career had been launched with numerous other accolades.

    The flip side of Markarian is his charitable work in Armenia, based upon the
    concept of rebuilding a nation and infusing its population with newfound
    energy. His focus is education and health, particularly in the border
    villages, with the Dilijan Children's Sanatorium and the Armenian Medical
    Fund.

    His writing is almost an addiction. This year alone, Markarian translated
    five plays by Karine Khodikian. He finds the homeland conducive to his work,
    surrounded by the people of his world.

    "There are many Armenian plays waiting to come to light," he confirms. "I
    won't deny them the right to be born. We are a nation that deserves a higher
    recognition with the performing arts. If my contribution contributes to
    that, an ultimate mission will have been achieved."

    Markarian talks about his blockbuster "Mirrors" which reflected his mother's
    life. It turned into a two-fold family history, one to oblige himself and
    again, to patronize his daughter Yeraz who was doing her senior thesis in
    theater at Columbia University.

    Yeraz wanted to direct an original play and approached her dad with a
    not-so-simple request. "Write a play for me," she asked.

    The daughter had heard her grandmother's story of immigration and was
    enamored by it. The grandmother and a brother got separated in 1922, never
    to see each other again.

    "It was a perfect fit," Markarian said. "I got to exercise my imagination
    and help my daughter. Somewhere out there is at least one Armenian that fits
    the other episodes."

    Plaudits ring out to such shows as "Nine Armenians" and "Beast on the Moon"
    which have entertained New York City audiences. Markarian sees theater as a
    way of connecting Armenians to their cultural heritage by mere virtue of
    their support. But that's not enough.

    "We need the non-Armenian audience to be successful and bring our issues to
    the forum," he maintains. "There are great pieces of literature that are
    kept in obscurity because of language barriers. With Armenian plays, you
    need an audience that understands the language and actors who speak
    Armenian."

    As for "Forty Days of Musa Dagh," Markarian hopes to see it done in
    Hollywood fashion, much like "Schlinder's List." He's looking for a director
    like Steven Spielberg to step forward and some benefactors to fund the cost.

    "I look to Armenia with hope-that it is going to evolve," he maintains.
    "There is no euphoria. Every country attempts to reach that dynamic state.
    Armenia is no different. With theater and the performing arts, it's a step
    in the right direction and I'm proud to be a small part of that."

    ***
    Herand Markarian


    Thumbnail sketch of Herand Markarian

    - Playwright, poet, literary and drama critic, actor, professor, Armenian
    community activist over five decades

    - Born in Basrah, Iraq, 1938; grew up in suburb of Margil.

    - Graduate, College of Sciences, Baghdad University; immigrated to United
    States in 1962, obtained master's and doctorate degrees in chemistry from
    Stevens Institute of Technology, New Jersey.

    - Along with doctorate studies, took up acting, directing, and playwriting
    in New York City

    - Authored 25 plays, latest being "The Georgetown Boys" (unmatched by any
    Armenian playwright); directed more than 40 plays; appeared in more than 50
    roles, including Yohann Lepsius in Toukhanian's feature film "Assignment
    Berlin"

    - Wrote, directed, and prepared many multimedia presentations and lectured
    extensively throughout Armenian communities in the diaspora; actively
    involved in Armenian national and cultural life.

    - First Hamazkayin Theater Group invited to Armenia in 1992.

    - Notable awards: St. Mesrop Mashdots Medal by His Holiness Karekin
    Sarkissian; Gold Medal of Cultural Achievements from Minister of Culture of
    Armenia; Best Diasporan Playwright by the Writers Union of Armenia.

    ***

    His Favorite Things

    American playwright: Shakespeare and Henrik Ibsen, Armenian playwright:
    Levon Shant and Gabriel Soondookian

    Director: Vahe Shahverdian of Sundukian Theater in Armenia

    Music: Classical, pop, flamenco, and Armenian

    Theater: "The Crucible" and "Les Miserables"

    TV show: "I Claudius" on PBS

    Sport: Soccer (I used to play)

    Screen star: Meryl Streep

    Stage star: Nelly Kheranian

    Hobbies: Art, photography

    Relaxation: Surrounding myself by nature and listening to the ocean

    Most embarrassing moment: When an Armenian mars our national character, that
    embarrasses me.

