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Kiss
Me, I'm Slavic
Third year for the Slavic Festival
BY VANESSA SALVIA
I'm betting you've never seen a "Kiss Me, I'm Slavic" T-shirt
on a thrift store rack, but Matt Ivashov and the organizers of this year's Slavic
Festival hope that someday you will. For a number of years the Slavic Festival was
only for members of the Slavic community. But the Slavic Festival was opened to
the public in 2006, and the response has been great. "With every festival it's growing
year after year," says Ivashov, who was born in the Soviet Union and emigrated to
the United States with his family in 1986. He's been in Eugene since 1997, and in
addition to his volunteer work around the community and for the Slavic Festival,
he's focused on becoming a U.S. citizen.
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| Voronezhskie Devchata ("Voronezh Girls")
make the sexy photo pose, yes? |
Many people simply do not know what Slavic culture is, according
to Ivashov, nor do they appreciate its great diversity and richness of heritage.
Slavic people include Russians, Belarusians, Ukrainians, Poles, Czechs, Slovaks,
Slovenians, Croats, Bosnians, Serbs, Montenegrins, Macedonians and Bulgarians. "Our
mission is diversity, so people can learn about other cultures and be aware of other
cultures," Ivashov says. "A lot of people perceive Eastern Europe as just this former
communist bloc, and there's a lot more to it than that. And for a long time people
couldn't travel and they couldn't spread their culture."
Slavic Festival 2008 encompasses special events at various venues
over January 17-26. Visit Springfield's Regional Sports Center January 19-20 for
an entertainment stage with an amazing array of talent, a kids' area and food prepared
by Eugene's Eastern European grocery store and deli, Zolotoy Petushok ("Golden Rooster").
The kids will get to make Russian beregynya (rug) dolls, decorate Easter
eggs (pysanka), decorate plates, make clay animal figures and make and decorate
traditional Russian head-pieces (kokoshnik). If that's not enough to keep
them happy, there's a marathon of Russian cartoons, and Slavic music and storytelling.
The entertainment lineup sounds thrilling. Russian vocal and dance
ensemble Voronezhskie Devchata ("Voronezh Girls") performs lyrical songs
sung by women. Their performances are versatile enough to find them interpreting
both traditional Russian choral folklore and contemporary pieces. Ukrainian violin
virtuoso Sergey Ryabtsev (who also performs with New York's "gypsy punk"
band Gogol Bordello) will appear, performing solo as well as with his group Barynya.
Barynya performs Russian, Ukrainian, Russian Gypsy, Cossack and Klezmer dancing
and music. Vilona features two lovely girls who will amaze you with their
violin takes on folk, classic and rock tunes. And Eugene's own Trio Voronezh performs their repertoire of the classical works of Bach, Vivaldi, Tchaikovsky and
Schubert, Russian folk music and popular tunes. Dance ensemble Veselka will
present Ukrainian traditions through dance and song, and Ivan da Marya presents
folk dance and musical modernizations of traditional Russian folk music. One North
Dakota couple with Czechoslovakian ancestry, Richard and Judie Kardmas, plays
Czech and German songs from the '40s and '50s. There's even a professional opera
singer, Anna Kazakova-Simpson, booked.
It's difficult to choose which of the additional events is the
most exciting. The musical play An Old Fairy Tale in New World or How the Style
of Three Made a Joyless Princess Laugh is a modern retelling of an old folk
tale. The Hult Center's "Star Filled Russian Nights — The Slavic Wonderland"
brings together many of these performers for a one-time only gala concert with dance,
songs, music and costumes from their many Slavic homes. "It brings together people
who love life, love having a good time, and learning about other cultures," Ivashov
says.
Slavic Festival 2008. Jan.
17-26. Various locations and admission fees. For full schedule, see www.slavichome.org
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