Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Weekly Perseveres After 75 Years

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Weekly Perseveres After 75 Years

    Armenian Weekly Perseveres After 75 Years
    By Tom Vartabedian

    Asbarez
    Dec 5th, 2009


    At a time when the ethnic press is teetering on the brink of change,
    the Armenian Weekly celebrates its 75th anniversary with a vision to
    the future.

    It has survived a monsoon of editorial exchanges, a transgression of
    readership, financial instability, unsettled attitudes, and now the
    electronic age.

    Yet, it continues to remain an organ for the ages, a voice for the
    Armenian community in this diaspora, a harbinger of democracy that
    pumps vitality into an Armenian readership eager for news. As a
    correspondent who's been attached for 50 of those years, I wonder what
    my fate would have become had it not been for the Hairenik and those
    who served its realm.

    Would I have devoted my life to journalism or been slinging hash at my
    dad's restaurant? Would I have become a conscientious Armenian, active
    with AYF and ARF standards, raising a family in the same vein?

    And what would become of you, the reader? Would you have been informed
    of the Armenian news, kept in touch with current events throughout the
    world? Would you have been entertained by Armenian socials, educated
    with buoyant lectures and seminars?

    The Armenian Weekly has remained a torch with an inextinguishable
    flame, burning in our hearts and minds, and providing a platform in
    which to form opinions, gain insight.

    Say what you want about William Saroyan earning his start with the
    Hairenik's in the 1930's. But so did a lot of others like him. Perhaps
    they didn't reach the prominence of this great writer but rest
    assured, they also used the paper to further their own careers in
    journalism.

    Detroit's Mitch Kehetian, for one, would never have spent 50 years in
    newspaper work had he not flexed his wings with the Hairenik Weekly,
    much less the likes of Hakob Karapents, Sarkis Atamian, Leo Sarkisian,
    Uncle Garabed, Uncle Bozo, poetess Diana Der Hovanesian and Jimmy
    Tashjian.

    Ask any of the 16 editors who handled the operation and they'll tell
    you it was not only a labor of love but a window of opportunity in
    their professional world.

    Ask any correspondent who ever submitted an article about the feeling
    they got at seeing their byline attached to a story. For some AYF
    Junior, that's huge. It's their incentive to keep on writing, develop
    a creative mind, do some good for their chapter, and, above all,
    contribute to a worthwhile enterprise.

    The organization would be quick to admit that were it not for those
    scribes - those budding journalists - the paper would never have survived
    all these decades. It's been only as good as those who fueled its
    longevity.

    One cannot fail to mention the Hairenik with its Armenian language
    content. A centennial celebration - on Dec. 2, 2000 (1899-1999) - served
    as a monumental milestone in that paper's tenure.

    And now, with the Armenian Weekly's 75th, that totals 175 years of
    dedicated service from two organs in one building. Both have remained
    part and parcel to one another throughout an eternity.

    As a long-time contributor, I am thankful for receiving such an
    opportunity to write and have my photographs published whenever
    possible. My gripe is this. There must be others like myself out there
    with a flair for writing who do not take advantage of this journal. In
    some ways, the Weekly has remained a writers' workshop where those
    with inclination have used it as a stomping ground to hone their
    skills.

    It has also inspired me to seek out many stories about Armenians and
    have them published in the American press. Every community has
    Armenians who are labeled as unsung heroes. They shun exposure and
    prefer to remain in the background.

    Having developed a `nose for Armenian news' with each trip I've taken
    to Haiastan, I was able to return with notebooks full of stories about
    interesting subjects. These are articles that would never have found
    their way to print were it not for the availability of our ethnic
    press to get them circulated.

    Perhaps the best story to come along over this half century was one
    that occurred in 1960 - the year I had just gotten baptized by the
    Armenian Weekly. I was a sophomore studying journalism at Boston
    University and very involved at the Holy Cross Armenian Catholic
    Church in Cambridge at the time.