    Most rewarding moment: When I touch someone with something I've written or
    said; creating a smile from an unsuspecting audience member

    Golden deeds: Wipe out hunger; eliminate injustice; give every child the
    possibility for growth

    Pet peeve: Writers who make fun of the handicapped; I don't like Black
    Comedy

    Vacation spot: The ocean for meditation, as contained in my book of poems
    "From the Depth of the Torn Self"

    Statesman: King Ardashes (189 BC) and King Hetoum (1226 AD)

    Proudest accomplishment: My very next play and every one before and after
    that

    Quote: "What did I get from life? That which I gave to others." -Poet Vahan
    Tekeyan

    ***

    Through a Camera's Eye

    Photography has always been a wonderful way to express myself. Over the
    years, I've won a couple prizes for my pictures. I enjoy capturing things
    that embody some sort of an art form.

    I like objects at different times of the day. I take pictures from angles
    that bring out some sort of secret in them-or catch a moment that's so
    volatile.

    I remember visiting the Holy Apostles Church in Kars with Archbishop Mesrop
    Ashjian. At that time, the church was closed to visitors. We found a broken
    bar in one of the windows and slid inside. Serpazan said a prayer which was
    the last time an Armenian clergyman said a prayer in that church before it
    was converted to a mosque. We were the only people in the church.

    It was then that I noticed a beam of light falling to the floor from a
    window above. I asked Serpazan to stand in that light and took the
    photograph which was later used on the cover of his book.

    I took a lot of pride in that.

    ------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------- ---
    2. 'Defending Infinity' Holds Mediocrity In Contempt
    By Andy Turpin

    WATERTOWN, Mass (A.W.)-Ken Janjigian's newest novel, Defending Infinity
    (Pocol Press, 2008), following 'Trapped Doors' (Pocol Press, 2005), is a
    foray into the lion's den of cultural and self-assessment on the brink of
    true committed adulthood.

    For the Gen X and Millennial generation, everything is so post-modernly
    "post" in general that it begins to hurt the head to think about it too
    hard. Unthinking young people under 30 have back lashed into religious
    conservatism. And those that consider themselves liberal desire to be moral
    people at their core, but exist in a jaundiced cultural vacuum that wants to
    continue the anti-authority trend of its Baby-Boomer parents. This, while
    they're savvy enough to know that the globalized civilization they exist in
    is little more than a multinational corporate fiefdom.

    As a society we see it everywhere-from the new neo-realism of superheroes
    like "Hancock" and Bale in "Batman Begins," to the masculinity-satire novel
    of Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club.

    But with local boy flavor, Janjigian brings the literary genre of the trend
    home to roost in his Boston stomping ground the way Nick Hornby and Mike
    Gayle did for "High Fidelity" and "Turning Thirty" in London.

    Like Sentimentalist literature in the Victorian era or the Dashiell Hammett
    serialized pulp fictions in the noir epoch, the Millennium is the decade of
    the decadent "Sex and the City" reminiscent chick-lit and male equivalent
    John Cusack movie-in-print genres of writing that represent the Lost
    Generation of our time.

    And if you're familiar with those realms as a reader and member of society,
    Defending Infinity is a fine addition and another brick in the wall.

    In premise, it's the story Van Arakalian, a modern-day Armenian late
    twenty-something on the verge of marriage becoming today's consistent of the
    "Man in the Grey Flannel Suit." However, inside he yearns to live a freer
    existence. Not without responsibility, but with a higher responsible
    obligation to himself in the vein of Polonius's sage advice, "To thine own
    self be true."

    As a result, Van goes on an intellectual comedic odyssey to assess himself
    with a rogue's gallery of Cambridge-area bohemians as his collective Virgil
    guiding him through the wilderness.

    Stylistically, there's a great deal of astute sociological perception and
    honesty in Janjigian's writing, balanced out with an equal amount of
    pretension. However, that pretension shouldn't necessarily be laid as blame
    on Janjigian as the writer, because anyone that's spent a significant amount
    of time in Cambridge knows that it's a berg that oozes pretension. And if
    Janjigian's character dialogues sometimes sound so artsy that they're
    unrealistic and caricaturist, I'll be the first to give my two cents and say
    that you as a reader haven't been paying enough attention to some of the
    self-absorbed drivel that spills forth from pontificators in Boston's
    bohemian hotspots.

    In contrast, much of the anti-consumerist soapbox rhetoric that Janjigian
    explores has been tread and re-tread before, at which point it just becomes
    a matter of taste as to whether you enjoy Janjigian's Boston-Armenian
    resonance of splicing open old societal wounds.

