Zareh Vorpuni
Zareh Vorpuni (Armenian Զարեհ Որբունի) (Born Ordu, Ottoman Empire May 24, 1902 - died Paris, France December, 1980) was a prominent Armenian novelist, editor, and writer.[1][2]
Life
Zareh Vorpuni was born Zareh Oksuzian in Ordu, a city in Turkey on the southeastern shore of the Black Sea. He received his early education at the local Movsisian school. His father was killed during the 1915 Armenian genocide, but his mother managed to flee to Sevastopol, Crimea, with her four children. After a year the family moved to Constantinople, where Zareh attended (1919–22) the Berberian school, and in 1922 they moved to France.[1] They lived in Marseilles for two years, then in Paris (1924–30) and Strasbourg (1930-37). From his early days in France Zareh was an avid reader, acquainting himself with European intellectual trends and prominent works of French literature, particularly those of Marcel Proust.[1]
Literary Activity
Vorpuni belonged to the group of promising young Armenian intellectuals-among them Nigoghos Sarafian, Vazgen Shushanian, Shahan Shahnur, and Hrach Zardarian: mostly orphans of the Armenian genocide-who emigrated to France in the early 1920s and produced literature that derived its themes from the social, cultural, moral, and psychological distresses of the emigres and their deep concerns about the eventual loss of their ethnic identity.[1] In Paris he and Bedros Zaroyan jointly edited two short-lived periodicals, Nor Havatk (New Faith, 1924) and Lusabats (Daybreak, 1938–39).[2] In 1939, at the beginning of World War II, he was called up for service in the French army. He was captured and held prisoner of war in Germany until the end of the war in 1945. Recollections of his prison days appear in a cycle of ten short stories called I Khorots Srdi (From the bottom of my heart).[2]
His first novel, Portsi (The attempt, 1929) depicts the hard life of an Armenian immigrant family of four plucked out of their native land and transplanted to Marseilles, where they suffer the impact of a totally strange environment.[1] Portsi is the first volume of a quartet, intended by the author to be published under the collective title Halatzvatzneri (The persecuted). However, the succeeding three volumes - Tegnatzun (The candidate, 1967), Asfalti (Asphalt, 1972), and Sovoragan or mi (An ordinary day, 1974) were not published until much later. In Tegnatsun the main character, Vahagn, embodies the tormented young generation that bore the psychological trauma of the Armenian genocide and remained its victims, leaving a moral legacy to the entire nation.[1] In the other two volumes the author delves more deeply into the psychology of his characters, probing the sources of their anguish. However, almost all his characters, no matter how battered, are firmly determined to survive.[1]
Of primary significance among Vorpuni's writing are his three volumes of short stories, Vartsu Senyag (Room for rent, 1946), Andzrevot orer (Rainy days, 1958), and Patmvatzkner (Stories, 1966).[1] In these tales he bares the hidden emotions and mental anguish of his characters and deplores the disintegration of the Armenian identity as it gradually becomes a burden for the new generation. The subtle presence of the Armenian genocide is felt through these narratives.[2]
In 1946 Vorpuni visited Soviet Armenia and recorded his impression in Tebi Yerkir, Husher Hayreniki n Hayreniken (Memories from the homeland, 1947). Another important work is the novel Yev yeghev mard (And there was man, 1965).[1] The title was later reused for a collection of his works published in Yerevan in 1967 that includes Portsi, Yev yeghev mard, and other short stories.[2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 J. Hacikyan, Agop (2005). The Heritage of Armenian Literature From The Eighteenth Century To Modern Times. Detroit: Wayne State Univ Pr. pp. 1007–1008. ISBN 9780814332214. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 B. Bardakjian, Kevork (2000). A reference guide to modern Armenian literature, 1500-1920: with an introductory history. Introduction by Kevork B. Bardakjian. Detroit: Wayne State Univ. Press. p. 444. ISBN 9780814327470. Retrieved 17 December 2012.