Announcement

Collapse

Forum Rules (Everyone Must Read!!!)

1] What you CAN NOT post.

You agree, through your use of this service, that you will not use this forum to post any material which is:
- abusive
- vulgar
- hateful
- harassing
- personal attacks
- obscene

You also may not:
- post images that are too large (max is 500*500px)
- post any copyrighted material unless the copyright is owned by you or cited properly.
- post in UPPER CASE, which is considered yelling
- post messages which insult the Armenians, Armenian culture, traditions, etc
- post racist or other intentionally insensitive material that insults or attacks another culture (including Turks)

The Ankap thread is excluded from the strict rules because that place is more relaxed and you can vent and engage in light insults and humor. Notice it's not a blank ticket, but just a place to vent. If you go into the Ankap thread, you enter at your own risk of being clowned on.
What you PROBABLY SHOULD NOT post...
Do not post information that you will regret putting out in public. This site comes up on Google, is cached, and all of that, so be aware of that as you post. Do not ask the staff to go through and delete things that you regret making available on the web for all to see because we will not do it. Think before you post!


2] Use descriptive subject lines & research your post. This means use the SEARCH.

This reduces the chances of double-posting and it also makes it easier for people to see what they do/don't want to read. Using the search function will identify existing threads on the topic so we do not have multiple threads on the same topic.

3] Keep the focus.

Each forum has a focus on a certain topic. Questions outside the scope of a certain forum will either be moved to the appropriate forum, closed, or simply be deleted. Please post your topic in the most appropriate forum. Users that keep doing this will be warned, then banned.

4] Behave as you would in a public location.

This forum is no different than a public place. Behave yourself and act like a decent human being (i.e. be respectful). If you're unable to do so, you're not welcome here and will be made to leave.

5] Respect the authority of moderators/admins.

Public discussions of moderator/admin actions are not allowed on the forum. It is also prohibited to protest moderator actions in titles, avatars, and signatures. If you don't like something that a moderator did, PM or email the moderator and try your best to resolve the problem or difference in private.

6] Promotion of sites or products is not permitted.

Advertisements are not allowed in this venue. No blatant advertising or solicitations of or for business is prohibited.
This includes, but not limited to, personal resumes and links to products or
services with which the poster is affiliated, whether or not a fee is charged
for the product or service. Spamming, in which a user posts the same message repeatedly, is also prohibited.

7] We retain the right to remove any posts and/or Members for any reason, without prior notice.


- PLEASE READ -

Members are welcome to read posts and though we encourage your active participation in the forum, it is not required. If you do participate by posting, however, we expect that on the whole you contribute something to the forum. This means that the bulk of your posts should not be in "fun" threads (e.g. Ankap, Keep & Kill, This or That, etc.). Further, while occasionally it is appropriate to simply voice your agreement or approval, not all of your posts should be of this variety: "LOL Member213!" "I agree."
If it is evident that a member is simply posting for the sake of posting, they will be removed.


8] These Rules & Guidelines may be amended at any time. (last update September 17, 2009)

If you believe an individual is repeatedly breaking the rules, please report to admin/moderator.
See more
See less

Cultural Horizons of Armenians

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

    3 of 3

    GURDJIEFF: THE FOUNDER OF AMERICAN MYSTICISM
    By Roya Monajem, Tehran

    Payvand News
    11/06/07
    ......................
    On the other hand, each one of us is a legion, perhaps in order to
    make it easier for us to understand each other, to understand the
    concept of 'unity in multiplicity' or in Sadi's words to understand
    the fact that 'sons of Adam are organs of the same body' and "because
    they did not see the Truth, went after Myth" (Hafez) In other words,
    we actually and potentially carry all personalities in this legion for
    a purpose: to reach a better understanding of ourselves because one
    can only understand things that one experiences within oneself. In
    other words, in this way one may accelerate the process of sensing,
    feeling and thinking of unity in multiplicity and vice versa. The
    aim of the concept of reincarnation and life after Resurrection
    and Day of Judgment may also be the same. Whether they are true or
    not, they point to the same thing: 'one will pay for one's deeds'
    (karma). The idea of 'humans as being a legion' can be helpful in
    this regard because in order to decrease 'evil deeds' in ourselves,
    learned men suggest: "Know yourself." In G's teaching the first step
    begins with self-observation in this manner: we become the camera
    woman or man of ourselves, as much as we remember. It is not that
    difficult because I don't think there is now not a single person in
    our world who has not wished to be a film star and has not identified
    herself/himself with one of them! And when one identifies oneself
    with any personality, one learns to play that role. Ignoring the
    more important fact that most of the time, whether by 'free will,'
    'free choice' or coercion, we are acting. In any case, supposing we
    honestly and sincerely wish to 'know ourselves,' by playing the role
    of the camera man or woman of the film of our lives, we gradually
    see that a series of 'I's appearing nearly everyday, seizing the
    reign of the 'common presence of our legion.' For example, we might
    notice that everyday a nervous person appears and depending on the
    surrounding condition, shows itself once or twice a day and is then
    replaced with for example, a lazy 'I' or a worried 'I' or...and...

    This film-making helps us to experience more fully the reactions and
    moods of these different 'I's, and if the real 'I' that would hopefully
    be born little by little from the Nothingness of the pettiness of
    our existence succeeds in taking their reigns in its hand, then when
    this happens, we add say one 'carat' to that diamond or Persian
    turquoise that we carry on our brace and is called 'essence.' In
    other words, we reach peace with the same number of 'I's and 'unify'
    with them and experience some heavenly moments until the next 'round'
    the next cycle starts. And if we fail to take their reign, we keep
    reproducing the same film-script over and over and pay the price in
    the form of reactions we receive from outside and thus 'the melody of
    grief continues'[11] till the last day of our lives. For those who
    think and believe that is the end, well that is the end. For those
    who believe in the first above concept (reincarnation), we continue
    to pay the price in a series of lives by in this very same world,
    and in the other concept we pay it in another world. As it can be
    seen the difference between these two seemingly different concepts
    is just a difference in time-space.

    Now on the basis of all that has been said, if we accept that it is
    according to Nature or Divine providence to have different types of
    human beings, then the subsequent divisions have to automatically
    follow; the fall of Mazdakism in Ancient Persia, Socialism and
    Communism in modern Europe present further evidence for this claim,
    that is human divisions into different categories. The main question
    is how is it that despite this concept of war of good and bad now
    encoded in two of our brains (instinctive and mental), thanks to all
    religions and moralities so far appearing and existing on earth,
    with the obvious result that every 'other human being' depending
    on the degree of differences - from racial to tribal, to religious,
    cultural, familial and... - will deep down can appear 'evil' to each
    of us, how is it that we don't explode out of anger or tear 'others'
    into pieces, for the simple fact that these 'others' can not share our
    'world view,' 'our perceptions' our 'conceptions' and...?

    There is only one answer! It is even possible to hear all of us singing
    it in our hearts: It is the heavenly feeling of Love, located in the
    third center that is preventing this most natural consequence of our
    historical way of thinking.

    Now if the above claim sounds sensible that G taps this center by
    using emotional words - isn't this what poetry does to us?

    - then based on above explanations, when this center is tapped,
    three other impulses are simultaneously tickled too, conscience,
    faith and hope.

    In addition to the above and some other emotional words seen in this
    work, there is one word that is repeated at least once in nearly
    every page or so of these Tales: favorite, mahboob.

    Human beings are Beelzebub's grandson's favorites! It is a word that
    in most of our mystical poetical writings is one of the commonest
    equivalents of man's ultimate 'beloved,' god.

