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Music: Local Musician Celebrates Armenians' Resilience

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  • Music: Local Musician Celebrates Armenians' Resilience

    LOCAL MUSICIAN CELEBRATES ARMENIANS' RESILIENCE

    Worcester Telegram
    April 10 2015

    By Richard Duckett TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF

    When the Ed Melikian Ensemble performs during dinner Friday evening
    at the Third International Graduate Students' Conference for Holocaust
    and Genocide Studies taking place at Clark University in Worcester, it
    will be more than just a prestigious engagement at an important event.

    The music could speak from the heart about much that the conference,
    running April 9-12, is pondering.

    The ensemble will play Armenian music, Melikian said. "Some of it is
    rather sorrowful. Some of it is brighter and happier." The sadness is
    for the 1.5 million people who died during the Armenian Genocide of
    1915-23 at the hands of Turkey's Ottoman Empire. But the music also
    gives note "to the fact we're still here," Melikian said. "We still
    carry on with our traditions and music and life."

    The first genocide of the 20th century started nearly 100 years ago
    the night of April 24, 1915, when more than 600 leading Armenians in
    Constantinople (now Istanbul), Turkey's capital, were arrested, taken
    out of the city and executed. A paranoid government had chosen the
    wrong side to back in World War I and was seeing enemies everywhere,
    especially in its Armenian minority population.

    The Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark
    University is hosting the conference for which scholars from around
    the world have convened for lectures and workshops on the theme of
    "Emerging Scholarship in Holocaust and Genocide Studies 100 Years
    After the Armenian Genocide."

    The Ed Melikian Ensemble will follow the private engagement at the
    conference Friday with its regular second-Saturday-of-the-month
    performance at Sahara Restaurant, 143 Highland St., Worcester,
    starting at 9:30 p.m. April 11.

    Melikian plays the oud, a short-necked, half-pear-shaped string
    instrument that dates back to ancient Persia and is featured in
    Armenian and Turkish music, Jewish music, and much of the music of
    the Middle East. "It's the forerunner to the lute. It's the forerunner
    to the guitar. It's a very unique sound," Melikian said.

    Melikian's father loved Armenian and Turkish music and would play
    recordings by groups.

    "I would listen to them. I was just mesmerized by the music,"
    Melikian said.

    One year his sister gave him a ukulele as a birthday present. Then
    "I graduated to mandolin." He got his first oud when he was around 16.

    One of his first public performances was at a party celebrating an
    Armenian couple's 50th wedding anniversary in Worcester.

    Meanwhile, Melikian remembers that as a child he would often be awoken
    by the sound of his father having nightmares and his mother trying
    to comfort him.

    "I couldn't figure out why until I got much older," he said.

    Both his father and mother were survivors of the Armenian Genocide.

    They were from the Turkish city of Sivas (Sepastia from historical
    Armenia) although they did not know each other there. Melikian's father
    lived just outside the city and tended sheep for a Turkish family. "The
    family actually protected him, so in good conscience I can't blame all
    Turks for what happened. It was the Ottoman government," Melikian said.

    His mother's father was a barber in Sivas, and his customers included
    Turkish officials who evidently liked him enough to warn him to
    take his family and flee. One day he was told, "You won't be harmed,
    but you have to leave," Melikian said.

    It has been documented that thousands of Armenians were force-marched
    into the desert where they perished.

    Melikian isn't sure what his parents saw. "Neither one of them talked
    very much about what happened or how they got out," he said.

    His father settled in Worcester, his mother in Springfield. "They
    got fixed up by relatives."

    Melikian was born in Worcester, and the family lived first on Chandler
    Street ("there were many Armenian families in the Chandler Street
    area," Melikian said) and then the Greendale section of Worcester.

    Melikian now lives in North Grafton.

    Worcester and Fresno, California, were the two major places Armenian
    immigrants gravitated to from the late 19th century on. In Worcester,
    the new immigrants worked in the mills. The Armenian Church of the
    Martyrs in Worcester was the first Protestant Armenian Church in the
    Western Hemisphere. Worcester was also the first parish of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church in America -- the Armenian Church of Our Saviour.

    Times change, but the Turkish government has never recognized that
    there was an Armenian Genocide.

    Adolf Hitler, however, knew about it. A week before invading Poland
    in 1939 and precipitating World War II, Hitler said to his generals:
    "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?

    The world believes in success only."

    "We won't let anyone forget what happened," Melikian said. "There
    are lots of events around April 24."

    The music also plays on. Melikian has played with groups at many area
    clubs, and had performed as far away as Honduras.

    "I've done the gamut for Middle Eastern music, including belly dance
    music," Melikian said. He is also a member of the group Jubilee
    Gardens, and is one of the alternating hosts of the radio station
    WCUW 91.3 FM program "Music of the Whole Earth," which airs every
    Saturday from 4 to 6 p.m.

    The Ed Melikian Ensemble is led by Melikian, oud; Leon Janikian,
    clarinet; Ken Kalajian, guitar; and David Gevorkian, duduk (an Armenian
    wind instrument). Other musicians also join. The group will play a
    good deal of Armenian music at the Sahara Restaurant on Saturday. Its
    repertoire is world music from Anatolia, Asia Minor and the Middle
    East, and there is usually a lot of dancing, including belly dancing.

    The ensemble has been a popular attraction there for a while.

    "The audience is a real mix," Melikian said.

    Upcoming events to mark the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    include a march from Lincoln Street tunnel to Worcester City Hall
    starting at noon April 18. The march will be followed by remarks
    from civic leaders, the planting of a Genocide Memorial Tree, and an
    ecumenical service at 2:15 p.m. in St. Paul's Cathedral, 38 High St.

    At 6 p.m. April 24 there will be a service in Armenian Church of Our
    Saviour, 87 Salisbury St., Worcester.

    http://www.telegram.com/article/20150410/NEWS/304109941/1312

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