Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Era for Glendale Armenians

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

  • New Era for Glendale Armenians

    Los Angeles Times
    Aug 8 2005

    New Era for Glendale Armenians

    Even as the ethnic group marks the milestone of a majority on the
    City Council, it struggles with internal diversity and a changing
    community.

    By Amanda Covarrubias
    Times Staff Writer


    Drive down Central Avenue in the heart of Glendale and the telltale
    signs of the city's long Armenian influence quickly become apparent.

    The cursive Armenian writing advertises bakeries, coffee shops and
    restaurants that serve such specialties as sweet honey baklava and
    lamb kebabs.

    Glendale has been a haven for Armenians for generations, a point of
    entry for immigrants from Armenia, as well as people of Armenian
    descent from Turkey, Lebanon, Iran and the former Soviet Union. They
    now make up 40% of the San Fernando Valley city's 210,000 residents.

    But it was not until this year that the city's Armenian community
    marked a major political milestone: winning a majority on the City
    Council.

    Many Armenian Americans are proud of the election results, saying
    they illustrate how a community that once stood on the fringes of
    local government now is playing a central role. But they also are
    quick to say the Armenian American majority on the five-member
    council does not reflect a homogenous community.

    Despite its size, the population is highly diverse. Wealthy second-
    and third-generation Armenian Americans live in tony neighborhoods in
    the hills above the city, while recent immigrants struggle in
    lower-income neighborhoods.

    Bridging this divide is a task with which social service
    organizations and the Armenian Church struggle. Sometimes the new
    immigrants complain that their high expectations about life in
    America are difficult to achieve, especially with limited English
    skills.

    "Some of these people can't get jobs that will pull them out of their
    financial situation," said Angela Savoian, regional chairwoman for
    the Armenian Relief Society. "They get deeper into debt because their
    children want what their neighbors have.... It's much more difficult to
    be poor in this country than where they came from."

    Sometimes parents work two or three jobs to make ends meet, leaving
    their children unsupervised for hours. In the past, authorities have
    said the situation helped boost the ranks of Armenian street gangs, a
    problem seen five years ago when an Armenian gang member fatally
    stabbed a Latino student outside Hoover High School.

    In recent years, police say, Armenian gang activity has declined. But
    both Glendale police and the FBI are becoming increasingly concerned
    about Armenian organized-crime rings linked to drug dealing and
    robberies.

    "I see a lot of materialism and anger and resentment," said Father
    Vazken Movsesian, who runs a youth drop-in center at St. Peter
    Armenian Church, across the street from Hoover High. "I have to keep
    telling them: 'Appreciate all that America's giving you.' "

    The newly elected Armenian American council members have vowed to
    help newcomers integrate into the community, fight youth crime and
    bring about changes that will ease some of the parents' problems.

    Among the steps they can take, said Councilman Ara Najarian, is to
    encourage the Police Department to hire more Armenian American
    officers and work to secure more federally funded housing for
    low-income families. The city has 1,500 vouchers for
    government-funded housing and a waiting list of 9,000.

    "Armenian Americans don't all think the same way or walk in lock
    step," Najarian said. "We're very diverse, from the poorest in the
    city to the richest; some are professionals and some are newly
    arrived with their own language and customs. It's not like we had
    60,000 people who came from Armenia yesterday and settled in
    Glendale."

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Once a bastion of white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant political power, the
    city is now home to about 85,000 Armenians, one of the largest
    populations outside Armenia itself.

    In addition to Central Avenue's bustling shopping district, Glendale
    is home to at least half a dozen Armenian-language newspapers, and
    local cable TV outlets are filled with Armenian-produced talk shows
    and public affairs programming.

    "When I first came to California to go to school in the 1950s, there
    were few Armenians in Glendale," said Richard Dekmejian, director of
    the USC Institute of Armenian Studies. "Most of the Armenians were in
    West Adams, Boyle Heights, a few in the Valley. There were a small
    number of Armenians in Hollywood, but they grew very fast."

    Armenian families have lived in the city since the 1920s, but
    immigration did not transform its social fabric until the 1970s, when
    Armenians who had scattered across the globe during the era of
    genocide in Turkey uprooted themselves in rapid succession from
    Lebanon, Iran and the then-Soviet Republic of Armenia. They were
    forced to leave these countries because of world events that
    prevented them from practicing their Christianity freely and to
    escape anti-Armenian discrimination.

    Many were drawn to Glendale, as well as East Hollywood and Fresno.