    When we see this word which is now a part of our collective memory,
    knowingly or unknowingly it brings about associations that in addition
    to tackling our emotional center, it tickles the emotional part of our
    physical center as well. On the other hand, considering the root of
    the word emotion, (stirring up, incite, agitate), any emotional word
    then should put into motion something in our mental center too. In
    other words, it should refer us to an emotional experience as the
    result of which an emotional state arises in us whether we become
    aware of it or not! All in all, each time we read this or similar
    words, all our three centers are stimulated, but each time with new
    impressions that arise from information and knowledge obtained from
    the part we are reading. Now remembering that the place of conscience
    is in the same center, when this center is tapped, our conscience
    is tickled too. Then according to G's description of conscience:
    "a state in which a man feels all at once everything that in general
    feels or can feel,"[12] then many of our habitual self-deceptions,
    self-righteousness, self-justifications, partialities, and...will
    naturally and automatically gradually fall into pieces. And this
    opens the way for further purification of this important center for
    our conscious individual development and evolution. It is apparently
    through this center that we get connected to our higher centers.

    It is here that we can understand better the meaning of the story
    G relates in the first chapter of this book as a warning, the story
    of a villager who buys a whole kilo of red pepper, thinking that it
    should be a tasty fruit, and starts eating them, ignoring the burning
    he is experiencing in his whole being. And again according to him,
    god forbid if one reads this book just as a matter of curiosity! Like
    that poor villager, one of the 'I's of this legion writing these lines
    who ignored G's warning was badly burning and scorching all the time.

    As this may happen to others too, then with a relatively long
    experience in medical field, I have a suggestion that may salve and
    ease this burning and scorching.

    The sense and feeling of our 'weaknesses', 'selfishness',
    'self-deceptions', 'wishful thinking' 'day-dreaming', 'foolish
    prejudices and partialities', 'vain self-justification' and... is
    indeed hellish!

    When we start acting as a camera man or woman of our personal life,
    that is start the process of self-observation, it is necessary to
    try to remember one thing that can be called the second step in
    G's teaching: we should remember not to identify with any of 'I's we
    film. For example, when we observe a lazy 'I', we should remember that
    our whole 'common presence' is not lazy, but we just have a strong
    or weak lazy I, shared by all humans. That's why laziness (sloth)
    is a sin in Christianity. Secondly, it helps to search for instances
    in life that we were not lazy at all, like in childhood when we were
    always ready to play and never felt lazy in this regard. Or even now,
    when we wish to do something with our whole being, like taking a trip
    to a land we always wished to visit, or...In such instances the lazy
    I immediately disappears. We do the same thing with all our 'weak,'
    'negative' or 'evil' 'I's, that is we search for their opposites,
    that is our 'positive' activities, the 'sacrifices' we make and...

    Not identifying ourselves with any 'I's whether positive or negative,
    means to remember our real self. Each time we say this is not I,
    willy-nilly we remember that divine particle we carry in our 'heart'
    that will be revealed only after we manage to see the veils of our
    vain empty egoism.

    You are your own veil Hafez / Rise up (and free yourself from them
    all)[13]

    We separate ourselves from each I of the legion, to get closer to
    our real I. Such long way! G comes to help again. He says: "study of
    laws of the world of creation and existence (which is what this book
    is all about) frees the third force that is the reconciling force.

    This is perhaps the 'peace and reconciliation' we feel when reading
    sacred books or mystical poetry. We might not feel it as openly when
    reading Beelzebub, because G intentionally sends our 'I's into the
    battlefield and in this war of "Iran and Turan"[14] like any other war
    'they don't distribute halva (sweet).' And the main reason for this
    may be that according to G this third or reconciling force always
    arises from friction and opposition of the other two sources, called
    active or affirming and passive or denying forces. So when this war
    reaches its peak, manifested each time we watch a part of the film we
    are making of our lives and realize our 'nothingness' 'powerlessness'
    'will-less-ness' and the bitter truth that 'we can do' almost nothing
    with our own initiative, or put it another way, we are always under
    the domination of outside influences, and because this time we truly
    wish to 'know ourselves' and thus close the normal habitual doors of
    escapes, we naturally can feel even suicidal, it really helps if we
    remind ourselves of the presence of the above reconciling force that
    arises from the war between the two legions of our 'good' and 'bad'
    'I's (inner good and evil) and this is a law and it can't be otherwise
    as much as the sun -at least under normal conditions - can not rise
    from the west, and wish beforehand that whenever this reconciling force
    arises, something in us uses it to back up and strengthen the legion
    of those 'I's that wish to stay on the path of goodness and love. And
    we can be sure that our 'common presence' knows what this something is,
    because as mentioned above, G promises that fortunately the impulse of
    'conscience' together with the other three impulses, i.e.

    faith, hope and love have not been completely destroyed and uprooted
    in us. One of the qualities of the force of goodness is to evoke love
    and forgiveness in us and what is more healing than this? Can there
    be a more beautiful heaven than what we find inside ourselves when
    filled with love?

    [1] Ouspensky was one of G's most famous pupils and apparently
    G's groups in US suggest that anybody interested to learn about G's
    teachings should start with this book. The Persian translation of this
    book by the translator has been published by Elmi Publishing (2007).

    [2] See G's Life is Real, only then when "I am."

    [3] I know it is very unscholarly, but I really don't remember whether
    I have read this or heard it in a documentary film about G's life.

    [4] It should be mentioned here that the sense and feeling I get from
    G's style of writing reminds me very much of our Persian writers of
    the past, before the invention of grammar here. Some of them still
    live. They use same long sentences without commas, full stops or
    question marks. It is quite possible that the translation of this
    work into English had been much harder than into Persian. G's style
    can be due to his origin, being born in Caucasus and getting a part
    of his teachings from Persian speaking people of the region.

    [5] Not a poetical translation! The verse is har kasi az zan khod
    shod yaar man.

    [6] G suggests that we should read this book three times, and because I
    translated the work, typed it, edited it and corrected it as well, I am
    counting the times I went over it as all these different personalities!

    [7] See B's Tales...chapter 26, Terror of the Situation.

    [8] See Jacob Needleman and George Baker, Gurdjieff, Continuum, 1996.

    This book is a collection of articles written by significant American
    and European figures influenced by G's teaching.

    [9] There is a discussion with Ouspensky in this regard in the same
    mentioned book. In addition, Rhonda Byrne's The Secret, may be looked
    at another evidence for this claim.

    [10] The source of exact or free quotations in this note is
    Beelzebub... unless stated.

    [11] Sohrab Sepehri.

    [12] In search of Miraculous, chapter 8.

    [13] A verse impossible to translate, I had to add that interpretation
    to show the point.

    [14] In our now called legendary history recorded mainly in Ferdosi's
    epic, Shahnameh, this is a never ending war, that symbolizes the war
    of good and bad.


    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

      RARE ARMENIAN MANUSCRIPTS DAZZLE AND DELIGHT

      Swissinfo

      Nov 22 2007
      Switzerland

      An exhibition of exquisitely illustrated Armenian manuscripts
      has opened for the first time in Switzerland at the Martin Bodmer
      Foundation in Cologny near Geneva.

      The documents of great cultural importance reveal how ancient and
      medieval Armenian literature was dominated by both Christian thought
      and scientific curiosity.

      "This exhibition is truly unique," said exhibition curator Valentina
      Calzolari. "It's the first time that Armenian manuscripts, a majority
      of which come from Armenia's famous library, the Matenadaran, have
      ever been shown in Switzerland."

      Armenia, which shares borders with Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan and
      Iran, is one of the earliest Christian civilisations.

      It has a rich cultural heritage, the result of being repeatedly
      invaded and spending many years under Turkish or Persian control.

      Despite that, the Armenian language and identity has survived largely
      intact.

