Barev Joghovurd Jan. I hope you all are doing great when you read this.
It's my first time on an Armenian forum which I've been reading for more then an hour yesterday. I thought I might join. Well, let me introduce myself.
My name is Sarkis and I was born on the 21st of September, 1990. I have a younger sister and brother, me being the oldest in the family and of course my mom and dad. Since then, I've moved a lot around the world, more then eight years in India, five years in the US, and other countries at different periods throughout the years. My family has been the traveling type for a long time which has been quite the experience, allowing me to bond with many different types of people with different religions, cultures, and manners, understanding the world and how it works pretty fast. Some trips were because we got exceptional chances to go on them and the others were business based you can say. In these eighteen years, I've come to Armenia only a few times, maybe 3-4 years altogether with intervals. Now I'm back and I've already been here with my family for 2 years. We’ve settled down and I can truthfully say that it feels refreshing. I know Armenian since my mom taught it in America to me, my brother, and my sister, sometimes forcefully, which I’m thankful for. It's difficult learning a language you don't use at the immediate time. I'm studying here now and I've finished school elsewhere. Naturally, my English is better then my Armenian although I can speak without any problems in expressing myself. I'm a computer designer, having been on computers since I could crawl and that's my career. I'm also a musician, love music which is an undividable part of me, basketball, history, writing, acting, and a few other things that define who I am in many ways. Anyways, all these years, I've been to countless places but Armenia is a place that is definitely exceptional. It may not be the best place but it's a little place ... I like to call home.
I’ve read many of the articles on this site and some were very interesting. Although I’ve been away from Armenia for such a long time, the love and respect I have for it hasn’t decreased but has rather gone much higher. Some of my thoughts on what’s going on right now and what I believe in are as follows.
I believe and I’m not afraid to say KNOW that the Genocide took place. People can call it karma, call it massacre, call it whatever, but the fact is, it happened. Right now, what we live by is the past. I don’t believe in living by the past NOR the future. Rather, I believe in living in the preset although at times, we all like to dream or must go back to the past which makes us human and gives us priorities or sets some for us. They say, “Forgive and Forget”. I say, “Forgive but never Forget”. The Genocide or incidents like that weren’t and will never be just some memories that some don’t like to remember or talk about. It’s neither just “something” that happened. It’s because of those Armenians and yes, even many Turks, that not I but WE are alive today and forgetting what they did is like letting dust pile on the mirror that we look in, not being able to then see who we are. Not only Turks but Americans, Russians, and people from lots of other countries. When we forget what happened, we are that much closer to making the same mistakes made back then, again. For that reason, we must look at ourselves in our mirrors and forgive, never forgetting those that gave us the opportunity to do so. Our past is our present but not the future. We can change that but shouldn’t at the expense of losing our identities.
The Armenians that died in the Genocide will only die when we forget about them and blindly forgive. True forgiveness is forgiving with understanding. It’s easy forgetting what happened and accepting blind apologies but its hard forgiving with understanding and realization of what happened. When there isn’t wine on the table, you can’t say you don’t drink because there isn’t any wine to drink whatsoever. In the same way, if you don’t face the past, looking straight and upright into the mirror, you won’t be able to forgive or understand what happened or who you really are. The identity that no amount of makeup, clothes, or passport’s can diminish. Facing it is no easy business but fear is not an option because fear of the past and present generates fear in the future. Once a person puts himself in the shoes of the person that has lost the person he/she has loved, only then will he/she have the right to forgive or not to forgive or in many (maybe all) cases, even talk about it. The rest is just everyday words that we have the ability to use. All of us, including our countries, have good and bad sides we hold on to but all problems must be faced at one point or another. We have all made mistakes as a country, family, and as individuals but the only solution to facing those problems is accepting what happened. We won’t be on this earth forever. We must go someday, one day, maybe today, but we will never stay. What will stay is what we do. The difference we make which isn’t as hard as it seems. A real mistake is making the SAME mistake again, having not learned a lesson from it. Our grandfathers, good or bad, all made their mistakes hoping and trying, in their own ways, good or bad, to create a better future.
What we have now is what we’re standing on and in the end it’s us that make the decisions and choices. We won’t be able to stand in front of God and say my government told me not to do something or this person told me not to OR even worse, some people changed my mind. We are, even as we speak, designing our future. Let’s make it a bright one and not respect each other as a WHOLE or something, that will never happen, but with distinction and RESPECT towards differences and those very same distinctions. Many people don’t understand why Armenians or people that have gone through a lot, fight after all this time. We fight because the truth and future I just described is powerful. We fight because those are the things really worth fighting for with every breath and all we’ve got. That battle will never end.
Hope all of you are still awake, haha. All the same, I’m proud to be an Armenian and I wish you all the best, looking forward to talking to all of you soon. Thanks for listening and not giving up.
