August 13, 2011

Day 3: Discovering Personal and Ancestral Connections.

After I got to my room, I managed to connect with Skype back home. I miss my family a lot. I share with them the exciting details. I tell them to read my blog, as I will likely publish the first installment soon. I also tell them to connect online for the opening ceremonies.

I fall asleep from sheer exhaustion around 4:30 a.m. I wake up at six.

I always become extremely depressed when I think about how short a human lifespan is and how many things I must do. I remember back in the early 1980s, I even wrote a small program which calculated how many man-years I required to complete everything I wanted to do then. I made reasonable assumptions about my life expectancy and it turned out that I needed two and a half lives to complete everything.

And I got more depressed.

Two and a half lives for everything that was on my plate then. Now I have 30 years less to go on, and at least double the amount of things that I need to do. Things that I must do, because it is likely that only I can write about them.

Like climbing Mount Ararat, Mount Fuji and Mount Kilimandjaro. The great triangle of the Temple Mountains rising on the plains, and feeling the connectedness of the three.

Like experiencing sunset and sundown at the Mandala temple of Borobudur in Indonesia, at the stone gate of Puerta Del Sol in Bolivia and on Lake Van, and through them, experiencing the birth of the Armenian Sun-God Vahakn.

Like researching Armenian manuscripts at San Lazzaro in Venice, in the Madenataran in Yerevan and in the St. James Monastery in Jerusalem, to unravel the mystery of the naming of our letters.






When I am in Armenia, that sense of urgency just shoots through the roof. I feel that I have a very short time in which I must accomplish so much. I feel like sleeping is a waste of time.

It happens to me subconsciously. I cannot help it. That is why I wake up so early.

I go down for breakfast and a large gulp of coffee. I need to put my thoughts together. I must get Sam and Ter Mesrop to talk. Ter Mesrop has already left me the mobile phone he promised. It is early in the morning but I call him and ask for his availability. He tells me that he can make it only tomorrow morning, but not too late. It is after all the Feast of Sourp Asdvadzadzin (the Holy Mother of God). He will be holding mass. This leaves me very little choice.

It is now around 8:30. I am ready to join Alex and his kin on the bus to Madenataran. I rush down to the lobby and as I step out I hear:

-Վիգէն դո՞ւն ալ հոս ես: (Viken, toon al hos es? - Viken, you're here too?).

Swoosh goes the Stargate. It is Boghos K. of Montreal, the former AGBU chairman, my predecessor in that job. A dynamo of a community organizer and my old friend. Without him, the new AGBU Center in Montreal would never have been built. Boghos is a fundraiser par excellence. He is here with the Canadian contingent of the Pan-Armenian games. He sits on the Organizing Committee. We barely exchange a few words when,

Swoosh goes the Stargate again. Hermineh D. shows up once more. Kiss kiss and we part. I board the van.






- You kissed that woman last night, says David. Who is she?- It's all right, I answer. She is my wife's cousin.






I am introduced to Svetlana. She speaks English very well and with a charming accent. She clearly is knowledgeable and very proud of the cultural heritage of her people.






I am then introduced to a red-haired young woman. She is Laura, Alex's wife. Alex didn't make it this morning because one of their three children is not feeling well. So the two parents are alternating to care for them. Laura says that she has heard a lot about me and was looking forward to meeting me.






David joins the conversation and tells Laura about our long covnersation of the previous night. I had told many stories to David. Including stories of my grandparents and the places they came from. I had told David how important it was in the understanding of ourselves to know our own stories. And to be able to tell them to others.






I told David that telling stories makes us human.






I had also told David many things about the place we were headed for. Sort of a sneak preview of what they were about to see.






Our minibus is now climbing the roads of Yerevan to the most sacred destination of them all. The greatest repository in the world of what is left of what has made us Armenian throughout the millenia. The Madenataran. The Great Scriptorium. The place of ancient manuscripts copied over centuries, illuminated with vibrant pictures by the unique talent of the great artists, bound and preserved with care.






A place where reside about 75% of what is left of their kind in the world. Slightly over 17,000 of the manuscripts that defined what Armenians were really about.






A place of research, meditation, serenity, and, of course, inspiration.






A place that is now living proof, that my people were the guardians of the knowledge of the world. From history, to religion, to the medical sciences, to poetry, to philosophy, to law, to storytelling, to mathematics, to physics, to cartography. All painstakingly created by hand, on parchment of animal skin . Original authors, translations, commentary.