      Around 40 manuscripts, dating from the ninth to the 17th century,
      are on display at the "Illuminations of Armenia" exhibition.

      Calzolari, who is also the director of the Armenian Research Centre
      at Geneva University, said the religious element was very important
      during this period. Armenians, she said, were and still are a
      "Christian people par excellence".

      She said that historians had always sought to find elements of national
      identity in Christian thought and in literature. This has manifested
      itself in translations of the Bible and in religious writings.

      Scientific side

      But this is not the only side to the Armenians, who "have been
      interested from the very beginning of their literary endeavours in
      the sciences too. They have always been fascinated by everything that
      was not considered sacred," said Calzolari.

      "Therefore we also have astrological manuscripts, musical manuscripts
      and historical ones which tell of the exploits of Alexander the Great."

      There are many rarities among the texts, such as the first ever
      manuscript miniature on a non-religious subject: a book of hymns
      depicting scenes from an epic 5th-century battle fought between the
      Armenians and the Persians.

      "On two of the pages you can admire the Persians on the one side,
      with their elephants," said Calzolari. "And on the other, Armenian
      general Vardan Mamikonian with his valiant companions, in the midst of
      strenuously defending the Christian faith but also - and above all -
      the Christian identity of the Armenians."

      Also shown are Armenian versions of philosophical texts. One of them
      includes a commentary by the great Armenian scholar, the Neo-Platonist
      Davide Invitto, who neatly encapsulates the country's dual interest
      in subjects both religious and secular.

      Next to it is a plain, sober manuscript containing no illustrations,
      "but is of major importance", according to Calzolari.

      "It's one of the first medical texts. It's not a translation of a
      Greek, Syrian or Arab text, but one written directly in Armenian by
      [the founder of Armenian medieval medicine] Mekhitar Heratsi."

      Zodiac

      Another curiosity shows the astrological sign of Pisces. The text
      around it explains the zodiac, and includes an astrolabe - an early
      way of helping to tell the time - as well as some songs.

      Calzolari says it was almost certainly used by merchants on their
      travels to help read the skies and alleviate periods of boredom.

      The "Illuminations of Armenia" exhibition is also showing a series of
      photographs, taken by French religious art and architecture historian,
      Regis Labourdette, depicting the architectural dimensions of the
      cross as used in 7th-century Armenian churches.

      "It was the intention of the organisers... to show these two symbols
      of the continuity of Armenian culture: the book and the stone -
      the churches," said Calzolari. "Because this is what they are still
      considered to be by the Armenians today."
      What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

        MIRROR IMAGE
        By Michelle Mastro

        Glendale News Press, CA
        Nov 15 2007

        Area artist uses rearview theme to showcase her philosophy of living
        in the 'Nanopresent,' looking toward what could be.

        Artist Seta Injeyan works on a painting in her home studio on
        Thursday. (Roger Wilson/News-Press)

        If 18th-century romantic poet William Wordsworth were alive today,
        he and local artist and quasi-philosopher Seta Injeyan might have
        something to gab about.

        Wordsworth dubbed the composing of poetry the "spontaneous overflow
        of powerful feelings." With her paintbrush, Injeyan experiences a
        parallel transformation.

        "I think about ideas, but once I start painting, I put away my
        conscious thoughts and paint with my unconscious self," the Glendale
        resident said. "I start with an idea, and then the idea becomes a
        part of me."

        Injeyan's unconscious self is constantly stumbling upon new avenues
        of imagination. Her previous artistic endeavor, pictures of cloudy
        skies with fish in flight, plays upon our perceptions of reality and
        can attest to her creative and philosophical ingenuity.

        Injeyan's solo exhibition, "In the Nanopresent" - her latest art
        series named after the term she coined - opens Friday at the Harvest
        Gallery in Glendale. The idea of the "Nanopresent" for Injeyan is
        the precise moment in which we leave what was and look ahead to the
        prospect of what could be. In the exhibition "In the Nanopresent,"
        this sliver of time, the here and now, is found in the driver's seat.

        "My art is very, very contemporary. Instead of still-life images,
        I use things like rearview mirrors," Injeyan said. "In the car, we
        see what is behind and what is coming up - the past, the future and
        the present - the driver."

        Injeyan uses the sort of subject matter that Gayane Gulstyan, Harvest
        Gallery manager and curator, said she rarely comes across. Yet her
        art remains aesthetically pleasing without being too novel in its
        approach to depict new ideas.

        "I find Seta's works thought-provoking and pleasing to the eye,"
        Gulstyan said. "Side mirrors have never been used as a subject
        matter." advertisement

        Revolving around the driver's perspective, Injeyan's series of
        paintings symbolizes the road of life. The receding image of the past
        is captured in the mirror's reflection, while the ever-looming future
        waits on the vast expanse of road ahead, Injeyan said.

        "In the car, we see what is coming up," she said. "I thought a lot
        about the process in a nanosecond. I think about the subject.

        Painting is as much as thinking. My paintings are not decorations.

        They inspire the viewer to think. They are thought-provoking."

        Longtime friend and fellow artist Ruben Amirian of Glendale calls
        Injeyan a thinking artist and said her work forces others to consider
        new ways of looking at things, even the mundane, fleeting moments.

        "Leaving the past and entering the future all at the same time,
        it makes you think," Amirian said. "You realize how true it is."

        Injeyan is also an artist with a philosophical edge, he said. Her
        education is evident in her work. She can see through appearances
        to reality.

        The running theme in the series addresses perceptions of Hollywood,
        Injeyan said.

        "I wasn't thinking about Hollywood, but all of a sudden, it
        showed up in my rearview mirror and I suddenly thought of illusion
        verse reality," she said. "I hadn't thought of it, but it became
        interesting."

        One of Injeyan's paintings at the gallery, "Holly Flock," comments
        on people's relation to Hollywood. Hollywood, Injeyan said, is an
        illusion. It is not real, but we follow it nevertheless.

        In the painting, a rearview mirror captures the reflection of the
        Hollywood sign while a flock of sheep grazes alongside the car.

        "We follow Hollywood," she said. "We adopt what it says."

        What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

          BOOK SIGNING IN L.A.
          By Christina Nersesian

          New University Online, CA

          Nov 19 2007

          Skylight Books in Los Angeles became home to the cultured and aging
          scruff of Los Angeles on Nov. 13. Aging hipsters with tatted chests
          and heavily sunbathed arms filed in and maintained the status quo
          between the hoardes of bookshelves in a tiny space. People from all
          walks of life quietly scampered in. There was an immediate sense of
          community because everyone was united for the cause of innovative
          and wholly unrepressed literature. Two celebrated authors and artists
          within their own crafts - Arthur Nersesian and Lydia Lunch - held a
          book signing and reading for their latest endeavors.

          Mementos of Lunch's past littered the scene as she gabbed about her
          prior experiences. From glamorous punks hitting their prime to tattered
          shirt-wearing and hair-dyed youths, the variety of those in attendance
          showcased the proliferation of Lunch's style. Particularly indicative
          of her eclectic nature was the inclusion of a white-collar office
          executive - preened to perfection - sitting in a front row seat, subtly
          showing off full finger tattoos and a nautical star-studded neck.

          Then there were the bookish types with middle-aged men and women.

          Obviously fans of Nersesian, they held tight their copies of some
          of his works, including "The xxxx-Up" and "Manhattan Loverboy," and
          stayed firmly placed in their seats. Watching the carnival of oddities
          roll by, these fans were quiet yet they must have had an underlying
          appreciation for the sort of unparalleled literary existence found
          within his works.

