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Appreciating Odds And Ends In Armenian Culture

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  • Appreciating Odds And Ends In Armenian Culture

    APPRECIATING ODDS AND ENDS IN ARMENIAN CULTURE
    By Robert Fullam

    ianyan magazine
    http://www.ianyanmag.com/?p=1966
    April 1 2010

    There long has been a phenomenon that not just myself, but countless
    other Armenians have taken note of, those ubiquitous floral patterned
    dresses that older Armenian women seem to wear. Whether they are at
    the store, at a church bazaar, a kef or anywhere else, they wear
    these things all the time! I have a feeling there is some rite of
    passage for Armenian women regarding this thing. You would think
    some people might catch on to new fashions yet women take after
    their mothers and continue this tradition of dressing like their
    grandparent's generation.

    There is this feeling in the pit of my stomach that today's Armenian
    girls, despite their UGGs and Juicy Couture pants, will inevitably
    grow into this fashion faux pas . There's the pattern with the dresses,
    they are usually accompanied by those bland orthopedic shoes and dark
    stockings and I can't forget to mention some of the tacky jewelry
    as well. I'm going to tell one of my stories about these dresses,
    a quick one that some of you can relate to. I went to one of the
    church bazaars during this past summer with my mother and grandmother,
    letting my grandmother drag me around, introducing me to some of her
    friends. They all tell me they remember how little I was, kiss me on
    both cheeks and pinch me and they all wore those dresses but this is
    not the clincher. After leaving the bazaar, we went to another one but
    thought it was closed so we continued home and at a stop light me, my
    mother and grandmother look over. There they were, three older women,
    all slightly overweight, floral dresses, and all making eye contact
    with us. It was at this moment everyone in the car knew that these
    women were Armenian. We did not know them, we did not see them at the
    bazaar, but we could tell that they were Armenian because of how they
    dressed and I find something hilarious yet disturbing about that fact.

    It was funny and a little sad, but such a stupid thing to laugh about.

    It's really just one of those cultural peculiarities that you have
    love, savoring it because you know it's unique, one of those things
    that you just end up telling yourself, "I love being Armenian."

    I will not deny however that this does not occur in other cultures as
    well, I'm sure there are grandmothers out there with their mysterious
    subculture that nobody can understand. Differences are not always bad,
    I bet there are some Armenians out there who can totally relate to what
    I'm writing about and some might not, Armenian subcultures vary widely
    and what I am describing are my own experiences that have culminated in
    a greater appreciation my culture and how it relates to me personally.

    So I just ask you to look around at the grandfatherly men playing
    tavlo(backgammon) in the park, the hairy, heavily mustached men who
    grill at the kefs and bazaars and the packs of medzmayrigs gossiping
    with each other and simply, appreciate it.
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