    Rome's always burning. Kurt Vonnegut and George Carlin as the Ezekiel and
    Elijah prophets of our time are dead, and the Empire is fallen, all the hail
    the Empire. Janjigian knows his audience, but with other similar novels
    floating around it becomes an issue of brand loyalty as to whether Janjigian's
    Beantown intellectual nuances will be too much for some to bear.

    In the tradition of Alan Moore, if you enjoy being the hippest cat in the
    room and reveling in references and humor that can make you feel like the
    king of Beacon Hill, you'll be sucked into Defending Infinity quickly. And
    if Redemption is an ink spot called home, the Cantab rocks your world, and
    you have permanent residency status in the People's Republic of Cambridge,
    there's no doubt in my mind that it will be just your pint of summer ale.
    --------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------

    3 . The ARS Mother and Child Clinic in Akhourian
    By Michael G. Mensoian

    In 2010, the Armenian Relief Society (ARS) will celebrate its centennial
    anniversary. This is a milestone for any organization. Established in 1910,
    the ARS has been at the forefront in providing emergency and long-term
    assistance to Armenians worldwide, in the homeland (Armenia, Artsakh, and
    Javakhk), and throughout the diaspora.

    Central to the mission of the ARS is its historic commitment to the
    children. In the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide, the ARS realized that
    hundreds of young girls and boys had been orphaned along the route of the
    death march to the desert region of Der Zor. Many of these children were
    taken by the tribe's people or villagers along the route or were given to
    them in desperation by dying parents. Although they were saved from death,
    they would be bound in servitude to their new families. During the period
    from 1922-26, the Armenian Red Cross, the predecessor of the ARS, was
    involved in the resettlement of displaced Armenians to safer havens and in
    providing for the many Armenian orphans. At their Convention in July 1926,
    which was held in Boston, the Central Executive Board (CEB) was instructed
    by the delegates to secure the freedom of these young girls and boys who
    were being held in servitude. Thus was born the innovative "One Orphan for
    One Gold Coin" program that successfully liberated hundreds of these
    children from their Turkish, Kurdish, and Arab families. Since that
    beginning, the ARS has continued with many projects and programs that
    address the specific needs of our young children in the homeland and
    throughout the diaspora.

    In Artsakh, the ARS has established the "Soseh" Kindergarten System.
    Presently the 12 mangabardezes (kindergartens) enroll approximately 550
    children 3 to 6 years of age with a staff of 111 employees. The ARS through
    its 218 chapters worldwide in 24 countries and its many friends underwrites
    the full cost of these schools. (See the Armenian Weekly, Feb. 2, 2008, "The
    ARS 'Soseh' Kindergartens in Artsakh.")

    In a parallel project that many in the ARS feel is the crown jewel of their
    many programs and projects is the ARS Mother and Child Clinic and Birthing
    Center in Akhourian, Armenia, which addresses the Society's commitment to
    young children. Following the devastating earthquake in December 1988, the
    Executive Committee of the ARS Eastern Region U.S. made a momentous
    decision: to build a health center in the town of Akhourian in the Shirak
    Marz or district of Armenia. Akhourian was a small town with an estimated
    population of some 10,000 people about three miles southeast of Gyumri, the
    district capital. The plan was to build a medical facility that would serve
    a cluster of six villages with an estimated population of 22,000. The
    following year, the ARS CEB decided to assume financial responsibility for
    this Mother and Child Health Clinic.

    The villages within this medical service area were Arevik, Aigabats, Garnut,
    Hovit, Jrarat, and Musaelian. The furthest villages from the new medical
    facility were Jrarat, about 8.5 miles away-measured as the crow flies-and
    Aigabats, about 6 miles away. Although these are not great distances, it
    must be remembered that the winding roads within the district increased the
    mileage that had to be traveled and due to changing weather conditions could
    quickly become impassable at times. Also, many of these families did not
    have reliable means of transportation to reach the larger existing hospital
    in Gyumri, which was another three miles distant, or the financial means to
    afford medical services when it was necessary.

    The villages to be served were on the margins of the earthquake zone which
    was centered to the northeast of Gyumri on the town of Spitak, which was
    completely leveled. The city of Gyumri itself sustained considerable damage
    as well. The Akhourian region, which had limited access to medical
    facilities prior to the earthquake, was now virtually without any medical
    assistance as the needs of the thousands of earthquake victims had to be
    given top priority.

    Given the limited income of the villagers, the decision was made to operate
    the hospital on a non-profit basis to provide free medical care.
    Construction of the Mother and Child Clinic met government standards since
    it was to be the first privately run medical facility in Armenia to be
    licensed by the Ministry of Health.

