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Armenian Picnic Draws Crowd: Annual Event Features Food, Music, Memo

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  • Armenian Picnic Draws Crowd: Annual Event Features Food, Music, Memo

    ARMENIAN PICNIC DRAWS CROWD: ANNUAL EVENT FEATURES FOOD, MUSIC, MEMORIES

    Journal Times
    http://www.journaltimes.com/news/local/armenian-picnic-draws-crowd-annual-event-features-food-music-memories/article_ff22bd9e-be71-11e1-9203-0019bb2963f4.html
    June 24 2012
    WI

    RACINE - Rich scents of freshly prepared traditional foods mingled
    in the warm summer air with the melodious sounds of Armenian music
    as hundreds of people flocked Sunday to celebrate their heritage,
    or the culture of their friends and neighbors.

    Pewaukee resident Ken Larsen, who is Armenian on his mother's side,
    sat under a tree during St. Hagop Armenian Apostolic Church's annual
    Armenian "Madagh" Picnic. Cradled in his arms was the oud, an Armenian
    string instrument, somewhat similar in appearance to a guitar. He
    said he began playing it about five months ago.

    "I wanted to start exploring my heritage a little more," said Larsen,
    54, who is Danish and Swedish on his father's side. "My mother passed
    away in November, but I started getting more desire to explore my
    heritage. Enter the oud."

    The oud is played with a risha or mizrap, which also can be called a
    pick. He played the rich mahogany-, ebony- and spruce-wood instrument
    during the all-day gastronomic extravaganza, hosted at Johnson Park,
    6200 Northwestern Ave., in Racine.

    "Mainly I'm listening to Armenian music and trying to play it by ear,"
    he said.

    "It's in my blood," said Larsen, a testing engineer for an IT company,
    adding he played the organ by ear years ago, too.

    Yet amid the melodies, peals of laughter from children, and entreaties
    from women gathered around some picnic tables to try a cornucopia
    of foods and authentic dishes, the festive fun of the massive annual
    picnic carried a much deeper, humbling meaning.

    The Rev. Hrant Keborkian of St. Hagop said the madagh, or a type of
    offering, began about 1,700 years ago.

    Originally, an animal typically was sacrificed, and he said the
    offering was shared with the poor after it had been blessed. Racine
    resident Var Krikorian - a local Armenian historian of sorts -
    said madagh may be offered in remembrance of a loved one who died,
    as well as offered in memory of Armenians slain by the Turks in the
    1915 Armenian genocide.

    "This is the result of the horrible stuff," Keborkian said. "It is
    prayers for the souls of our departed. (Madagh) is made in memory of
    our deceased members. Armenians tragedy brings us together."

    Keborkian, who moved here from Lebanon, said Sunday's picnic was his
    first madagh here.

    Krikorian, however, said she has been attending the picnic her whole
    life, or more than 80 years.

    Having a little fun with her Armenian and non-Armenian friends,
    she asked each of the dozen people sitting at her table to attempt
    to pronounce a special dessert. She broke into a grin the couple of
    times the uninitiated tongues got it right. She offered jovial ribbing
    to others who proved way off, not even knowing its first letter and
    winding up make the sound of someone blowing raspberries.

    "It's fun to experience new things," said Racine resident Sharon
    Cushing, 70. "There was no one Armenian in the town I grew up in
    (Bloomington, Ill.)."



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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