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SOFIA: What It Takes To Be Armenian In Bulgaria

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  • SOFIA: What It Takes To Be Armenian In Bulgaria

    WHAT IT TAKES TO BE ARMENIAN IN BULGARIA
    A report by Dafina Boshnakova

    Sofia Echo, Bulgaria
    Oct 30 2006

    PRESERVANCE: Priest Kusan from Holy Virgin Mary church keeps faith
    and language alive for the Armenians in Sofia.A look at the past,
    present and future of a community that has become an integral part
    of Bulgarian life.

    "I remember my childhood days in Varna when my family visited
    relatives. Having guests is a ritual for Armenians. There would
    always be a meal prepared and everybody would sit at the table eating,
    drinking and talking. Sometimes we would go there at noon and leave
    at late evening.

    "The funniest part of the visit would start when someone would say
    it was about time we had left. Then, all of a sudden, the hosts would
    bring one more dish or start pouring coffee. In this fashion we would
    spend another hour. When we would manage to get up and start for the
    door, our relatives would stop us at the top of the staircase (for
    the dining room in their house was on the first floor) and everybody
    would continue chatting as if they hadn't met for ages. Half an hour
    more would pass.

    "When we would finally get to the door on the ground floor, our
    hosts would keep us there 30 minutes more, talking incessantly. So
    traditionally it would take us about two hours to be actually able
    to leave our relatives' house."

    This story is one of the numerous memories of Mishel Gutsuzian, 27,
    a representative of the youngest generation of Bulgarian Armenians.

    Despite that his mother is a Bulgarian and that he presently lives
    in Sofia, away from his relatives, Mishel feels proud of his Armenian
    origin.

    But what does it mean to be Armenian in Bulgaria? One general thing
    could be said - Bulgarians don't consider them different. They are
    so well integrated, that usually only their surname ending with the
    typical -ian gives them away. It strange but true - Bulgarians don't
    fancy Turks too much and they quite dislike Roma people. At the same
    time, Bulgarians feel Armenians to be part of their nation and have
    no negative stereotypes about them.

    It could be the result of the hundreds of years of peaceful
    co-existence. Protobulgarians and Armenians had their first interaction
    1900 years ago, and Armenians have lived on the Balkans for more than
    1500 years. Throughout this time, political changes have obviously
    strengthened all the more the relationship between the two nations.

    Armenians have a unique fate that probably could be likened only to
    that of Jews. This talented nation has put its grandest historical
    achievements not in its own state and culture, wrote English
    Byzantologist R Genkins.

    Centuries of trial Although Armenia is one of the most ancient and
    still-existing countries, it has suffered numerous dominations and vast
    parts of its territory were torn apart by its neighbours. In 387 the
    Roman Empire and Persia finally divided Armenia in two parts. Since
    then, over 1600 years now, the state of existence of two Armenias -
    East and West - has continued. Their sovereignty and their belonging to
    one or another foreign country changed through the centuries depending
    on the geopolitical situation in the region and the world as a whole.

    One sole fact speaks for itself - the present Armenian country is
    fully within the borders of East Armenia. The rest of the historical
    Armenian lands are in Turkey.

    Armenians might very well be called a nation of fugitives. Today
    there are about three million people living in Armenia, and another
    10 million scattered all around the world. Migrating has become their
    fate - Armenian mercenary armies were first settled in the lands of
    nowadays Bulgaria by the Byzantine emperors in the sixth century.

    With each new conqueror, new groups of Armenians were displaced and
    very often sent to the Balkan Peninsula. Armenians left their lands
    not only because of the oppression of foreign rulers. The unfavourable
    natural resources and conditions in their territory were one more
    reason that besides foreign occupations that urged Armenians to find
    other places to live.

    Even bigger were the migration waves during the period of Ottoman
    domination. At that time, both Bulgaria and Armenia were within the
    borders of the Turkish empire. Travelling for the purposes of trade
    and crafts fostered the relations between the two peoples. Probably
    that is the time when the Armenians realised they would stay in
    Bulgarian lands for good. So they started building churches and
    founding schools. The common faith - Christianity - also helped
    Bulgarians and Armenians to grow closer.

    The sad events in the history of the Armenian nation at the end of
    the 19th and the beginning of the 20 century turned Armenians and
    Bulgarians into close friends once and for all. Armenians still fight
    for a worldwide recognition of the genocide inflicted on them.

    Bulgaria is one of the few countries that openly accepted the refugees
    from that period, and that is why Armenians are ever thankful to
    the Bulgarians.

    A nation of fugitives But let's give it a clear explanation. By the
    end of the 19th century, Bulgaria was already a free country. Its
    liberation had been acquired through a war between Russia and the
    Ottoman Empire, the battles held on Bulgarian lands with the active
    participation of many Bulgarian volunteer detachments. Although
    unstable and just starting to make its way through the complicated
    situation of the day, Bulgaria was free. At the same time, the Ottoman
    Empire was already on the deathbed, striving to survive and crumbling
    under the pretence of its own ruler.

