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  • Assimilated With Dolma

    Assimilated With Dolma
    By Tamar Kevonian

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/77894/assimilated-with-dol ma/
    Feb 26th, 2010

    We arrive on time at the local watering hole to meet with friends we
    haven't seen in quite a while. Seems everyone is running late. Richard
    is the first to arrive, apologizing for his tardiness, not realizing
    that all of the others are still on their way.

    After the initial "Hellos" and "How have you beens?" were asked
    and addressed, he turned and commented on a past column I'd written
    entitled Who is an Armenian? Richard is quieter and more reflective
    than most the others we were expecting to see this evening. He rarely
    spoke extensively so when he asked the question, it was evident that
    he's spent quite a bit of time on the subject he was about to address.

    "But we need to further ask ourselves what is an Armenian value
    system?" he says. It seemed like a vague statement that used words
    that were hard to describe.

    "How do you associate the word Armenian with any sort of word?" he
    says as a way of expanding on the topic. "Fill in the blank. For
    example, when you say 'Japanese' immediately you think about
    discipline, organizational agility, efficiency. 'German' you think
    about discipline, execution, leadership. 'American' you think about
    value of wealth, hard work. When it comes to 'Armenian' there is no
    value system."

    How is that possible? It seemed that Armenian values were so clear
    that they never needed to be stated. But in trying to identify it I
    discovered that is much more difficult to do than I initially thought.

    Richard suggests that maybe, given our wide Diasporan existence and
    our nomadic lifestyle of the last couple of generations, we have
    adopted the value system of our host cultures: Iranian-Armenians from
    Iranians, Lebanese-Armenians from the Lebanese, and so on. "So when
    you mix and match everything, and try to think of a national value
    system nothing really stands out."

    "What about our value of the family?" I ask.

    "Okay, but you see that amongst Americans too," he said and went on
    to explain that if we step out of the limelight of the big migrant
    cities like Los Angeles and New York, an American's sense of family
    was very much like ours.

    "There is an American value system: it includes things like
    competition, material wealth, hard work, independence, individualism.

    But in the Armenian value system there is no individualism, there is
    no independence. You assume 'family' as a value system but it's not.

    Family is basically a medium that provides you a value system,"
    he explains.

    "Wait a minute," I said, unwilling to accept that we had no
    identifiable set of values. "Armenians can be equated with
    entrepreneurship. With survival."

    He focuses on the word "survival" but questions its integration in a
    value system. "That's a verb. What does that mean or what does that
    say bout the values we hold? Maybe you can interpret that to say
    we're flexible."

    "We're adaptable."

    "Yes. That is very true. As a value system, I believe that's actually
    true," Richard agrees. Armenians are resilient and adapt easily. The
    established communities in almost every country in the world are a
    testament to those two traits. "You can literally lift us up from
    here, drop us in the Amazon, and will still create the same social
    structure."

    "We come from different corners of the globe and we each have a
    unique approach to our 'Armenianism' which is our cultural and ethnic
    identity," I said.

    "Is language a part of it? Can there be non-Armenian speaking
    Armenian?" he asks

    "Absolutely."

    "So it's OK to lose some of the elements of your Armenianism and
    still be Armenian?"

    "Unfortunately we have to adapt. Like a chameleon that changes colors
    to blend into its environment but doesn't stop being a chameleon."

    "There's different process. There's integration, there is
    assimilation," Richard says to clarify. In integration you identify as
    Armenian while maintaining all the values, whereas in assimilation you
    start to deny your identity and accept the host culture's system. "You
    start to deny your identity as an Armenian (during assimilation)
    and you start to completely accept the American thing. You start to
    say things like 'I like the food.' You identify yourself with some
    symbols or some sort of memories."

    Most people's first and most prevalent experience with an unfamiliar
    culture is through their cuisine. But this has also become a barometer
    for knowledge: how well do we really know a culture if all we can
    say about it is that "I like the food?" By the same token, how well
    does one know or identify with being Armenian if all they can say is
    "My parents/grandparents were Armenian and I really like the food?"

    "Exactly, you are already assimilated with dolma (stuffed grape
    leaves)," Richard says and laughs. "So what values are you adhering
    to as an Armenian?"

    He made his point. Although the discussion was lively, it was clear
    that we couldn't specifically describe a set of values that can be
    identified as "Armenian." It is to be another discussion for another
    day. Perhaps it will never be identified or perhaps we will create
    it as we go along on our journey: a subcategory of a larger topic of
    identity and finding our place in the world.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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