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A Review of Kalinoski's "Beast on the Moon"

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  • A Review of Kalinoski's "Beast on the Moon"

    http://www.pamphletpress.org/pamphlet/files/arts1. htm

    BEAST ON THE MOON
    by James L. Seay

    When one hears the word, "Genocide," one almost without fail calls to mind
    the Nazi "final solution" to "the Jewish problem" which has become known as
    the Holocaust. However, between 1915 and 1923, another Holocaust took place;
    one which is today virtually forgotten. On May 16th, 1978, past President
    and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Jimmy Carter said, "It is generally not
    known in the world that, in the years preceding 1916, there was a concerted
    effort made to eliminate all the Armenian people, probably one of the
    greatest tragedies that ever befell any group. And there weren't any
    Nuremberg trials." On May 11, 1918, only two years after the beginning of
    the Armenian Holocaust, another past President and Nobel Peace Prize
    laureate, Theodore Roosevelt, summed it up, saying, "...the Armenian
    massacre was the greatest crime of the war, and the failure to act against
    Turkey is to condone it ... the failure to deal radically with the Turkish
    horror means that all talk of guaranteeing the future peace of the world is
    mischievous nonsense."

    After the able bodied Armenian men were "drafted" and killed by the
    so-called "progressive" Young Turks of the Ottoman Empire, villages and
    towns, now populated only by women, children and the elderly, were
    "relocated for their own good" as Turkish Gendarmes "escorted" them in death
    marches across Anatolia to the Syrian Desert, Der Zor. An estimated million
    and a half people died. Not only was it an Armenian Holocaust, but, somehow,
    I could not help but be reminded of the Trail of Tears. Man's inhumanity to
    man seems to know no boundaries.

    I must admit, I knew little of the Young Turks and their efforts to
    eradicate the Armenian people, a Christian minority in the Ottoman Empire,
    except from reading The 40 Days of Musa Dagh by Franz Werfel in an
    undergraduate Modern World Literature class B and that was well over 40
    years ago! This was my background when I traveled to Normal, Illinois to
    witness a play, Beast on the Moon by Richard Kalinoski, at the tiny
    Heartland Theatre, hidden away in northeast Normal in what used to be the
    Soldiers' and Sailors' Children's School and sponsored by
    Armenian-Americans, George, Carol and Peter Churukian.

    Set in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the 1920s, the core story deals with Seta, a
    sparkling, impulsive young girl, filled with hope and the love of life, who
    is brought to America from the "old country" by Aram as a "picture bride."
    Grateful that she has been saved from death, Seta discovers that her life as
    Aram's wife involves a different kind of suffering, as she endures a
    soul-chilling servitude to a desperate and wounded man bent on begetting
    sons who will replace the empty faces in a faded photograph of his dead
    family. The title, we learn, comes from a Nineteenth Century lunar eclipse
    during which the Turks ran from their houses and fired guns at "the beast on
    the moon," as the Armenian minority watched. A few years later, the Turks
    again ran from their houses with guns, but this time, fired at their
    Armenian neighbors.

    The aching irony of the play is that both Seta and Aram, who have managed to
    escape the atrocities wrought by the Young Turks and their predecessors in
    the old country, find a new tyranny in which he attempts to turn his
    quicksilver bride into a "proper woman," obedient, compliant and silent,
    while he attempts to become a proper patriarch. The play, in spite of its
    historical background, is not so much a story of escape or revenge, but a
    graceful fable of transformation, and begs the question, in such a marriage
    and in such a world, how can both souls be rescued?

    Kalinoski's play, skillfully directed by Rachel Chaves and featuring
    outstanding acting by Dan Irwin, Katy Lacio and Greg McGrath, is overflowing
    with a wealth of images and dramatic action. It is funny, poetic,
    compassionate and wise. But be warned, it is one of the most emotionally
    powerful plays I have seen in a long time. It has all of the terrible impact
    of a brick crashing through a plate glass window. And when you look at the
    play's poster of an ancient photograph of a stiffly-posed circa 1900
    Armenian family, it will scald your heart. One should remember the words of
    Adolph Hitler, who, while persuading his associates that a Jewish holocaust
    would be tolerated by the West, stated, "Who, after all, speaks today of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?"

    Beast on the Moon is presented at the Heartland Theatre Company, at One
    Normal Plaza, near the corner of Beech and Lincoln in Normal, Illinois. It
    was originally produced as part of the 1995 Humana Festival of New American
    Plays at the Actors' Theatre of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky. In three
    weeks, it will open at the Moscow Arts Theatre in Moscow, Russia (made
    famous by Constantine Stanislovski) and in March, 2005, it will finally open
    in New York. Remaining performances at Heartland Theatre Company are October
    28th, 29th & 30th at 7:30 p.m.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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