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  • Changing Identity: Jerusalem To Surrey

    CHANGING IDENTITY: JERUSALEM TO SURREY

    Runner Magazine, Canada
    Oct 27 2013

    The Runner | Oct 08, 2013 | Comments 0

    A personal exploration of what it means to be Canadian.

    By Sarine Gulerian [contributor]

    It must have been a subtle shift. To this day I cannot give the
    exact, or even general, time it took place. The moment when I began
    to think and even dream in the English language, rather than Armenian,
    is a mystery.

    Conversing with me now, you would never know that English is my second
    language. My tan and foreign accent faded long ago.

    Because of my pale skin colour, perfect English and "Canadian"
    exterior, people assume that I was born and raised in Canada, where
    I currently reside.

    Sitting in the back room of Starbucks, enjoying my well-earned lunch,
    my cell phone rang. Interrupting my conversation with my co-worker
    I quickly picked up my phone.

    "Hi bab, inch gelagor?" I said. This is my usual script when my father
    calls, it's the same as "Hi dad, what's going on?" Casually talking
    to my father, I failed to realize why my co-worker was staring at me.

    Her eyes squinted and intently listening, it dawned on me. She'd
    never heard me speak in Armenian. She probably didn't even know what
    Armenian meant and, at that point, neither did I.

    Being an Armenian, who was born in Jerusalem but currently living in
    Canada, was a combination that resulted in an identity crisis during
    my early teens. I found myself ashamed of being different. I began to
    dress in fashionable clothes, painting on make-up and straightening
    my hair to blend in. Just like many other 15-year-olds, all I wanted
    in life was to fit in and be normal.

    My parents took it upon themselves to make this as difficult as
    possible. I hold NBC and ABC responsible. Dateline and 20/20, which
    aired every Friday night at 10 p.m., had my parents convinced that
    all young, intelligent, beautiful girls who have a bright future end
    up in a ditch, run away, overdose, get kidnapped by their jealous
    boyfriends, or die in some insane manner.

    In high school I couldn't go to most sleepovers, I couldn't go to
    parties ... and there was no way I could hang out with boys. Trying to
    explain to my Canadian friends why I couldn't be at Kaila's weekend
    benders was humiliatingly impossible. I didn't know which was worse:
    having to explain to people that my parents couldn't cut my umbilical
    cord, or going out with the risk of getting caught, and having to
    face the wrath of my father.

    But I understand now why it was so hard for my parents to allow us
    any freedom. We moved from an enclosed neighbourhood with a curfew in
    Jerusalem, which was also home to their lifelong friends and family,
    to some suburban street in a foreign country where the only thing we
    had in common with our neighbour was our fence.

    The process of being Canadianized was almost as sluggish as human
    evolution. But, slowly and surely, changing our environment led to
    the change of thought process, lifestyle and personality. Khoren, my
    brother, soon became Corey. Ohan, my father, soon became John. These
    were some of the obvious changes made in the process of conforming to
    Canadian culture. The subtle changes, like the disappearance of our
    accents, went unnoticed until years later when I tried to pinpoint
    the precise moment we became Canadian. I realized that my siblings
    and I spoke to each other in English, we had Chinese food and pizza
    parties rather than traditional Armenian meals, and our Christmas
    was no longer celebrated on Jan. 6. Change is never good or bad,
    it is something we all must do to adapt at school, work or in the
    real world and this too was just a change.

    After the initial culture shock, the years quickly passed. At the
    age of 13 I realized that I had lived longer in Canada then I had
    back home, in Jerusalem. What a strange thought. Did living longer
    in Canada mean that I was officially Canadian?

    The answer became more obvious when I was 17 and my family decided to
    go back and visit for the first time since 1997. And finally in April
    2009 we took our first family trip back to Jerusalem during Easter. It
    was a special occasion for the Armenians who grew up in Jerusalem
    because it was the 80th anniversary of St. Tarkmanchatz Armenian
    School. It is the only school which is enclosed inside of the Armenian
    Quarter of Jerusalem, the school that my father graduated from, and
    the same school my mother, my family and all our friends had attended.

    Everyone, no matter where they were now, was expected back for
    a reunion.

    Corey and I landed at the Tel Aviv airport. The rest of my family
    had departed after us. As soon as we arrived we were deemed suspicious.

    "If you were born here, why don't you have an Israeli passport?" asked
    one of the women working. They automatically concluded that we must be
    Arab. Two hours later we were finally given an opportunity to explain
    that we weren't Arab and we weren't Israeli. We were Armenian. Raised
    in St. James Monastery, an Armenian-orthodox convent located in
    the southwest of Jerusalem, we were the exception to their strict
    citizenship laws.

    But instead of welcoming us back - something Canadians do when they
    flip through your passport, smile and wave you through the border -
    they whispered to each other in Hebrew, a language they knew neither
    of us understood.

    My brother and I were interrogated together, separately, then together
    again. They had taken our passports and our bags. We were left in a
    small room with other travelers that had been stopped, the majority
    of whom looked and spoke Arabic.

    At that point, all I wanted was to go home ... but this was supposed
    to be my home, wasn't it?

    It felt as if I had run into an old best friend who, once upon a
    time, I knew well and loved dearly. Now, 12 years later, they were a
    stranger and the comfortable feeling I once had in their presence had
    vanished. I felt out of place. I felt like I was back in high school,
    and all I wanted was to fit in. Once we were finally released, we
    found our cousins patiently waiting outside the terminal. We didn't
    have to explain to them what happened; they had already assumed.

    The architecture in Jerusalem* was nothing like the cute colourful
    suburban houses in Surrey. I found myself missing the random smiles
    strangers always flash at each other when walking by in Canada,
    something I had failed to notice. To me it was a different world.

    Everyone here was intensely focused on the ground while walking,
    sandwiched like a school of fish, through the narrowed alleys.

    Sometimes they used their shoulders as a weapon to shovel through you.

    I always hoped this was done only to avoid tripping on the uneven
    ground. But I knew better. There was tension no matter which way you
    went. This place was too unfamiliar, too unfriendly and full of way
    too many fundamentalists

    This couldn't be my home. It may have been a part of my culture and
    my history but now it was a part of my past. I couldn't relate to
    these people in any way. Of course, I'm Armenian and I will always be
    proud of my ethnicity, but I couldn't be any happier with the choice
    my parents forced upon me. I couldn't be more thankful that I live
    in my favourite place in the world. There's no place like home.

    http://runnermag.ca/2013/10/changing-identity-jerusalem-to-surrey/


    From: Baghdasarian
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