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The Secret Of Endurance

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  • The Secret Of Endurance

    THE SECRET OF ENDURANCE
    RAZMIG B. SHIRINIAN

    Asbarez
    Apr 9th, 2010

    Rarely an organization, consistently hard at work, finds time to recall
    its destiny, take pride of its accomplishments, evoke and celebrate its
    undertakings, and generate public enthusiasm and support. Ever since
    its founding in 1910, the ARS has staged the priority of practice
    and labor over rhetoric and publicity. Carrying on a multitude of
    tasks and missions, the organization has been moving along with the
    Armenian fate and reflecting on its history for a century.

    Honored by the regional executive's invitation to reflect on the
    centenary of ARS, I first recall and invoke Simone de Beauvoir's
    classic book, The Second Sex, which offers a systematic feminist
    critique exploring the perpetual inequality and violence linked
    to masculine cultures and representations. Beauvoir convincingly
    discloses the argument that inequality and violence are not fixed in
    human nature or in biological differences, but are determined by male
    perspective and point of view. The missing truth in this perspective
    is well captured by the Beauvoirian epitaph that "one is not born
    but rather becomes a woman" in male culture. Her powerful analysis
    targets the male representation of the world which seems to clearly
    resemble the Armenian culture of male point of view often "confused
    with absolute truth."

    A similar feminist musing appears in Betty Friedan's The Feminine
    Mystique about a decade later. Since Beauvoir and Friedan, the
    counter-traditional conceptions of feminism have been expounded in
    various philosophical dimensions ranging from Marxist-existentialism
    to liberal-conservatism. ARS, a distinctively prominent and
    task-oriented Armenian women's organization, has its exclusive
    approach on how feminism is viewed. It is the natural, constructive,
    and predominantly service and relief oriented image that characterizes
    the organization. It also carries an "Irenist" label, from Irene, the
    goddess of peace, without however, much sharing with other feminist
    organizations a critique of masculinity and patriarchy.

    The Armenian Relief Society is the epithet of service and faith both
    in Armenia and the Diaspora. I call upon the idea of founding mothers
    of civil service to recognize the leading proponents of social justice
    and ardent believers in relief of people in hardship. It seems that
    the ARS has earned the emblematic status to represent what often
    goes under-represented in our understanding of Armenian politics:
    the profound role of infrastructure, construction and development,
    love and faith in the struggle of national liberation and self
    identification of the neglected Armenian masses.

    The vision ARS shares is an alternative to the pervasive violence
    inflicted upon us at the core of the Armenian political life. The aim
    is clearly set: end social conflict and destitution through communal
    settlements, persuasive and empathetic means. The means for ARS seem
    to matter as much as the end since the method of giving and caring
    expounds an existential meaning to relief. The ARS's idea of service
    best captures this sense of means as relief incessant, persistent
    and in the making. The ideas of service and faith are reasoned in the
    revelation of the will of the nation, the survival of collectivity,
    and construction of cultural identity.

    ARS does not, however, call for nostalgic or abstracted national
    romance. There is the perennial concern for faith in relief effort
    that can be used to bring up the real rewards upon others. Moreover,
    faith and service are tempered by love not only for Armenians, but
    also for the whole humanity. Consider the organization's immediate
    response and reach to human need globally. ARS refers to service as
    the social force which is born of need and care. In its struggles
    against conditions of injustice and oppression, this social force
    echoes the proletarian ground work and reveals the organization's
    counter-traditional character with a pragmatic clout. ARS, thus,
    embodies social powers of sacrifice, protective care, and, the most
    valuable of all, the powers of protection extended to the ordinary
    working people. It is a distinct social organization, dynamic in
    its relations, and equipped with reciprocal powers of sympathy and
    compassion.

    These social powers of the ARS are practically applied through a
    range of political actions: civil service, hunger and disaster relief,
    poverty reduction, elimination of discrimination, and commission of
    reconciliation and social justice. Both as a feminist and a social
    organization ARS strives for a nation out of misery, a world without
    war, and communities devoid of political, economic, and religious
    violence. This means the organization must endure human tragedies,
    ready to lay down all selfish attributes, and aim for collective
    well-being. This is the secret of endurance ARS has carried for
    a century.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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