    The clinic received its first patient in May 1997. It soon became apparent
    that there was a need to expand the range of services available if there was
    to be any significant improvement in the overall health of the population.
    It was estimated that about 50 percent of the women in the district were
    also in their childbearing years. Few of these women had ever had the
    opportunity to receive either pre-natal or post-natal information or care.

    With this in mind, the ARS decided that a birthing center should be
    constructed to be attached to the Mother and Child Clinic. This would
    provide the people of the Akhourian district with a full-service general
    hospital. Plans were drawn up to add approximately 7,200 square feet to the
    existing clinic. Construction began in September 2003. When completed, the
    combined Mother and Child Clinic and Birthing Center had more than 13,000
    square feet of space. On April 24, 2005, the first baby, a boy named Vrej,
    was born.

    The Mother and Child Clinic and Birthing Center in Akhourian has been
    responsible for a significant reduction in the infant mortality rate
    including miscarriages and still-births. The number of babies born with
    medical problems has also shown a significant decrease. The reputation of
    the staff, the up-to-date technology, and the modern facilities available
    have been responsible for the geographic expansion of the facility's service
    area into the southern region of the Shirak Marz, with the population being
    served more than doubling from 22,000 to over 50,000.

    The hospital currently provides a full range of diagnostic services
    including mammography and sonography units and blood work-ups.
    Gynecological, pediatric, and pre-natal and post-natal examination and care
    is also available. The hospital maintains an emergency unit and a pharmacy
    to dispense vital prescription drugs which would not otherwise be easily
    available to the patient. In 2004, the ARS reported that the staff of the
    Clinic and Birthing Center and the University of Massachusetts Medical
    Center's HIV clinic ".began cooperating in a study of preventive measures
    against sexually transmitted diseases and HIV." For many families this was
    their first formal introduction to the dangers of HIV to the prospective
    mother and the baby. The Clinic and Birthing Center is also carrying out a
    comprehensive inoculation program against early childhood illnesses.

    Data for the four-year period, 2002 to 2005, indicates that nearly 17,000
    visits were logged by nearly 10,600 patients. The medical staff made 1,299
    house calls during this same period. From June 2002 to August 2005, 24,316
    laboratory analyses were completed. Perhaps the most important fact is that
    since April 24, 2005, when the first birth was recorded, 3,135 healthy
    babies have been delivered as of May 2008 without cost to their parents.
    That is an average of nearly 87 healthy births each month. The ARS assumes
    financial responsibility for the entire operation of the center.

    To expand needed medical services to an ever-increasing population and to
    continue its policy of not charging for the services provided by the
    "Birthing Center," the ARS introduced the "Healthy Birth Sponsorship
    Program." Under this program a donation of $150 covers the medical expenses
    of the mother and provides a healthy start in life to a baby born at the
    center.

    Presently, the ARS Mother and Child Clinic and Birthing Center in Akhourian
    has a medical staff of 41 professionals, which includes 4 pediatricians, 4
    gynecologists, 18 nurses, 11 mid-wives, and 4 laboratory technicians
    assisted by a support staff of 9 people. The success enjoyed by the hospital
    is due to the diagnostic skill and care that the professional staff
    provides. However, credit must be given to the hospital administrator and
    the three directors who have responsibility for administrative, medical, and
    support functions respectively.

    Since its opening in 1997 and its expansion in 2005, the ARS Mother and
    Child Clinic and Birthing Center in Akhourian has made significant
    contributions to the improvement in the general health of the population.
    This has had a beneficial effect on the families. The birth of a healthy
    child eliminates the tension and the worry that would engulf the parents of
    a baby born with medical problems or worse, should a miscarriage or a
    still-birth occur. During the pre-natal period, the mother is able to
    receive the necessary information and care that reduces possible
    complications and anxieties and makes for a safe and successful birth.
    Post-natal information and check-ups reduce the stress on the new mother and
    contributes to the development of a healthy child.

    Society is a beneficiary as well. Preventive medicine is invariably less
    expensive and more rewarding than curative procedures whenever that option
    is available. A healthy family unit is happier and more productive.

    The ARS's commitment to our children has always been central to its mission.
    The ARS Mother and Child Clinic and Birthing Center provides for their needs
    at birth. The ARS "Soseh" Kindergarten System in Artsakh provides another
    group of Armenian youngsters the opportunity to develop their young bodies
    and minds. Whether in Shirak Marz or in Artsakh, the ARS remains committed
    to its historic role with respect to our children who are the future of
    Armenia.
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