It's my first time on an Armenian forum which I've been reading for more then an hour yesterday. I thought I might join. Well, let me introduce myself.
My name is Sarkis and I was born on the 21st of September, 1990. I have a younger sister and brother, me being the oldest in the family and of course my mom and dad. Since then, I've moved a lot around the world, more then eight years in India, five years in the US, and other countries at different periods throughout the years. My family has been the traveling type for a long time which has been quite the experience, allowing me to bond with many different types of people with different religions, cultures, and manners, understanding the world and how it works pretty fast. Some trips were because we got exceptional chances to go on them and the others were business based you can say. In these eighteen years, I've come to Armenia only a few times, maybe 3-4 years altogether with intervals. Now I'm back and I've already been here with my family for 2 years. We’ve settled down and I can truthfully say that it feels refreshing. I know Armenian since my mom taught it in America to me, my brother, and my sister, sometimes forcefully, which I’m thankful for. It's difficult learning a language you don't use at the immediate time. I'm studying here now and I've finished school elsewhere. Naturally, my English is better then my Armenian although I can speak without any problems in expressing myself. I'm a computer designer, having been on computers since I could crawl and that's my career. I'm also a musician, love music which is an undividable part of me, basketball, history, writing, acting, and a few other things that define who I am in many ways. Anyways, all these years, I've been to countless places but Armenia is a place that is definitely exceptional. It may not be the best place but it's a little place ... I like to call home.
I’ve read many of the articles on this site and some were very interesting. Although I’ve been away from Armenia for such a long time, the love and respect I have for it hasn’t decreased but has rather gone much higher. Some of my thoughts on what’s going on right now and what I believe in are as follows.
I believe and I’m not afraid to say KNOW that the Genocide took place. People can call it karma, call it massacre, call it whatever, but the fact is, it happened. Right now, what we live by is the past. I don’t believe in living by the past NOR the future. Rather, I believe in living in the preset although at times, we all like to dream or must go back to the past which makes us human and gives us priorities or sets some for us. They say, “Forgive and Forget”. I say, “Forgive but never Forget”. The Genocide or incidents like that weren’t and will never be just some memories that some don’t like to remember or talk about. It’s neither just “something” that happened. It’s because of those Armenians and yes, even many Turks, that not I but WE are alive today and forgetting what they did is like letting dust pile on the mirror that we look in, not being able to then see who we are. Not only Turks but Americans, Russians, and people from lots of other countries. When we forget what happened, we are that much closer to making the same mistakes made back then, again. For that reason, we must look at ourselves in our mirrors and forgive, never forgetting those that gave us the opportunity to do so. Our past is our present but not the future. We can change that but shouldn’t at the expense of losing our identities.
The Armenians that died in the Genocide will only die when we forget about them and blindly forgive. True forgiveness is forgiving with understanding. It’s easy forgetting what happened and accepting blind apologies but its hard forgiving with understanding and realization of what happened. When there isn’t wine on the table, you can’t say you don’t drink because there isn’t any wine to drink whatsoever. In the same way, if you don’t face the past, looking straight and upright into the mirror, you won’t be able to forgive or understand what happened or who you really are. The identity that no amount of makeup, clothes, or passport’s can diminish. Facing it is no easy business but fear is not an option because fear of the past and present generates fear in the future. Once a person puts himself in the shoes of the person that has lost the person he/she has loved, only then will he/she have the right to forgive or not to forgive or in many (maybe all) cases, even talk about it. The rest is just everyday words that we have the ability to use. All of us, including our countries, have good and bad sides we hold on to but all problems must be faced at one point or another. We have all made mistakes as a country, family, and as individuals but the only solution to facing those problems is accepting what happened. We won’t be on this earth forever. We must go someday, one day, maybe today, but we will never stay. What will stay is what we do. The difference we make which isn’t as hard as it seems. A real mistake is making the SAME mistake again, having not learned a lesson from it. Our grandfathers, good or bad, all made their mistakes hoping and trying, in their own ways, good or bad, to create a better future.
What we have now is what we’re standing on and in the end it’s us that make the decisions and choices. We won’t be able to stand in front of God and say my government told me not to do something or this person told me not to OR even worse, some people changed my mind. We are, even as we speak, designing our future. Let’s make it a bright one and not respect each other as a WHOLE or something, that will never happen, but with distinction and RESPECT towards differences and those very same distinctions. Many people don’t understand why Armenians or people that have gone through a lot, fight after all this time. We fight because the truth and future I just described is powerful. We fight because those are the things really worth fighting for with every breath and all we’ve got. That battle will never end.
Hope all of you are still awake, haha. All the same, I’m proud to be an Armenian and I wish you all the best, looking forward to talking to all of you soon. Thanks for listening and not giving up.
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