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From Horrific To Joy

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  • From Horrific To Joy

    FROM HORRIFIC TO JOY
    Frank Wilson - The Philadelphia Inquirer

    South Bend Tribune, IN
    July 2 2007

    Poetry

    All the tribes of humankind have had their sorrows, but the Armenians
    -- like the Jews -- seem to have had more than their share. Between
    1915 and 1917, deported and massacred by the Young Turk rulers of
    the moribund Ottoman Empire, they became the victims of the 20th
    century's first genocide.

    The memory of that horrific episode clearly resonated in Gregory
    Djanikian's family -- for this book is transparently a memoir in
    verse -- and his portrayal of it in the first part of the book makes
    for tough reading, in no small measure because of the understated,
    pastoral tone he often employs to detail atrocity (one of the poems
    is titled "Armenian Pastoral, 1915").

    Consider "Deportation Song": "This one was given a week to get ready
    ... This one hired carts and mules ... This one hid in the pantry
    bin ... This one carried his son on his back ... This one was already
    being led away ... This one was butchered ... and this one was crying
    for water ..."

    Accident of birth spared Djanikian -- who heads the creative-writing
    program at the University of Pennsylvania -- direct experience of the
    1915 deportation, but not a later one, in 1956, after the French,
    British and Israelis attacked Suez, when Armenians -- including
    Djanikian's family -- who had found refuge in Egypt after World War
    I, were among the nationalities expelled by Gamal Abdel Nasser's
    government. And that is how 8-year-old Gregory Djanikian came to
    America.

    "Immigrant Picnic," with its catalog of his mother's endearing
    malapropisms, is both hilarious and touching, as is the account of
    the card game he has with her. Before dealing, his mother declares,
    "Let justice prevail." And so it does: She wins just about every hand.

    It all comes together in the splendid penultimate poem, "Mystery Farm
    Road," where two boys meet in memory and imagination thanks to "a book
    read one summer ... in Alexandria." That boy, Djanikian tells himself,
    "reading a book / and mouthing the words "huckleberry and harvest /
    that will cast a spell on him for years ... that boy is you." But so is
    "the boy by the river / baring his calves under the black willows."

    For all its focus upon the lives and customs of Armenians, this book
    makes you proud to be an American.

    http://www.southbendtribune.com/apps/pb cs.dll/article?AID=/20070701/Lives04/707010439/-1/ LIVES/CAT=Lives04

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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