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The Camel's Homeland: A Western Armenian Puppet Show In New Jersey

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  • The Camel's Homeland: A Western Armenian Puppet Show In New Jersey

    THE CAMEL'S HOMELAND: A WESTERN ARMENIAN PUPPET SHOW IN NEW JERSEY

    AZG DAILY
    20-07-2011

    Some 130 children and adults crowded into the hall of the
    Armenian-American Support and Education Center on June 11 to see
    an Armenian-language puppet show, "Ughdin Hayrenike" [The Camel's
    Homeland], performed by children. The show was organized by Vartan
    Garniki's Hye Theater Studio, Armenian Mirror Spectator's June 25
    article reports.

    Seven young Armenians performed with their puppets a dramatized
    Western-Armenian version of a short story by Sergey Vardanian of
    Yerevan. Vardanian originally published a set of children's short
    stories in Yerevan in 1989 called Arevadzaghig [Sunflower], which
    was translated by Makruhi Hagopian and published in Western Armenian
    in Istanbul in 1994. Vardanian, today working at the Archaeology
    and Ethnology Institute of the Armenian Academy of Sciences, worked
    for many years as a journalist and also served from 1991 to 2002 as
    the vice president of the State Council on Religious Affairs of the
    Republic of Armenia. He has organized a movement to collect folkloric
    materials in Armenian schools in Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan,
    Mountainous Karabagh, Nakhichevan, Abkhazia and Krasnodar (Russia),
    which were published in two volumes in 1981 and 2003. He has published
    a volume on the twelve historical capitals of Armenia, first in 1985,
    and then in an enlarged edition in 1995, and is a specialist on the
    Hamshen Armenians of Central Asia and founding editor of the monthly
    Dzayn Hamshenakan [Hamshen Voice].

    The plot of the play concerns a camel that sets off to find his
    homeland and convinces other animals he meets along the way to join
    him. When they arrive in the desert, the other animals realize that
    this may be an ideal home for the camel but it is too hot and in
    general unsuitable for them. They then return to their original homes
    with renewed appreciation of their own value. The story can be taken
    as a parable for Armenians scattered throughout the world.

    Naturally, a show performed by children may not be perfect in all
    aspects of its presentation, but in this particular instance, it was
    appropriate for the children in the audience, who seemed to enjoy
    it greatly. My own two boys eagerly asked when the next performance
    would take place. Such plays should be constants in the arsenal of
    tools to make Western Armenian relevant to children. Several children
    apparently afterwards expressed an interest in participating in
    future performances.

    The positive effects of the play were not limited to the children in
    the audience. Director Vartan Garniki told the audience that some of
    the children in the play, who are of varying ages, did not know much
    Armenian when they began their rehearsals. In fact, one boy could
    only recite his lines and did not understand any Armenian at all.

    Garniki has organized similar plays for children for the Khrimian
    Lyceum of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern). He
    established Hye Theater Studio in 2006 and its first performance,
    "Honest Person," was performed by children and based on four tales
    by Hovhannes Toumanian. Hye Theater Studio has also presented two
    plays for adults in Armenian.

    Garniki (Oganesian) was born in Yerevan, and inspired by his father,
    a well-known reciter and actor, he studied drama at the Theatrical
    Institute there. His final project won first prize at the Moscow
    Festival of Russian Dramaturgy. Afterwards, he worked as an actor
    five years before becoming director of the Alexander Shirvanzade State
    Dramatic Theater of Kapan, where he directed over twenty productions
    from 1985 to 1992. Garniki established his first puppet theater while
    in Kapan in 1988 with his wife and two sons. He and his family moved to
    the United States in the early 1990s. In 2002, he joined the Tekeyan
    Cultural Association's Mher Megerdichian Theatrical Group and served
    as its artistic director for six years. His wife, Anahid Oganesian,
    was the stage and puppet designer for "Ughdin Hayrenike."

    Garniki works in theater as a labor of love. He exclaimed, "Drama,
    I have to do - if I didn't do it, I would not be myself!" To make
    a living, he works as a tour guide, showing Russian and Armenian
    speakers the sights in New York City, Philadelphia, Atlantic City,
    Niagara Falls and elsewhere. He arranged with Armenian military
    attache Col. Mesrop Nazarian that any profit from "Ughdin Hayrenike"
    will be donated to the children of Armenian soldiers who died in the
    struggle for the liberation of Artsakh. Several more performances of
    this puppet play are planned for this fall at Armenian schools and
    churches in the New York and New Jersey area.

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