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Transformations: Wood Stoves And Faith

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  • Transformations: Wood Stoves And Faith

    TRANSFORMATIONS: WOOD STOVES AND FAITH

    http://asbarez.com/107790/transformations-woodstoves-and-faith/
    Tuesday, January 22nd, 2013

    BY MARIA TITIZIAN

    Most days you just want to turn the switch off, go home, sit on
    the couch and watch a meaningless movie. You don't want to think
    about work, about deadlines and responsibilities, about the upcoming
    presidential elections or about your crazy, chaotic life. You crave
    boredom, monotony, a peaceful existence.

    And then a 23 year-old journalist goes ahead and files a news report
    about the first presidential elections (1991) in a free and independent
    Armenia, an Armenia you didn't believe would exist in your lifetime
    and you realize that you don't have the right or the luxury to switch
    anything off.

    It wasn't so much the substance or content of her report that moved me
    but how she had made herself part of the story she was trying to tell.

    And as her friends and colleagues shared her clip, they began to
    reminisce about those early years of our country's independence. Most
    of them were mere children, some not even old enough to talk or to
    even have memories. Yet oddly they recalled similar things. Like
    the smell of potatoes baking on woodstoves in their apartments, the
    darkness, the cold winter nights, the candlelight. They remembered
    their euphoria when the electricity would unexpectedly return or how
    they would play games or do their homework by candlelight; or how
    the neighbors in their building would all come together for warmth,
    for some company and compassion. An entire generation of Armenia's
    children grew up in the "cold and dark years" of the early 1990s. Most
    of them grew up without the basic comforts we took and continue to
    take for granted, like warmth, light, clean water, proper nutrition,
    a carefree and blissful existence. They could have been my children...

    Many of that generation have left Armenia and many continue to leave.

    But for those who have stayed, those young men and women who paid
    a high price for something they didn't understand, it is for and
    about them that we should all continue to work, regardless of where
    we live, whether in the homeland or the Diaspora. None of us will be
    able to give them back their childhood, but we can try and restore
    their faith in the future of Armenia.

    Yet, as I write such lofty sentiments about how we should 'restore
    their faith,' it dawns on me that they are the ones who are restoring
    ours. The steadily growing environmental movement is Armenia is teeming
    with young people, who see themselves not as temporary residents in
    search of a visa guaranteeing their departure but as the rightful
    owners of this land. There are those dedicated group of activists who
    are on the frontlines to ensure the protection of human rights in the
    country, and who consistently address different kinds of abuses and
    injustice with conviction; there are those women's rights activists
    who confront stereotypes and rigid gender roles on a daily basis yet
    who carry on to ensure that women's voices, perspectives and needs are
    guaranteed in decision-making; and there are those young journalists
    who try to enlighten us by writing articles and filming reports about
    the state of the country from their own unique prism. It is true that
    journalism in Armenia has much room for improvement but there are
    some news organizations trying to fill that void. And while there is
    an army of those who complain or simply write statuses on Facebook,
    there are just as many more who are trying to ensure a dignified life
    for everyone.

    I work with a lot of different people, most of them considerably
    younger; it's not always pleasant being the oldest person in the room,
    but I have come to realize what a gift it has been for me. Every day I
    interact with young, bright, and, energetic people who work hard, dream
    big and strive for excellence. I forget about their personal stories,
    their memories and recollections of those difficult early years of our
    country's independence when they huddled around woodstoves, trying to
    warm their frozen little fingers so that they could play the piano, or
    read a fairy tale or simply run around to play a game of hide-and-seek.

    The generation of the 'cold and dark years' are now young adults,
    studying, working, serving in the army, getting ready to chart their
    journey through life. Their passage through childhood was not an easy
    one, it was fraught with hardship and many deprivations but their
    nostalgia when recalling potatoes baking on woodstoves and fond
    memories of candlelight in the darkness simple proves, yet again,
    the strength and resilience of the human spirit.

    I read a saying today, "A smooth sea never made a skillful sailor." If
    there's any truth to these words, then our future is indeed bright.

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