          Up first came Nersesian, his native New York accent evident with
          certain vowel-ridden words. He has peppered hair and thick-rimmed
          glasses with red insets that are typical of the hip professional. As a
          professor at city and state universities in New York, he appropriately
          donned a suit coat over a plain T-shirt.

          Extremely humble and seemingly ordinary, he began to read from heavily
          side-notated photocopied pages of his newest book, "The Swing Voter
          of Staten Island."

          Unable to disappoint even if he tried, his cult status with previous
          published works has given him a high place on the tier of fiction
          and literature. "The xxxx-Up" had been initially self-published until
          MTV caught wind of it and published it. They advertised it alongside
          their other unabashed novels about sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll.

          Showcasing an individual in the prime of his or her muck-ridden life,
          usually in a setting comprised of his native New York, Nersesian takes
          the reader on adventures of back alley happenings, piss-ridden street
          agendas and the filth of New York society. Published by Akashic Books,
          "The Swing Voter of Staten Island" features an embellished version
          of these previous themes, including referential real-life characters
          and allusions to the isolated desert travels akin to the fate that
          befell his Armenian ancestors nearly a century ago.

          His featured clip was poignant and teasing for what was to come,
          proving yet another golden morsel to his already celebrated body
          of work.

          Lunch came up next, and showed the crowd her colors immediately. Her
          sensually raspy voice showed signs of years of wear from a life
          riddled with experience. She delivered a somewhat unnerving reading of
          "Paradoxia: A Predator's Diary." The microphone readily absorbed the
          obvious sexual undertones and the speakers unwillingly transmitted
          her breathy voice.

          Every once in a while, her half-lidded eye leered into the crowd,
          choreographed perfectly as she read aloud an account of sex with
          Richard Hell, of TV fame. Her words were stream-of-consciousness and
          as she read them aloud, the audience caught a rare glimpse into her
          thought process.

          She read to the audience a romance novel of the modern age and made
          the listening experience visceral as she muttered add-ons, a continual
          tirade as she flipped through the pages.

          Somewhere down the line of her narrative, someone told her before
          making love to her, "Sickness becomes you." She recited to a crowd
          with bated breath and laughed at her somewhat tactless and abrasive
          delivery.

          Such is the character of Lunch, famous perhaps for collaborating as
          a poet, musician and overall popular culture artists on many projects.

          That night, she let everyone in on her dirty little secrets and the
          crowd loved it.

          Her book of collaborative poetry with legendary punk band X's
          front-woman Exene Cervenka, fittingly titled "Adulterers Anonymous,"
          sits atop of a roster of already deeply confessional writing.

          When new wave was dying and Brian Eno was catching the remnants to
          bring to life the no wave genre, Lunch and her band, Teenage Jesus
          and the Jerks, were featured in Eno's compilation "No New York"
          alongside the likes of DNA and Mars.

          Where Skylight Books has brought two very influential and
          against-the-grain writers together, their admirers created a cesspool
          of fandom around them. Deservingly so, both Nersesian and Lunch have
          graced Los Angeles during their book tour through the country. While
          musicians release new albums, remixes and compilations, b-sides and
          live tracks, writers wield the power of language to create a unique
          and individual work each time. Nersesian and Lunch not only signed
          books, but held a celebration for their craft as well.

          Disclosure: The writer of this article is not related to the author,
          Arthur Nersesian.

          Some Links:
          1- Personal Site???
          2- Wikipedia
          What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

            Originally posted by Siamanto View Post
            I don't consider him Armenian nor do I consider him a "Armenian writer". Why are Armenians like this? He writes about his experiences as a American, growing up in the "Big Apple" or New York, and he is half Armenian. How can you possible consider him Armenian? It is mind boggling. How is this appropriate under "Cultural Horizons of Armenians"? This should be posted under "Cultural Horizons of Armenian Diaspora" or more specifically, "Cultural Horizons of Armenian-Americans". The latter is not even a correct catagorization of where to place this writer. At least with writers like Professor Balakian, he writes about the Armenian-American identity growing up in the United States, which then makes sense to catagorize him as a Armenian-American, but what is the justification to catagorize Nersessian under a full blown Armenian writer, furthermore, what is justification to consider this as part of the "cultural horizans of Armenia"? Understand, I am not attacking you or your thread, but I totally understand the non Armenian point of view when we are accused of claiming "everyone is Armenian" and or trying to mask "cultural assimilation" under "Armenian culture", I can understand this now, I see it, it makes sense to me, does it make sense to you? If we assume that we live in world based on nation states and national identity then we have to stop pretended that people of Armenian ancestory are Armenian, there not, they were, but not anymore. They are neutralized into a new nation, under this nation they promise to live and develop, to push forward the interests of this new home, to ignore this, it is a level of backwardness that I can not seem to understand, what is motivating you to post him as part of the "Cultural Horizans of Armenian"? What is your justification?

            This is a Turkish Writer:


            This is a American Doctor:


            One is Turkish, he writes about Turkish identity, he writes about his experiences in Istanbul, he writes in Turkish, and he resides in Turkey. The latter is a American of Turkish extraction, he practices medicine in the United States, contributes to the development of the American medical professsion, speaks English, and is American as American apple pie. Do you understand how if we allow this to occur, we are losing our national talent? It is a lowpoint of a nation when your heroes and "cultural stars" are foreign nationals, we have built up our identity on the wins of foreigners and placed our identity on the backs of foreign nationals. One wonders, when this perversion will end.
            Last edited by Virgil; 12-04-2007, 11:47 PM.

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

              Atom Egoyan's Adoration finds a familiar subject
              Katherine Monk CanWest News Service

              Saturday, December 1, 2007


              Long before the Internet redefined the place of ordinary people in the real
              world, Atom Egoyan was obsessed by new modes of communication that allowed for
              a virtual separation between mind and body, as well as a reinterpretation of
              individual identity.
              For a big chunk of the 1980s, the celebrated director of The Sweet Hereafter
              made movies that touched on these themes: the role of a therapist's videotape
              in the development of a young boy's self-image (Next of Kin, 1984); people
              looking for family through a video lens (Family Viewing, 1987); the blurred
              line between reality and fiction as he explored the idea of alternate
              identities and the actor's craft (Speaking Parts, 1989).
              It's been a while since the Victoria-raised, Toronto-based director examined
              technology and its effect on the construction of personal identity, but he's
              back at it in his latest effort, Adoration.
              Currently in post-production, Adoration focuses on one young man's
              fascination with the possibility he's the spawn of two historical figures --
              and how his personal obsession is both enabled, and threatened, by technology.
              "We've just assembled the first rough cut and it looks good," says Egoyan
              >From a Toronto edit facility. "The whole idea was triggered by an account of a
              real life incident I read from 1986, where a Jordanian guy talked his Irish
              girlfriend into boarding an El Al flight with a bomb in her purse -- which she
              didn't know was there," he says.
              In his dramatic account, Egoyan doesn't focus on the two newsmakers as much
              as he focuses on their potential offspring, or at least one young man's desire
              to be seen as the progeny of the doomed couple.
              "The whole thing is left pretty ambiguous, but there's this thing about high
              school drama. There's a definite relationship between adolescents and
              theatricality," says Egoyan.
              "Our son is 14 now, and it seems the whole idea of (remote) connection is
              very casual now. Before, the world was essentially divided into those who make,
              and those who watch. The lines of demarcation between the two worlds were
              very clear. But not anymore," he says.
              "It's been really exciting to go back to textures I explored in the '80s, the
              idea of people looking at each other in video monitors and the need for
              connection. Back then, it was a pretty rarified form of communication -- it
              wasn't something everyone had access to. But that's changed so much," he says.
              "Before it was all quite intimate. Now, it's viral."
              Egoyan says he'll expand his thoughts on the role of technology vis-a-vis the
              human condition when he takes the stage at the Whistler Film Festival this
              weekend, where he will be honoured with a tribute as well as preside over the
              jury for the Phillip Borsos Competition, one of the richest purses on the
              Canadian festival circuit boasting a $15,000 prize.
              "I'll also be talking about a lot of the non-film related projects I've been
              doing that people may not have had a chance to see, the work on (Samuel)
              Beckett and stuff like that. It will be exciting to show clips from this work
              and to share it with a new audience."
              In Egoyan's fertile mind, everything can find new meaning, and so the
              convergence of technology, identity and his mid-edit trip westward has already
              sparked his imagination -- making it a little tough to keep up with his
              lightning-fast synapses as they start to accelerate.
              "You can generate a tremendous amount of excitement through the Internet, but
              ultimately, that kind of energy can't sustain itself," he says, continuing
              his thoughts about the changes in communications technology.
              "Apprenticeship is no longer part of the process and as a result, the journey
              one used to go through in order to gain access has evaporated. The whole
              nature of that journey has changed, so how do you find identity? You can'tfind
              it through technology, even though it offers infinite possibilities for
              character."
              Egoyan says despite his own fascination for the changing face of technology,
              he's gone through his own struggles as a user. "I don't Skype and I had a
              hard time watching people texting all the time, but now I'm addicted to it."
              The key is to remain curious in the face of change, he says, otherwise it's
              easy to feel overwhelmed, if not completely alienated by a world moving faster
              than human understanding.
              "The tension is always on now. People are always looking for the next thing,"
              he says. "There is no down time on the Internet. No time to fully digest
              anything, so how do you secure a physical relationship with other people using
              the 'Net' when you can't be off? You still have to negotiate the notion of
              absence."
              Egoyan's voice trails off for a brief second. Technology is interrupting the
              choo-choo train of thought. "I have another call," he says.
              "But before I go, I want to say I don't think we're more disconnected than
              before, I think the question is how much effect will our efforts produce? We
              can make our feelings known to a broad community through the Internet, butdoes
              anyone really care?"

