Award-winning playwright Heather Raffo was at a family wedding in Damascus in 2006 when she decided to go for a walk by herself. "Fifteen people in my family stood up to come with me," Raffo recalled. "Damascus was perfectly safe. But what's considered normal in America — that I would have some alone time — is not seen the same way [in the Mideast]. The community attachment is huge."
Raffo, a Michigan native whose father emigrated from Iraq and married her American mother, explores the tension between two mythos she carries in her veins. The idea from her American side is rugged individualism, that you can do anything you want to actualize your goals. But you can't abandon family or group in the process. That part comes from her Mideast heritage. Both deeply held notions are in conflict in "Noura," which previews Saturday at the Guthrie Theater.
Raffo's play, which explores motherhood, marriage and identity, is partly inspired by the lead character in Ibsen's "A Doll's House," who leaves her 19th-century family for a life of her own.
"The bridge between community and individualism is something I carry daily, and that's something the world is confronting more and more," Raffo said.
"Noura" kicks the Guthrie's first celebration of Arab and Arab-American artistry into high year. Last fall the theater hosted Kathryn Haddad's "Zafira and the Resistance," about an Arab-American teacher falsely accused of proselytizing for Islam.
In addition to "Noura," the celebration this month includes tour productions of Hanane Hajj Ali's "Jogging," a dreamy work about Medea, exercise and artistic freedom in Beirut (Jan. 29-Feb. 2), and Amir Nizar Zuabi's "Grey Rock," about a Palestinian TV repairman who is building a rocket to the moon in his shed (Jan. 23-26).
Together, the Guthrie shows offer expansive views of Arab and Arab-American life and culture beyond such signifiers as turbans, fairy-tale genies and talk of terrorists in the news.
"When we conceived the series, the idea was to shine a light on Arab and Arab-American artistry and to look at it through multiple lenses, not expressly political," said Guthrie artistic director Joseph Haj. "When the U.S. finds itself in challenging moments in the Middle East, what happens to so many Arab-Americans is the propaganda machine gets going, and it becomes so large, entire populations are demonized."