One should walk the halls of the Madenataran only in silence. Because the spirits of those who created these works are all alive and in conversation with our times. This is the real time-travelling machine. It contains untold secrets, unknown histories, unrecited tales.






We can only glimpse this past though. What remains of this immense treasure, what has reached the 21st century, is ultimately less than 1% of what the Armenian people had created.






All the rest was destroyed by those who wanted to kill our real spirit.






Our ability to create.






Historians tell us that when the Tatar hordes of Tamerlane (Լենկթիմուր - LengTimur in Armenian or Timur the Lame) invaded our lands, they piled up the manuscripts from the great libraries of our monasteries and burnt them.






They tell us that those piles burnt for months.






Here is a mathematical problem:






If we know that one sheet of bovine parchment is x millimeters thick, and that an average manuscript contains y sheets of parchment, and that the rate of complete incineration of one sheet is z minutes, how many hours would it take to completely burn one book of sacred writings?






And now the inverse problem:






Given that a certain pile of manuscripts burnt for m months, how many manuscripts could be estimated to have constituted that pile?






Millions. Depending on how large m would be.






Of course, this is not a true inverse problem in mathematics. That branch of the science has been developed relatively recently. The real inverse problem would have been to derive probabilistic solutions to the range of values for x, y and z given m. Actually, our own Viktor Hampartsumyan, who was a trained mathematician prior to creating the whole science of astrophysics, was a genius in inverse problem solving. His most significant contributions to cosmology were based on his insight and ability to formulate and then solve related inverse problems.






Viktor Hampartsumyan is also no longer. But our mountains, from where he watched the unfolding of the magnificent story of the universe, still remain.






His work, which is an immense intellectual mountain, still remains.






Our mountains of manuscripts were burnt to ashes. We are now left with a small hilltop.






The great mountain-sized and mountain-inspired creativity of my people still remains.






We are greeted by the statues of Mashtots and his pupil Koryun, the chronicler of the life of the Real Illuminator. Mashtots, the greatest linguistic genius of his time who created the ever-lasting monument for my people. The original 36 letters of the modern Armenian alphabet.






Siamanto, an Armenian poet martyred in 1915 during the Genocide of Armenians, had written a poem dedicated to Mesrop Mashtots on the occasion of the 1500th anniversary of his masterful invention.






It says:






«...Դո'ւն դարերուն դիմաց կեցող ադամանդեա'յ ապառաժ:»
"Toon tareroon timats getsogh atamantya abarrazh. You who stand as a rock of diamond against the power of centuries."






I have always found Siamanto too pompous. But in this specific case, his statement is definitely not an exaggeration.






Armenian is, in my view of a humble amateur linguist, one of the great spiritual languages of the world. It is true that all languages have a spiritual component, because they are essentially another manifestation of our humanity. But it is also true that there are a few spiritual languages that have transcended their national origins. These would include, not in any particular order of importance, Hebrew, Tibetan, Sanskrit, Japanese, Arabic and Armenian. Of the languages that are now only studied as archeology, they would likely also include Ancient Egyptian and Babylonian. The Great Scriptorium in the heart of Yerevan where I am standing now is a testament to that.






We are also greeted by the statues of six giants of Armenia's intellectual heritage. Toros Rosslin, the masterful illuminator artist, unmatched in skill and talent. Grigor Datevatsi, the founder of the great monastery and university of St. Datev, the great teacher and the last Armenian official saint. Ananya Shiragatsi, the one whom I have called the Armenian Da Vinci in one of my lectures, the great genius of mathematics, physics, cosmology, philospohy, languages, calendar theorist, environmental scientist, teacher and builder of dozens of schools. Movses Khorenatsi, the "father" of Armenian history, the first chronicler of the history of my people from the beginning of time up unto his own age. Mekhitar Gosh, the first codifier of the laws of the land of Armenia, and a great writer of Armenian fables. Frig, the medieval poetic genius, whose language had been living proof of the vitality of the evolution of our ancestral tongue from its ancient roots into the modern era.






The story of the selection of these six is an Odyssey in itself. Worthy of a separate essay. I shall perhaps document it one day.