              © CanWest News Service 2007


              What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

                1 of 3


                The Armenian Weekly On-Line
                80 Bigelow Avenue
                Watertown MA 02472 USA
                (617) 926-3974
                [email protected]


                The Armenian Weekly; Volume 73, No. 46; Nov. 17, 2007

                Arts and Literature:

                The Education of Ashot
                By Knarik O. Meneshian

                "Yes, he was here, Raffi was here in Shvanidzor in 1881," said Ashot as we
                climbed up the foothill, up the steep, narrow, winding path leading to a row
                of crumbled and crumbling stone houses turning to piles of stone. "And when
                he came," continued Ashot, "Raffi said, 'You must build a school in this
                village!' and the villagers did."

                "This is where I was born, and this is where I received my elementary
                education!" announced Ashot proudly, his green eyes sparkling as he raised
                his arms to the sky. "And it was in these mountains, during Lenin's time,
                while walking one day with my father, who was a religious man, where I
                learned from him what to say, what not to say. and warning me not to go to
                church because I was a Gomsomol, a young Communist. I was just nine years
                old.

                "Ashot, what does Shvanidzor mean?" I asked the tall, gentle-voiced man of
                the mountains.

                "The word, according to the locals," he explained, "actually has two
                meanings. The first is 'weeping valley' because of all the blood that was
                shed protecting our land from both Turkish and Persian invaders. The second
                is 'sweet valley' because the sun is so intense here in the southern part of
                Armenia that it makes our fruits extra sweet."

                As I listened to Ashot speak with such fervor in his voice, such passion in
                his eyes about this rugged, jagged land of his ancestors-Weeping Valley,
                Sweet Valley-I looked long and hard at the terrain before me, so
                mountainous, rocky and dry, yet lush in the distance where the river Arax
                flowed. So, this was Davit Beg Country! This was Zangezur! This was Siunyats
                Ashkhar! This was where for centuries heroes lived, fought and died
                defending home and hearth and land; where today heroes still live, but the
                treacherous invaders now are joblessness and poverty.

                We finally reached the rocky slope, the place where crumbled and crumbling
                stone houses were once home to many. Ashot's home, abandoned years ago for a
                better life in Yerevan, still stood but was on the verge of collapsing,
                while all that remained of the house next to his was the toneer (a
                bell-shaped clay oven placed in the ground) and a partial wall. That house
                had been his relative Suren Hagobjani Hovhannesian's (my father) childhood
                home. I touched the wall, walked over to where the toneer room had been, and
                thought, My father was born here, seven children and their mother and father
                had lived here-here, where once a one-room house with a hearth, a toneer
                room, and a balcony overlooking the dirt road below had stood. This was
                where he was orphaned at nine, finished the village school, a
                grades-one-to-four elementary school, and left in 1917 to live with his
                uncle in Yerevan where, yet a child, he worked in a shop and continued his
                education, eventually earning his teaching degree in 1930 from the
                Mangavarzhagan Tekhneegoom by attending its evening classes.

                In those days, children began first grade at age seven, sometimes eight, and
                while some villages had schools up to grade four, others had schools up to
                grade seven. First graders learned the alphabet, the numbers, adding,
                subtracting and multiplication. By the second half of the school year they
                began reading lessons. Today, villages such as Shvanidzor offer a higher
                level of education; its teachers have university degrees; and a number of
                the students go on to study at universities and institutes.

                Traveling by foot from one's village to a nearby one or moving to a town or
                city in pursuit of a better or higher education was not uncommon as far back
                as the 1840s, when the revival of Armenian learning and literature had
                already begun. In the case of a student who wished to continue his or her
                education and the family was able to arrange such a move, the student would
                either be placed with relatives or friends while he or she attended school
                or enrolled in a boarding school. Such arrangements were also the practice
                in Armenian regions in Turkey.

                "Ashot," I asked, "are there any churches in this village?" I had not seen
                any domes.

                "Look over there, on that hill beyond the trees," he replied as he pointed
                to one of Shvanidzor's three churches nestled in between a cluster of
                houses.

                The small 17th-century church with a slanted roof had no dome. It was the
                style in this village of 112 households (as of 2004). Not far from the
                village, there was yet another style church. Built in the 10th century of
                small stones and mud, the square-shaped church, with two small slits for
                windows, was built partially underground and had a flat roof. This place of
                worship was not easily noticeable in the rocky terrain where lizards and
                scorpions scurried about, where Turkish villages had been built (prior to
                and during Soviet times) between the existing Armenian ones. As I thought
                about the various churches and ancient monasteries I had seen throughout
                Armenia, I began thinking about the important roles they, as well as the
                pagan temples during the pre-Christian era, played in the history of the
                people, one of them being early education. During medieval times, 10th to
                14th centuries, courses such as medicine, the natural sciences and
                philosophy were taught at such monasteries as Datev (in the Zangezur
                region), Gladzor, Haghbat and Sanahin; at Akhtamar, Ani, Sis, and Yerznga,
                where the education at the time was dominated by Christian influence. Many
                who attended these learning centers were secular people.

                The educational institutions associated with the monasteries of Datev,
                Gladzor and Sanahin (all three in Eastern Armenia) were considered
                universities, while the monasteries of Haghbat (in Eastern Armenia),
                Naregavank and Varagavank (both in the Van Province) were considered
                schools. These monastic centers of learning played a major role in preparing
                teachers. In addition to the courses mentioned, students also studied
                architecture, astronomy, geometry, handwriting, history, music, mathematics,
                painting and other sciences. Some of the teachers that taught at these
                centers were Anania Shiragatsi and Grikor Datevatsie.