    The opportunity came to study Armenian in Vienna, Austria, with the
    Mekhitarist Catholic Fathers. I figured it would be a great
    opportunity to enhance my language skills with an Order that had
    preserved our culture and history for nearly three centuries through
    their writings and translations.

    It would be a year's duration, which meant a sabbatical from my
    studies. I would be living with these priests inside a monastery in
    what was meant to be a pilot program, which would allow other students
    like myself to follow if feasible.

    Just before departure, Jimmy Tashjian pulled me aside with a request.
    He was wondering if I could write a monthly series of my experiences
    inside this vank. Very little had been written previously about the
    Mekhitarists and the editor saw tremendous human interest potential
    from the installments.

    Up to this point, my experiences with the Weekly had been purely
    token. An AYF chapter report here. A basketball write-up there. I
    anxiously accepted the offer.

    So once a month for a year, I dispatched an article that found its way
    into print. With all the publications received at the monastery from
    around the world, and a limited English capacity among the priests,
    the Hairenik Weekly was hardly a journal they eagerly awaited, despite
    the complimentary subscription.

    When the first issue arrived with the story I had submitted, I
    approached Archbishop Mesrob Habozian, the abbott general at the time,
    with the great news. Stories about the Catholic Order would now be
    read by other Armenians wherever the paper was circulated.
    None of this mattered to him. Instead, as my instructor, he had
    another request - one that sent me into instant delirium. As I showed
    him the stories, he asked that they be translated into Armenian and
    read to the other priests.

    >From then on, all 20 priests at the vank eagerly awaited the Hairenik
    issues each month to see what I had written, but more importantly, to
    hear my progress with both written and spoken Armenian. Any mistakes
    were instantly corrected, much to my chagrin.

    This all pleased Tashjian so very much to think that his organ had
    suddenly taken on a sacred presence with the Fathers. Upon my return
    home, a career in journalism had pretty much been established and I
    had suddenly become a familiar correspondent to readers.

    And here it is, 50 years later, thousands of stories behind me, an
    Almanac Column that was launched in 1970, an Olympics issue that
    celebrated its fourth decade, and I still find the Armenian Weekly a
    viable presence in my life - and yours.

    Tashjian is gone. So is Mandalian, Reuben Darbinian, and others like
    Kevork Donabedian who were veritable icons in their mission to keep
    the ethnic press secure, whether it was the English publication or the
    Armenian. One visit to that building at 212 Stuart St. in Boston was
    enough to recharge a young writer's battery.

    When I think about all that talent that was laden behind those walls,
    all the dedication and verve it took to get one issue after another
    printed, the utter chaos at times and quiet transitional periods, it
    blows my mind.

    I sometimes hear complaints: Too much politics. Not enough AYF news.
    An overabundance of academia and a scarcity of human interest. When
    all is said and done, you cannot appreciate the final product unless
    you fill an editor's shoes. Eventually, everybody's business becomes
    the newspaper's business.

    On this 75th anniversary, let us all raise our glasses high and do the
    Armenian Weekly a favor. Communities can band together and hold a
    Hairenik Day. Without preaching to the choir, we can get the paper
    circulated to non-subscribers.

    As loyal readers, we can take out complimentary subscriptions and gift
    them to relatives and friends. It's a small investment into their
    mainstream.

    And those of you with some inclination to write, share this talent by
    joining our correspondence family. Report on your community, send
    along a photo, and keep us abreast of local news, be it a distinction
    student or distinct athlete. Voice an opinion. Take a stand.
    Send along a monetary contribution when able. Make it in someone's
    name if you wish. Pass your issue on to others in your family and take
    out a subscription for someone in college, particularly the AYFer in
    your family. They will surely appreciate the gesture. Mine certainly
    did. It was their connection to the Armenian world.

    Above all, be grateful we have such a publication in our midst. Any
    institution - newspapers or otherwise - to have survived for 75 years must
    have something going in its favor.

    That something is YOU.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X