    The sultan Abdul Hamit II feared to death that someone might undermine
    his unlimited authority. Hence he had become hostile to every kind of
    national-liberation movement in the empire. Armenians were first on his
    list of culprits. During the 1880s, a vast plan for their genocide was
    developed. It included depriving Armenians of the protection of law,
    seizing by force of Armenian property, organisation to systematically
    massacre them. Of course, everything was carried on unofficially. The
    aim of the sultan was that Armenians revolt against such treatment,
    which reaction would be the perfect pretext to officially use armed
    force against them.

    The result of the sultan's 1894-1896 campaign: 300 000 victims and
    500 000 refugees. Bulgaria reacted immediately: the ships Bulgaria,
    Knyaz Boris and Istanbul transported Armenians to the Bulgarian Black
    Sea ports for free. The government granted the refugees money and
    exempted from taxation all petty tradesmen, craftsmen and those who
    had managed to receive agricultural land.

    Like everybody, Armenians hoped that the downfall of the Ottoman Empire
    would mean end to the oppression. Wrong. The Young Turks proved to
    be more barbaric even than the retrograde sultan had been.

    Only one generation, 20 years, had passed. Armenians had fresh memories
    of the loss of friends and relatives. And everything repeated all over
    again, but on a grander, more horrifying scale, from between 1915-1916
    and until there was mass Armenian deportation to the most distant
    desert parts of Turkey. People were simply left out there and were
    told they had to find a way to survive. Men, who were more likely to
    fight against the Turks, were collected from around the towns and shot.

    That period saw the loss of 1.5 million Armenian lives and the flight
    of another 800 000 people. The fact that Bulgaria officially opened
    its borders for the refugees is a credit to the state. Actually,
    Bulgaria had just gone through three wars (two Balkan wars and World
    War 1) that had exhausted its resources to the utmost extent.

    Nevertheless Knyaz Boris III ordered with a decree that all Armenians
    should be accepted into the country. They numbered about 20 000.

    Nowadays, Armenians from all over the world celebrate April 24 as a
    memorial day to the victims of the genocide. The date is used to launch
    campaigns for recognition of the genocide, appointed by the respective
    country's parliament. Although the UN had acknowledged the genocide
    back in 1945, many states still have no official standpoint on the
    topic. The greatest problem probably is with Turkey, which stubbornly
    continues denying that something like that had ever happened.

    According to the official census from 2001, presently in Bulgaria
    there live about 13 000 Armenians. Unofficial data of the Armenian
    church gives even a larger number - about 20 000. Almost all of them
    (about 95 per cent) live in towns and their occupation is very often
    connected on trade, crafts or arts. There even exists such a stereotype
    in Bulgarian minds about Armenians - that they are goldsmiths (or
    other craftsmen, who are skilful in producing exquisite things),
    and that they have never practiced hard physical work.

    "Usually when I say my name, people recognise my Armenian origin,"
    Anton Hekimian, 22, a student at Sofia University, explains. "Next
    thing that happens is that everybody starts talking about us being
    goldsmiths and so on," he smiles. As a matter of fact, his grandfather,
    one of the refugees from 1915-1922, had been a shoemaker. The other
    curious fact is that only when his father married a Bulgarian,
    did he "discover" the difference between the various agricultural
    implements. "So it's not true that Armenians never worked in the
    fields. My farther did. Because of his love for my mother," said Anton.

    The role of faith There is one thing most characteristic of the
    Armenian communities outside their home country. They keep tight
    relationships, support each other and do their best to preserve their
    cultural identity.

    Their solidarity is so popular that Bulgarians started joking that all
    you need is put three Armenians together and they will immediately
    build a church, found a school and start publishing a newspaper. At
    the same time, Armenians are not insular and they actively co-operate
    to establish connection between themselves and the "host" peoples.

    That is how Armenians in Bulgaria have both managed to keep their
    traditions and still be active citizens, bringing prosperity to
    the country. According to Kusan Hadavian, a priest at Sofia's Holy
    Virgin Mary church, the Armenian minority alone stand closest to the
    Bulgarian nation. And that is why they have never created problems
    for the government. "We have come here knowing clearly that we need to
    obey local laws. But meanwhile we are called to preserve our language,
    religion and culture. We shouldn't allow what we call 'djermak chart'
    to happen - that means we shouldn't give our traditions up," Father
    Kusan explained.

    In the past, because of the numerous dominations that the people
    of Armenia had suffered, the church played the role of a uniting
    centre for all Armenians. It substituted the government, the court,
    the schools. Today, with Armenians living abroad, the church again
    plays as the centre of their universe.

    It is at church service where most of the Bulgarian-Armenians talk
    their native language. There people meet not only to pray to God,
    but to socialise and to find out what's new with their friends.