                As Ashot and I began making our way down the slope, I asked, "How did the
                women and children carry water from the nearby chaheriz (centuries-old,
                man-made underground canal which provides potable water) all the way up
                here, every day, all year long?"

                "Stone steps used to line this path," Ashot explained, "making the climb up
                and down much easier. But time and the elements have crumbled and swept away
                the steps just like the houses. You see, because arable land is scarce in
                this area, we have always had to build our homes up high in the hills in
                order to cultivate the land below for food, for our livelihood. In addition,
                the vantage point and the secret passages between the houses served us well
                during times of danger."

                As I looked up at the rocky slope one last time, I thought, Besides the
                teachers in the pagan temples, the monasteries and the schools, by far the
                most demanding and exacting of teachers were the rugged terrain, turbulent
                history and harsh life of the Armenian people.

                Walking again on flat land free from rolling pebbles and stones and thorny
                weeds, we were greeted on the side of the road by a sleepy cow, lazily
                waving her tail in the air, and chickens clucking and pecking in the dirt.
                "Barev dzez," (Hello to you) we said to a group of old and young men sitting
                in the shade smoking and talking, and to some old women sitting on a log,
                staring into the dusty distance. Somberly, they greeted us too, and we
                continued on our way. Nearby, a young girl about ten or twelve years old sat
                on a tree stump reading a book. She reminded me of another girl, who was
                about her age in 1991, studying in her frigid kitchen in Yerevan during
                Armenia's bleak days when the country was still traumatized by the physical
                and emotional damages caused by the 1988 earthquake, and the political and
                economic upheaval and uncertainty that prevailed. I remembered 1991 and my
                students in the little blue school house in Jrashen, a village next to
                Spitak, and how eager they were to learn despite the lack of food, water,
                heat and electricity. Our English classes would often times be held in a
                large closet where a broken sink, a broom and a mop were kept. For the
                entire class period, the lesson would be conducted standing shoulder to
                shoulder with coats on. The students, both the younger ones and the older
                ones, were eager and enthusiastic to learn. In the mud, in the snow, in
                shabby clothes and shoes, with worn-down pencils and flimsy notebooks, and
                some in poor health, they came every day to learn English, even on holidays.
                Whether in the villages, towns, cities or the capital Yerevan, schools were
                open and education continued despite all adversity.

                "See that girl reading over there," said Ashot pointing to the girl sitting
                on the tree stump, "she reminds me of a scene from one of Raffi's (Hakop
                Melik-Hakopian, 1835-1888, born in Persia) writings. He had just returned
                home with great excitement and enthusiasm to Payajuk, a village in the
                Salmast region of Persia, in 1856 after receiving his education in Tiflis,
                Georgia, first at the Garabed Belakhian School (established in 1846), a
                private Armenian prep-school, and then at the Russian Gymnasium. (The
                prep-school offered boarding, specialized in Armenian studies and prepared
                students for the gymnasium (high school.) Learning much and exposed to new
                ideas, curricula and methods of teaching other than the harsh, overly
                pedantic and unproductive Der Totik Dbrots (village schools run by priests)
                style of teaching, he was filled with a passionate desire to educate and
                enlighten his fellow Armenians. One day, as he was walking around his
                village, he came across a young teenage girl sitting near a spring. Raffi
                asked her, 'Do you know how to read?'

                "The girl responded, 'I am not a deeratsoo (one studying for the priesthood)
                or a priest that I need to learn or know how to read.'"

                "Raffi felt strongly that women needed to be educated for the enlightenment
                of the nation, and as he pondered the young girl's response, he thought to
                himself, Poor girl, I will remove the confusion from your innocent mind.
                Reading is more important for you than for the deeratsoo and the priest. You
                must educate the new generation, and you must smooth the path for our bright
                future! Yes, you must learn to read! It will be then that you will no longer
                be a poor and pitiable creature, and your children will live good and happy
                lives."
                .....

                What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

                  2 of 3



                  The Armenian Weekly On-Line
                  80 Bigelow Avenue
                  Watertown MA 02472 USA
                  (617) 926-3974
                  [email protected]


                  The Armenian Weekly; Volume 73, No. 46; Nov. 17, 2007

                  Arts and Literature:

                  The Education of Ashot
                  By Knarik O. Meneshian

                  .....

                  Soon after Raffi's return home to Payajuk, he and a friend opened a school
                  to provide the children of the village with a modern education.
                  Unfortunately, due to fierce opposition from the clergy and the Prelate, the
                  school was shut down, and his dream of opening a girls' school never
                  materialized.

                  In 1810, the Armenian community in Astrakhan, Russia, opened its first
                  school, the Aghababian School. Earlier, in 1780, the Armenian community in
                  Calcutta, India, had opened a school, and in 1821 they opened the Armenian
                  college, Mardasiragan Jemaran (depending on the curriculum, the jemaran is a
                  high school or a junior college), which trained numerous teachers and men of
                  letters for forty years. In the early 1800s, the Murad-Rafaelian School was
                  opened in Venice by the Mkhitarists. In Moscow, the Lazarian College was
                  established in 1815. Initially, an elementary school for poor children, in
                  1820 it became a gymnasium, where along with basic subjects, Arabic,
                  Armenian, French, German, Latin, Persian, Russian and Turkish were also
                  taught. It was renamed the Lazarian Institute for Oriental Languages in
                  1827, and in the 1830s received the title of Second-Level Educational
                  Institution. Later, the school was known as the Moscow Institute for Eastern
                  Studies, and during the Soviet era it was known as the Institute for the
                  History of Asian Peoples. Mikael Nalbandian, who graduated from the
                  University of St. Petersburg, earning the title of professor, was one of the
                  teachers that taught at Lazarian College. Some of the school's well-known
                  graduates were Rafael Patkanian (Kamar Katiba), Vahan Terian, Leo Tolstoy
                  and Ivan Turgenev.

                  In the Russian Empire, freedom was given in 1836 to its ethnic communities
                  to open their own schools. Etchmiadzin was given permission to open one
                  school associated with each active church, and one school for each of the
                  six regions subject to Etchmiadzin. Prior to 1836, though, Armenian schools
                  had opened in Astrakhan, Nor Nakhichevan (near Rostov-On-Don), and in
                  Kizliar and Mozdok in southern Russia north of the Caucausus Mountains.

                  This crucial period in the history of the Armenians-the 1800s-marked the
                  revival of education and the establishment of schools and learning centers
                  for all the people, not just the select few. This period of enlightenment
                  was met with zeal, idealism and a sense of renewal.
                  Before 1800, nearly all education for the Armenians was controlled by the
                  church in order to train clerics and to preserve the literature of Classical
                  Armenian. Armenians in the Caucasus had very few if any schools before the
                  Russian annexations. With the existence of the Aghababian, Gogoian and
                  Lazarian schools in Astrakhan, Nor Nakhichevan and Moscow, respectively, the
                  Zharangavorats Seminary in Etchmiadzin (opened 1813), and the Nersisian
                  Jemaran in Tiflis, Armenian learning in the Caucasus or Eastern Armenia
                  began to take shape and branch out to the churches and homes where usually
                  one devoted teacher would teach. By the end of 1836, there were twenty-one
                  Armenian church schools.

                  In Tiflis, the Nersisian Jemaran was established in 1824, and had three
                  grades with 80 students the first year. By the 1885-86 school-year it had
                  seven grades with 487 students, and by the end of the 1800s it had 712
                  students. The school graduated its last 25 students in 1924. The following
                  year it was converted to a trade school. Some well-known Nersisian School
                  graduates were Khachatur Abovian, who later taught in Tiflis (from 1837 to
                  1843), Derenik Demirjian, Anastas Mikoyan and Hovhannes Toumanian. Besides
                  the Garabed Belakhian School, the Gayanian and Hovnanian Girls' Schools in
                  Tiflis were also opened in the 1800s, as were the Yegheesabetian Girls'
                  School in Akhltskha, Georgia, and the Mariam-Ghoogasian School in Shushi,
                  Karabakh.

