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  • A tightly woven family tradition

    Salt Lake Tribune, Utah
    May 21 2006

    A tightly woven family tradition
    Utahn keeps art of Armenian rug-weaving alive

    By Brandon Griggs
    The Salt Lake Tribune


    George Aposhian Jr. and his daughter, Diane Moffat, display a rug.
    (Danny Chan La/The Salt Lake Tribune )

    As a structural engineer, George Aposhian Jr. helped design
    buildings. As a rugmaker, he knots ornate wool carpets. Guess which
    project takes more time.
    "It doesn't take as long to build a skyscraper as it does to make
    a carpet," says the Holladay man, whose first carpet took him nine
    years to finish. "It takes a lot of patience."
    That patience will be on display this afternoon at the 21st annual
    Living Traditions Festival, where Aposhian and his daughter Diane
    will demonstrate the time-honored and time-consuming art of Armenian
    rug-weaving. It's a skill Aposhian learned from his father, who
    learned it from his father.
    The carpets are beautiful and functional, but to Aposhian they are
    more than that - they are physical links to his Armenian heritage.
    The first rug he made was based on a decorative pattern passed down
    by his grandfather, who immigrated to Utah in 1909. Without his
    carpets, the man may not have completed the journey.
    The story, and it's a good one, goes like this: Zadik Moses
    Aposhian was a successful rug merchant in Turkey in 1898 when two LDS
    missionaries gave him a copy of The Book of Mormon. He read the book
    in three days, felt divinely inspired and, along with his wife,
    Catherine, converted to Mormonism three weeks later.
    But the Aposhians' new religion did not sit well with the other
    Turks in their village, who shunned them and stopped buying Zadik's
    rugs. After a decade of persecution, the Aposhians decided to flee
    with their seven children to Utah. It was an arduous journey that
    took them from Turkey to Lebanon, to Egypt, to France and then to
    England. Along the way they were robbed twice.
    Their odyssey stalled in Liverpool, where Zadik was forced to work
    as a laborer to support his family. To fund their trans-Atlantic
    crossing, Zadik sold his two remaining carpets, which had been hidden
    from thieves at the bottom of his trunk. But when it came time to
    depart, their three oldest children accidentally boarded the wrong
    ship. By the time their parents realized the mistake, the ship had
    sailed.
    The remaining six Aposhians traveled by boat to Montreal, and then
    by train to Salt Lake City. On the train they bought several oranges
    from a man who took Zadik's last $20 and promised to return with the
    change. He never came back. When the family finally arrived in Utah,
    they were penniless. The couple finally got some good news when their
    three oldest children were located in Mexico and reunited with them
    in Salt Lake City.
    In Utah, Zadik Aposhian found work in a silver mine and later in a
    brick factory. He never sold his carpets again. But he continued to
    make rugs for his family's use, and passed along his skills to a son,
    George Sr. George owned an automobile-repair shop but made a few rugs
    in his spare time and eventually built a loom for his son, George Jr.

    The elder George manned an Armenian rug-weaving booth at the first
    Living Traditions


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    festival in 1986 before turning it over to his son several years
    later. An Aposhian has shown the family's handsome rugs at the
    festival ever since.
    "It's about preserving the family tradition," says George Aposhian
    Jr., 78, who thinks of his late grandfather every time he works on a
    rug. "He was a man who made his living making carpets. I couldn't see
    not carrying it on."
    Like most Oriental rugs, an Aposhian carpet represents countless
    hours spent meticulously knotting thousands of colored wool threads
    into a pattern stretched vertically on a hand-made wooden loom.
    Completing a horizontal row of knots takes about an hour, and each
    carpet has hundreds of rows.
    "People will watch me . . . and say, 'How can you stand to do
    that?' " says Aposhian, who works on a loom in his living room. "It's
    fun to watch the pattern grow. But the real satisfaction is cutting
    [the finished carpet] off the loom and putting it on the floor."
    Aposhian made looms for each of his four children. But only one,
    Diane Moffat, has kept the family tradition going. Moffat began
    weaving on her own about 10 years ago, thanks largely to years spent
    assisting her father at Living Traditions.
    "I doubt I would have ever started if it wasn't for the festival,"
    says the Salt Lake City woman, who likes rug-weaving because she
    feels connected to her Armenian ancestors. "Your fingers are doing
    the same thing that their fingers were doing . . . back in history as
    carpetmakers."
    Moffat and her father hope to give people a deeper appreciation
    for the artistry and hard work that go into crafting a carpet. In an
    age when machines can crank out a credible-looking Oriental rug in a
    few hours, the Aposhians also hope to keep their family's heritage
    alive.

    ---
    Contact Brandon Griggs at [email protected] or 801-257-8689. Send
    comments to [email protected].

    Dream weavers

    George Aposhian Jr. and his daughter, Diane Moffat, will
    demonstrate the art of Armenian rugweaving from noon to 7 p.m. today
    in Canopy C on the grounds of the City-County Building, 450 S. 200
    East, Salt Lake City. The crafts demonstrations are part of the 21st
    annual Living Traditions festival, which celebrates Utah's ethnic
    diversity with food, crafts and live music. Festival hours today are
    noon to 7 p.m. Admission is free.
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