    In many respects, the Armenian American councilmen represent the
    diaspora. Bob Yousefian was born in Iran, moved to Lebanon as a
    teenager and later followed his family to the United States; Rafi
    Manoukian was born in Beirut and immigrated to the United States in
    1975; and Najarian, whose parents emigrated from Armenia, is a
    Cleveland native whose family moved to Glendale in 1980.

    The leaders consider former Gov. George Deukmejian and former Mayor
    Larry Zarian, the first Armenian American on the City Council, to be
    their role models. Zarian, who served on the council from 1983 to
    1993, was invited to Armenia for an official state visit after
    becoming the first Armenian American mayor of a relatively large U.S.
    city.

    "I think what the community is doing in Glendale is something it has
    not been able to do in many other parts of the world," Zarian said.
    "Our parents, who come from Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, the Soviet Union
    and Iran, were not able to participate in the governmental political
    process and run for public office.

    "But their children became lawyers, teachers and doctors and said:
    'We want to be able to get involved.' "

    The growing Armenian population did not always experience a smooth
    transition. In 2000, when city officials lowered the American flag to
    mark Armenian Genocide Commemoration Day, some longtime residents
    complained about all the attention the event was receiving. The day
    recognizes the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and
    1923.

    Around the same time, officials became concerned about violent
    clashes between Armenian and Latino students at a local high school.

    More recently, the FBI's Eurasian Crime Task Force and the Glendale
    Police Department have worked together to combat organized crime
    involving Armenians from the former Soviet Union and the United
    States. Authorities said the groups have taken root in the last five
    years, dealing primarily in white-collar crimes involving auto
    insurance, credit cards, identity theft and welfare fraud. But the
    rings have also been linked to several murders.

    In March, the FBI filed charges against members of a Russian Armenian
    organized-crime ring accused of plotting to smuggle $2.5 million in
    illegal guns into the United States.

    There have also been tensions within the Armenian community. Earlier
    this year, Manoukian and members of the Armenian Council of America
    accused each other of politicizing the city's annual Armenian
    Genocide Commemoration activities.

    Arguments broke out over who would serve on the committee that plans
    the events. Vasken Khodanian, chairman of the Armenian Council of
    America, said Manoukian excluded all but one representative from his
    committee and filled it with members who have ties to the Armenian
    National Committee.

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Members of the new council majority are quick to say they do not
    consider themselves a voting bloc. They note that they ran for office
    on a broad range of mainstream issues, such as improving public
    safety, providing more affordable housing and overseeing the
    redevelopment of Brand Boulevard.

    But that voters elected them, they believe, signals Armenians in
    Glendale want a voice in the city's stewardship.

    "To be able to say there's three Armenians on the City Council,
    that's wonderful," said Greg Krikorian, a board member with the
    Glendale Unified School District. "I'm proud to see it, as long as
    they're qualified and they put Glendale first."

    Manoukian, the mayor, also expressed pride over the election but said
    it represents a moment in time.

    "There aren't that many cities with a 40% population of Armenian
    descent," he said. "Two or 10 years down the line, people of
    different ethnicities could move to Glendale and they'll run for
    office, and that would be fine."

    Indeed, in addition to Armenians, Filipinos and Koreans make up a
    growing segment of the city's population; Asians now make up nearly
    17%, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Sixty-five languages are
    spoken in the Glendale Unified School District.

    Voters in April also elected their first Armenian American city
    clerk, who ran on a platform of improving services to immigrants and
    increasing their participation in civic life.

    "Not many people were voting in Glendale. It was frustrating for me
    to see so many Armenian Americans not participating in the city
    government," said Ardashes Kassakhian, 28, as he sipped strong
    Armenian coffee in a cafe near City Hall. "That's why I'm trying to
    stress voter awareness and education."

    During the campaign, he initiated a broad voter registration effort,
    aggressively signing up new voters via Korean and Filipino
    newspapers, cable television and direct mail. He proudly notes that
    the number of Filipinos registered to vote climbed from 700 to 5,000,
    or nearly half the city's Filipino population.

    Berdj Karapetian, a businessman who has lived and worked in Glendale
    on and off since 1982, said a big challenge for the new officials
    would be to serve all parts of Glendale, both rich and poor.

    "There are very wealthy Armenians who live in the hills, yet there
    are those at low socioeconomic levels or seniors, who are dependent
    on Medi-Cal or pensions," Karapetian said.

    "Will the policies start reflecting changes that accommodate those
    who are in a less fortunate situation? Let's look at policies that
    will serve the less affluent population, whether they're Hispanic or
    Armenian or Asian."
Working...
X