                  After leaving Tiflis, Khachatur Abovian, (1809-1848-born in Kanaker on the
                  outskirts of Yerevan) a progressive thinker, who had studied in Dorpat,
                  Germany (now Tartu, Estonia), and read works by Kant, Rousseau, Goethe and
                  Schiller, believed that students should be treated kindly, with respect and
                  in a pleasant teaching environment. He also believed strongly in education
                  for girls. (Mkrtich Khrimian Hairig and Raffi had similar beliefs and
                  implemented such teaching approaches as well.) Abovian was both a teacher
                  and principal at the Yerevan Regional School from 1843 to 1848. The school
                  was established in 1832 with three grades. Later, pre-gymnasium and
                  gymnasium level grades were added. Because of Abovian's progressive,
                  nurturing and encouraging approach to education, during his second year as
                  principal at the school the number of students increased from 90 to 190. The
                  majority of students were Armenian, while the remainder was a mixture of
                  other ethnic students, including Russians and Adrbajanies. Classes were
                  conducted in Russian, and the major subjects taught were mathematics,
                  religion and Russian. In addition to their regular subjects, the Armenian
                  students also studied Armenian, and the Adrbajanie students studied Turkish.
                  In the school's pre-gymnasium level-grade four-French, geography, history
                  and Latin were taught. At the gymnasium level-grades five through
                  eight-Greek and physics were taught. In 1881, the school became a gymnasium
                  with eight grades and two pre-college grades. The gymnasium offered boarding
                  and had a library and workshop. In 1925, the school was renamed Abovian
                  School.

                  The Gevorgian Jemaran, founded at Echmiadzin in 1874, was dedicated to the
                  training of priests and teachers. Gradually, it became a college with a
                  strong emphasis on Armenian scholarship, and its religious character grew
                  less. Later in the century, the jemaran became a hotbed for political
                  activity. Both the Gayanian School in Yerevan and the Arghootian School in
                  Alexandropol (later known as Leninakan, and now Gyumri) were opened in the
                  1800s. Emphasis on education for the Armenians in Persia came later in the
                  1800s, whereas it came earlier for the Armenians in Eastern Armenia-Yerevan,
                  Nakhichevan, Zangezur and Karabakh-within the Russian Empire, especially in
                  Tiflis, and the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

                  In the mid 1800s, American and French missionaries had established schools
                  in the Urmia region in predominately Assyrian areas. A number of Armenian
                  students attended these schools where they studied English and French. In
                  Tavriz, Persia, the Aramian School was opened in the mid 1850s, and schools
                  in New Julfa (Isfahan), where many illuminated manuscripts were produced,
                  also opened. Raffi taught history and Armenian at the Aramian School from
                  1875 to 1877. During this period, he modernized the curriculum, introduced
                  new teaching methods, and was instrumental in secularizing the school,
                  "which earlier was run by ignorant deeratsoos." In 1877, he was invited to
                  teach at a boys' school and a girls' school in the town of Verin Agulis in
                  the Nakhichevan Province in Eastern Armenia. (During the 1600s, eight
                  thousand Armenian families lived in Agulis. They had schools and a library.)

                  In the Ottoman Empire, even though minorities were finally given the right
                  to open their own schools in 1789, it was by the second half of the 1800s
                  that Armenian schools and other schools that Armenians attended began
                  opening in large numbers. In Constantinople and Smyrna, however, a number of
                  boys' and girls' schools already existed in the 1840s, one of them being the
                  Mesrobian College, which had opened in 1825 in Smyrna. In both cities there
                  had been schools for the training of trade apprentices, and small church
                  schools where priests taught religion, reading and writing to neighborhood
                  children. In Constantinople, the Nersesian Varzharan and the Skudar College
                  were well known. By the end of the 1800s, nearly every Armenian village had
                  at least one school. In areas with large Protestant and Catholic
                  communities, those denominations also opened schools. Later, with the
                  re-establishment of the Ottoman Constitution in 1908, reading rooms and
                  lecture halls were also established in Armenian villages and towns.

                  In Kharpert, schools were opened by French, German, Italian and Spanish
                  missionaries, as well as by the Armenian Evangelical Union and the Armenian
                  (Catholic) Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in the 1800s. At the
                  missionary schools, boys and girls attended separate classes at the high
                  school and college levels. In the lower grades, co-education was practiced.
                  A theological seminary was founded by American Missionaries in 1859-named
                  Armenia College in 1876, and renamed Euphrates College in 1888. The Kharpert
                  Central School was founded in 1887. The writers Hamasdegh and Totovents were
                  students at the school.
                  .......

                  What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

                    3 of 3



                    The Armenian Weekly On-Line
                    80 Bigelow Avenue
                    Watertown MA 02472 USA
                    (617) 926-3974
                    [email protected]


                    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 73, No. 46; Nov. 17, 2007

                    Arts and Literature:

                    The Education of Ashot
                    By Knarik O. Meneshian

                    ......

                    In the city of Erzerum, a center for manuscript production, there were ten
                    community schools, with one established in 1811. There was one Catholic
                    school for boys, established in 1867, run by the Mkhitarist Order of Venice;
                    one Catholic school for girls, run by the Armenian Sisters of the Immaculate
                    Conception; and two schools, one for boys and one for girls, maintained by
                    the Protestant community. The Hripsimian Girls' School, one of the community
                    schools, was established in 1875. The Sanasarian Varzharan was founded in
                    1881 and served as a teacher-training center. Although the school was closed
                    in 1912, it opened later in Sebastia in the same year. The Kavafian School,
                    a co-educational elementary school, was established in 1905. Karmir Vank, a
                    monastery near the village of Hintsk, in the province of Erzerum, was a
                    center of education, which included an orphanage, hospital and leprosarium.
                    Some of Erzerum's teachers received their education at the Tiflis and
                    Echmiadzin schools, where they had been trained as specialists in the fields
                    of Armenian history, language and literature.

                    In the 1800s, American missionaries associated with the American Board of
                    Commissioners for Foreign Missions arrived in the province of Sebastia and
                    established a number of educational institutions including an elementary and
                    a high school for boys and similar schools for girls. In 1886, they
                    established Anatolia College in Marsovan, where the students and teachers
                    were largely Armenian, a kindergarten, and a school for the deaf. In the
                    same city, the American Boarding School for Girls was renamed Anatolia Girls'
                    School in 1886. Among the large number of schools in the city of Sebastia
                    that existed in the 1880s, there were the Aramian and Seraydarian Boys'
                    Schools and the Hrispimian Girls' School. The Sivas Normal School for Boys,
                    a secondary level school, was established in 1880 and became Sivas Teacher's
                    College in 1912. Armenian Catholics and Protestants also established schools
                    in Sebastia. Among the schools in Adana were the American School for Girls,
                    a Jesuit school for girls, a French college and the Mouseghian School.

