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New Column: Diary Of An Armenian Journalist

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  • New Column: Diary Of An Armenian Journalist

    NEW COLUMN: DIARY OF AN ARMENIAN JOURNALIST
    Tom Vartabedian

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/0 9/28/new-column-diary-of-an-armenian-journalist/
    S eptember 28, 2009

    I never intended to keep a journal but my wife had other ideas.

    She said, "If you're going to Armenia, it behooves you to record
    your daily experiences. Besides, it'll give me something juicy to
    read when you come back."

    I didn't keep a journal my first trip to Hayastan in 2006. My
    mistake. While sorting through my slides and compiling my stories,
    I wish I had been more organized.

    On the other hand, I needed a break from writing and didn't entertain
    the thought of leaving a newspaper behind for two weeks and resuming
    my journalism in Armenia.

    So I skipped a journal and resorted to hen-scratching on pads, which
    turned out to be rather illegible at times. So disengaged that I
    actually identified the wrong church in a photo exhibit until a
    curator brought it to my attention.

    One important facet about Armenia. Either get it straight or don't
    get it at all.

    So my wife went out and purchased this fancy leather journal with a
    red cover and dark red elastics to keep it bound. "Here's a little
    something special to remember your trip by," she said, handing over
    a neatly-wrapped package.

    It was an offer I couldn't refuse.

    In the days and weeks I spent in Armenia during April and May,
    the journal became my commitment. And my panacea. Each evening, no
    matter the time, I would sit on a cozy sofa and make my inscriptions
    dutifully.

    So did my sidekick Joe Dagdigian. He's been keeping journals for years
    and encouraged me to make it a daily exercise. "Miss a day and it's
    hard to recall," he told me. "Jot down places in your notepad and
    transfer them to the journal at night."

    Sounded like sage advice. If Joe was a general in some war, it would
    never end because he would spend most of his time keeping journals
    for future books.

    Some people say I have such a way with words that I can write my
    journal in advance. Well, they couldn't be further from the truth. To
    keep an accurate journal, no matter where you go, takes work.

    The last time I had kept such a journal was at age 19 when I spent
    a year studying with the Armenian Mekhitarist Fathers in Austria. At
    the time, I had no intention of becoming a journalist but had begun
    corresponding for the Hairenik Weekly through the AYF. Its editor,
    James Tashjian, encouraged me to keep a journal.

    Every day for a year, I made my notations, capturing the lives of the
    Catholic priests and the social climate in Vienna. It turned into my
    personal diary until I shared it with my wife and loved ones.

    I never intended to have it published. It was kept for posterity. What
    it did was open a window for me that ultimately led to a journalism
    career and a published series of articles for the Hairenik which were
    welcomed by the editor.

    I wish to share my journal with Weekly readers in the weeks to
    come. The beauty of any trip, be it Armenia or Africa, is to draw
    others into the experience. Whether you've been to Armenia or not,
    maybe these installments will take you there.

    On the lighter side, I happen to be a big Mister Boffo cartoon fan. And
    wouldn't you know it? On the day I was writing this introduction,
    they showed a man behind bars with the subtitle: "Too Little Too
    Late Award."

    The inmate, presumably a journalist, turns to the jail keeper and
    says, "Should I be writing this?" I can assure you that I was never
    incarcerated in Armenia much less given a snide look by any law
    enforcement officer. Had that occurred, you'd probably be reading
    about that as well.

    Please join me as I transport you to places like Dzidzernagapert and
    witness April 24th, like Gyumri and Artsakh and the many villages along
    the way. Come sample the vibrant social life, some of the impoverished
    areas, and the spiritual encounters in many of the churches. Relive
    a heritage with me that dates back 5,000 years and refuses to die.
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