    "Conditions of life have changed," admits Father Kusan, "and they
    have become more difficult". That's why the regular-goers have grown
    fewer. But at least for tradition's sake, the temple fills up on
    Sundays and major feasts like Easter and at the Nativity.

    Maybe preserving the Armenian consciousness is truly in their genes, as
    a man from the congregation said. Religion, Christianity to be exact,
    is a vital part of that consciousness. It is very unlikely that you
    meet an Armenian who doesn't know how Christianity was spread in his
    country. Everybody you ask surely takes pride in the fact that the
    religion had been widely popular in Armenia from the very beginning of
    its existence in the first century CE. Another thing that you might
    hear very often is the fact that the country officially accepted
    Christianity even before the Roman Empire did, in 301.

    Even though, at present, the Armenians in Bulgaria are less religious
    than they were some 20 years ago, they still feel hurt if you neglect
    the ancient history of their church. They also insist on making its
    actual name clear. Officially it is the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox
    Church, and they call it such because the first people to spread
    Christianity in the lands of Armenia were two of Jesus' disciples -
    Thaddeus and Bartholomew. One other name for it is Lusavorchagan, after
    the most-honoured Armenian saint. He is Krikor Lusavorich (257?-337?),
    or Gregory the Illuminator, a reformer of the church during whose
    time Christianity was proclaimed the official religion of the country.

    Unfortunately, a misunderstanding about these names appeared. In
    the 19th century Echmiadzin - the spiritual centre of Armenia - fell
    within the borders of the Russian empire. The Russian constitution
    demanded that the church bear the name of its founder. That's why
    Armenians started calling it Lusavorchagan, Russians - Enlightener's,
    and in Western Europe it became popular as Armeno-Gregorian. In truth,
    the last name created a lot of confusion. Although it was attributed
    to Gregory the Illuminator, Western people tend to believe it has
    a relation to the Roman Catholic pope Gregory. Armenians deny this
    concept as absolutely untrue. Actually this is one main reason why
    they insist hard on the name Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church.

    The other reason, of course, is the fact that they want to uphold
    their 2000-year-old heritage, starting with Thaddeus and Bartholomew.

    Language during service turns out to be both a privilege and a
    problem. For many Armenians, the church is the only place where they
    can speak it in their otherwise Bulgarian habitat. On the other hand,
    it's so rich and complicated that sometimes it's hard to understand
    the words and chants of the priest. "In order to make ourselves clear
    and to attract more pilgrims to service, we ought to use plainer
    vocabulary," Father Kusan admits. In his view, another tactic that
    could bring more people to the church is publishing a booklet with
    the order and texts of service in both Armenian and Bulgarian. That
    could also stimulate people to learn the Armenian language better.

    Recent challenges During the communist period, in the 1960s,
    Armenian schools in Bulgaria were closed. The effects were all
    negative. The interest in the study of Armenian language was lost to
    a great extent. Twenty years later, when teaching could be resumed,
    there were neither qualified professors, nor adequate books, which
    created a lot of problems. The contemporary young prefer to study
    Bulgarian because they live and work among Bulgarians. While in
    past years, 76th elementary school William Saroyan in Sofia has
    had classes full of Armenian children, now things have changed:
    "There are more than 300 kids here," said Headmistress Stefanova,
    "but out of them only about 20 study Armenian language. I believe the
    reason is the difference between the generations. The grandparents
    insisted much more on knowing the traditions and language. Nowadays
    parents are not so much up to that". And there are some the adults,
    too, who don't speak Armenian even at home with their relatives.

    It all seems to be connected - the young Armenians in Bulgaria tend
    to break the dogmas of their ancestors. You should go to church,
    you should speak Armenian, you shouldn't marry a person who is from a
    different nationality... Keeping the "purity" of the blood used to be
    an obligation out of question for every Armenian in the country. But
    some of its validity was lost 30 years ago, when intermarriages
    started.

    "A cousin of my father's fell in love with a Bulgarian girl," gave
    Anton as an example. "After the wedding his parents didn't speak
    a word to him for 10 or more years. They were really mad that he
    neglected the tradition."

    You might think that that's the natural way for a development of
    a nation - where young people revolt against the rules created by
    their predecessors. And still there are interesting exceptions from
    that like mixed families, where the Bulgarian partner speaks Armenian
    perfectly. Anyway, the Armenian people have been put to the test of
    time and have survived, keeping their identity intact. Massacres,
    emigration, insecurity and assimilation proved weak and couldn't wipe
    them out. In spite of their having lived in Bulgaria for so long,
    they keep their face and traits. But then again, they have managed
    to integrate so well that no one considers them foreigners. That is
    a life approach worth envying.

    http://www.sofiaecho.com/article/reading -room-what-it-takes-to-be-armenian/id_18374/catid_ 29
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