Yervant1 Posted February 27, 2015 Report Share Posted February 27, 2015 ARMENIA: MY ILLUSION13:14, February 27, 2015By Meltem Naz KaÅ~_oA week after a three-month stay in Armenia, I am once again at homein my green room in Istanbul, Turkey."Men must live and create. Live to the point of tears," a quote fromAlbert Camus, is written on my wall. To me, Armenia seems like anillusion now. An illusion I lived and created to the point of tears.For a Turk, going to Armenia seems a crazy idea. It's not like goinganywhere else with a Turkish passport.I was selected by the Hrant Dink Foundation to be a research fellow ina Yerevan-based NGO, to contribute to cross-border understanding. Justas Turkey has racists, Armenia has its own."Somebody can intentionally hurt you, or even kill you, just tomake a point," a friend of mine said. My cousin who works for theUN claimed that Yerevan was a safe city. "But not for a Turk," headded. I recalled the Armenian terrorist organization ASALA's killingof Turkish diplomats around the world in the seventies. They did itto force discussion of the Armenian Genocide. Hurting a young Turkishwoman in Yerevan during the centennial anniversary of the Genocide,I imagined, could be equally useful. "Make sure they don't cut you,"a Turkish friend said ominously when he wished me farewell.Immediately after arriving in Armenia, I met a local surgeon whoexpressed interest in me. Smelling the white roses he brought me,I consoled myself in the knowledge that, were my fears realized,I had a surgeon on my side. He wasn't a bad guy. Not once did hecome after me with a gun or a knife, or a cross word. But there wasa gulf between us. To him, we were two attractive bodies. To me,we were souls being pulled towards each other by unknown forces. Hesaw magnetism, I wanted magic.Armenia offered less consuming, and more substantial, delights. PublicInformation and Need of Knowledge (PINK), the LGBT rights advocate NGOfor which I worked, was a temple of joy. I still hear, in my world ofillusion, Nvard's screams of "Meltushiiii" as she hugs me to welcomeme to the office. "Hi darling," Kolya used to say nonchalantly. Hisopenness encouraged me to be at ease with myself. Soon, Kolya becamemy alter ego. When faced with challenging circumstances, I developedthe habit of asking myself: "What would Kolya do in this situation?"Never will I forget my host Nouneh either. She opened her house tome, giving me her daughter's old room. Now, only after a week, thenames of the streets of Yerevan are disappearing from my mind. Factsare becoming illusionary. But what stays with me is the proportion ofNouneh's eyes, nose, and lips. Her familiar face made me feel at homewhen we cooked recipes she had learned from her deceased mother. Outof generosity and love she shared her legacy with a stranger.I was lucky enough to know the Seferian brothers as well. One evening,I invited Nar over for dinner. I provided the food while he broughtmemories to laugh about and information on history and politics. Withhis inquisitive eyes, he looked around and found something wise tosay about the architecture of the house and the future of Armeniaand Turkey. His older brother, Naz, frequently read my written workbefore I dared share it with the rest of the world. To him, I exposedmy most vulnerable self: my stories.During my last week in Armenia, the Seferian brothers, Naz's wifeMariam, his little son Mikael, and I went to a restaurant. It wascalled Aintab, a city in today's southeast Turkey, and branded itselfas a provider of "Western Armenian Food."It was right then and there, sharing appetizers and kebab with them,that I realized the price of the Genocide and the forced departure ofArmenians. What it must have been then and what it is today. A pricein more than land and money. It was the price of home, of proximityand trust, of exchange and empathy. I understood and wished that,somehow, the Seferians had stayed in Western Armenia, their home,so that we could be neighbors.Figments of my imagination produced almost-fictional women whom Iregistered as my "mother Armenias."Ani, Anna, and Anush - the threeof them guided me in fashioning armor to protect me from peopleor place that sought to do me harm. The armor was in the form ofa feminine, home-made apron shield. Ani, two years older than me,accepted my naivety wholeheartedly and guided me to listen to thestrong voice inside me and not to give in to anxiety. Anna and Anush,the organizers of my fellowship program had planned my visit withlogic and forethought.During our farewell lunch at the Central Cafe, Anna gave me a bookof poetry that she had published. She wrote about what it meant tobe a woman. That same night, I read her book under candle light,repeating over and over again two of her poems. She taught me howrationality and intuition can go hand in hand.On my last day in Armenia, Anush, a green stone I held in my hands forthose three months, brought me to the Parisian Cafe on Abovyan Street.We were there the morning after my arrival in Armenia too. We hadsome coffee. The same waitress served us. Anush gifted me mint teain a green box. Each time I drink it I return to Armenia, to her armsand her loving kindness.I wasn't all that close to the three Turkish fellows that participatedin the same program. We had no fights or unpleasantness, but I neverfelt from them the openness and generosity that I received from myhosts. What did it mean that I was emotionally closer to my Armenianfriends than the Turks who came with me?I offer no overarching conclusion about Armenians and Turks. No twopeople are the same even if they hold the same national identity. ButI accept that, sometimes, friendships can pass closed borders whenthey cannot walk across a room. In illusory worlds, lived and createdto the point of tears, they do.Meltem Naz KaÅ~_o is a short story writer, freelance journalist, anda social science researcher. As part of the Hrant Dink Foundation'sfellowship program to facilitate cross cultural affiliations betweenArmenia and Turkey, she conducted comparative research for PublicInformation and Need of Knowledge (Pink Armenia). Meltem received aComparative Human Development degree and graduated with honors fromthe University of Chicago.http://hetq.am/eng/news/58750/armenia-my-illusion.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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