                    In Van, Mkrtich Khrimian, reverently known as Khrimian Hairig (1820-1907,
                    born in Van), established a seminary at Varak Monastery in the 1850s. It was
                    the first school in the area that provided modern teaching methods,
                    including the absence of corporal punishment. He trained and encouraged
                    teachers to create a positive and pleasant learning atmosphere as well as to
                    treat students compassionately, and instill in them patriotism and love for
                    the homeland. He believed in the education of girls, and was against the
                    "Oriental idea that husbands have a right to rule over their wives by
                    force." Earlier in the 1840s, a number of boys' and girls' schools had been
                    established in the region where a number of scriptoria existed in monastic
                    centers of learning. The Yeramian School had been opened in Van in the
                    1800s. Schools established by Mekertitch Portugalian (1848-1921, born in
                    Constantinople), a prominent and inspiring educator, were the Varzhabetanots
                    (Normal School), and Gedronagan Varzharan (Central Gymnasium).
                    Unfortunately, both schools were short-lived.

                    Our visit to Shvanidzor had come to an end, but before it was time for Ashot
                    and I to get on the bus back to Yerevan, I asked him if we could stop at the
                    village cemetery. "So, you want to visit the geereezmodee dooz," he said in
                    his melodic Shvanidzor dialect. I nodded, wondering, What kinds of stories
                    will the headstones tell? Most certainly, history lessons for another day,
                    but for now a quick look would have to do.

                    The bus back to Yerevan was full. Among the passengers were two families
                    From Agarak, a neighboring town. They had locked the doors of their homes
                    permanently in pursuit of a better life, one in Yerevan, and the other in
                    Russia.

                    The following day, Ashot and I continued our discussion on education as we
                    strolled up and down the bustling streets of Yerevan. Much had changed in
                    the capital and throughout the country since I first saw it in 1975, and
                    then several more times beginning in 1990. But, the enthusiasm for learning
                    among most of the students I had seen had not changed and remained equally
                    strong whether in the Yerevan schools, such as the Aghbalian and Pushkin
                    schools I visited in 1990, or schools in the regions such as the ones where
                    I had taught in a remote village school and a city public school. As in the
                    past, the rote method of teaching is still prevalent. Teachers generally sit
                    behind their desks as they teach, and students rise when the teacher enters
                    the classroom.

                    During the 1800s, a number of schools were opened in Yerevan: the Yerevan
                    Regional School, 1832; the Armenian Religious School, 1837; the Yerevan Boy's
                    School, 1850; the Nork Community School, 1860; the Gayanyan Girls' School,
                    1866; and the Teacher's Seminary (the seminary was a three-story, black
                    stone, Russian era building located on Abovian Street), 1881. Also opened
                    were the Library in 1865 and the Printing House in 1874. Some of the
                    periodicals on education during this period were: Dasdeearak, (Educator),
                    published 1873-74, Crimea; Dbrots (School), published 1874-76, Vagharshabat;
                    Mangavarzhagan Tert (Pedigogic Newspaper), 1882-84, Tiflis; Aghbuir
                    (Source), 1883-1918, Tiflis. Of significant importance was the first
                    Armenian Teachers' Conference that took place in Tiflis in 1882.

                    "Had your father been alive and walking with us right now," said Ashot with
                    excitement in his voice, "he would have been amazed at the progress that has
                    been made in this city where he witnessed the birth of Armenia's First
                    Republic, in this country where later, during Stalin's reign, he was
                    arrested and tortured for his anti-government beliefs and writings, thus
                    becoming a political prisoner in Siberian prisons."

                    Just then, I remembered one of my students in Jrashen in 1991. He was a
                    quiet, studious boy, no more than ten years old, who one day during our
                    reading lesson suddenly blurted out, "Deegeen (Mrs.) Knarik, Lenin babeeguh
                    sadgets! (Grandpa Lenin croaked!)" Yes, much had changed in the country.

                    During the First Republic, the fledgling democratic nation, which existed
                    for almost two and a half years, was faced with a number of trials and
                    tribulations. Despite them, the government had vision and a goal to lift the
                    people from its centuries-old web of oppression and ignorance. Of utmost
                    concern was the welfare of the people; therefore, social programs were
                    begun, such as education and the establishment of schools and institutions
                    of higher learning, health and hygiene, and land distribution to farmers.

                    Public lecture series were begun in Yerevan and various places throughout
                    the country. The Minister of Education, Nikol Aghbalian, planned to have
                    1,500 elementary schools in operation by 1921, and to further develop
                    schools of higher learning (in 1908, Yerevan had 31 schools and 3,724
                    students, predominately Armenians). Funds were allocated for textbooks,
                    adult literacy classes, indigent students and children who lost family
                    members in defense of Armenia. Plans were made for a seven-year military
                    academy in Kars, a medical school in Yerevan, and technical schools in
                    Alexandropol and Yerevan. In 1919, Yerevan opened its first hospital, which
                    included an obstetrics and gynecology department.

                    Founded in 1919, the State University of Armenia (later renamed Yerevan
                    State University) was opened in 1920 in Alexandropol, with plans to expand
                    the university and transfer the campus to Yerevan in the fall, where it
                    would temporarily be housed in the building of the Teacher's Seminary on
                    Abovian Street. Allocations were made for faculty housing and the purchase
                    of books from abroad. By September 1920, six hundred thirty two men and
                    women had registered for the fall term, and a number of internationally
                    renowned Armenian scholars returned to Armenia to teach at the university.

                    After the Red Forces entered Yerevan on April 2, 1921, life changed
                    drastically for the people in Armenia. The nation's hard-fought albeit brief
                    independence would be squelched for decades until it came again on September
                    21, 1991.

                    During the Soviet period, education continued to excel and schooling was
                    free, including at the university level. In 1921, twenty-two new schools
                    were opened, eighteen primary and four secondary. During the same year, the
                    medical school reopened, and a music school was started. In 1922, the Fine
                    Arts School was opened, and in 1923 the Mangavarzhagan Tekhneekoom.

                    During the 1930-31 period, a literacy program was instituted (during the
                    First Republic such a program had already been initiated and existed in
                    1919), and night schools associated with factories were opened so that
                    workers could continue their education. In 1930, mandatory primary education
                    (4th grade) was initiated. In 1940, the mandatory grade level was seven, and
                    in 1969 it was eight.

                    It must be noted that after the 1915 genocide, Armenian communities in the
                    Middle East opened many Armenian schools, including secondary level, and in
                    some communities post-high school educational institutions.

                    In Armenia today, the education system is as follows: pre-school or
                    kindergarten; elementary school (grades 1-3); basic school (grades 4-8);
                    high school (grades 9-10); and higher education. Primary and secondary
                    education is free. Higher level education is free only for a limited number
                    of students who score high on entrance exams.

                    "Come," said Ashot in his impassioned and cheerful manner, "let us walk a
                    little more!" The statue of Vartan Mamigonian soon came into view. We
                    stopped to watch some children at play. Their happy sounds felt good, like
                    the warmth of the sun on a chilly day. Suddenly, Ashot grew quiet and
                    withdrawn, and the glimmer in his eyes was gone. I wondered what had
                    happened, but dared not ask. In an attempt to get his mind off of whatever
                    was distressing him, I said, "Ashot, I cannot believe we have walked so far!
                    Nearby is the kindergarten I visited in 1991. I remember it so well. It was
                    autumn, and the children were welcoming voske ashoon (golden autumn) and all
                    its bounty, with songs and dances and recitations."

                    Ashot sighed and slowly nodded his head as he continued watching the
                    children. Suddenly, more to himself then to me, he said, "Heema hasgatsa vor
                    sood er, amen eenchuh sood er! (I have now understood that it was a lie, it
                    was all a lie.) Look around you now. Look what has been accomplished so far
                    under our own flag! It can only get better for us, including my Weeping
                    Valley, Sweet Valley. Yes, voske ashoon will soon be here. Let its bounty be
                    reaped by all, and let it be used with wisdom, foresight and benevolence!"

                    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Cultural Horizons of Armenians

                      I enjoy her articles.

                      Before this, she had done a series detailing her experiences in the regions of Armenia.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X