But not today. Today, I must listen to the reverence-filled information that is being provided by Svetlana. Today, I shall once more climb the stairs of this multi-layered temple into its main hall.
I pause at the entrance as we wait for the specialized guide of the Madenataran to escort us. I am staring at a huge map of Eurasia showing with dots the historical locations of the repositories of Armenian manuscripts. There are literally hundreds of them across the vast landscape, from London in England all the way to the extreme Eastern borders of India.






I tell David, Stewart and Laura about the stories of the copiers, the skills that they have learnt through a lifetime. Laura points to a small dot right outside Istanbul.






- You know, she says, this is the location from where Alex's grandfather has come after the Genocide. It is called Atapazar.






Silence.






- What did you say? I ask.






- Atapazar, she says. I found it on ancestry.com. I traced back the ship and landing records. It is really amazing.






As I hear that word from her mouth, I freeze. She is pointing to the location of the great Monastery and Seminary of Armash. A place of immense learning and scholarship from where have come many great Patriarchs of Constantinople of the Armenian Church. Armash lay on the outskirts of the township of Atapazar. The latter was composed of a few small villages and was a picturesque area not far from Istanbul.






Armash is no longer. Neither is Atapazar.






None of this is of course identified on that wall. There is just a map and a dot. And Laura, the young American wife of my friend Alex S. just points to that dot, says its name, and with a great smile tells me that it is the place Alex's grandfather comes from.






That is a miracle.






That is a miracle caused by this place where we are standing right now.






It is a miracle, because the night before, I had spent many hours talking with the other grandson of this long-gone Genocide survivor, Alex's brother David, telling him the stories of my own grandfather. The great patriarch of the maternal side of my family, Israel-Vahan P.






I had told him how I had videotaped my grandfather in 1992, talking about his ancestral village.






I had told him how my own stories had enabled my grandfather to travel back in time and remember his grandmother. How my grandfather was prodded to remember his childhood and her stories and we were able to reach back perhaps all the way into the first half of the 19th century.






I had told him why it was important to keep stories alive and create our own.






I had not told him where my grandfather had come from.






My grandfather came from a village in the township of Atapazar. Just like Alex's grandfather did.






I had not met anyone to date in my generation who could trace their roots to that same small area.






And now, in the hallowed halls of this sacred place of ultimate creativity, I, the grandson of one Genocide survivor, discover that the grandson of another Genocide survivor, who is my friend and with whom we have worked to create another sacred place of future creativity; I, that biped who is, at best, an insignificant background in likely an accidental dream of the Creator; I, living on a spec of dust revolving around a fireball at the edge of a galaxy not distinguishable from billions of others; I, discover that this other biped who is my friend, and with whom I have shared ideas and a vision of a better time that we set upon to build together, I discover that he is actually descended from someone who came from the same corner of that spec of dust that we bipeds who pretend to be intelligent call Earth.






Not only from the same corner, probably from the same village street. For all I know, we are very likely related, because everyone there was related to everyone else, either by marriage or by blood. After all, according to my grandfather, the Armenians there were between 50 to 100 families.






At that moment I realized the tragicomedy of existence. The absurdity and the equally magnificence of the human condition.






The Madenataran, and by extension, all of Armenia and its dreams have brought Alex and me, and David and Stewart and Laura together.






I must admit that there has been a certain sense of uneasiness in all of this. The stories of our scribes and educators and heroes are, not unlike those of other dogmatically Christian nations, stories of men and by men. The female perspective is mostly lost or only appears in minute flashes in our folklore, like the grand epic of David of Sassoon.






And yet, I know that during the millennial period of our pagan centuries and even during the early Christian tradition of Gnostic Christianity, of which Armenia was one of the birthplaces and even a hotbed for close to a thousand years, during those periods, women have played a key role. A role that had gone unrecorded and remained unstudied.






I had given a lecture on that too. In fact, I had given three lectures on that topic.






Women hold the keys to magical realms of eternal wonder. They always have in all cultures. We are not different.






And symbolically, it was Laura who uttered the password that unlocked this miraculous door.






And now, because of her, we were living in Armenian space-time. Warped, curved upon itself, labyrinthine, spiraling.






Strangely enough, as if always familiar.






Words cannot express it. Our stories are now intermingled in a glorious symphony whose echoes are captured from across the centuries. And as we tell our story, our voices get mixed with the millennial old tales that are themselves captured in the Great Scriptorium. We come alive with them and they are reborn in us.






The only witness of this sublime awesomeness being our mountains.






Our mountains, who are us.






We step inside the main exhibition hall, the story of the manuscripts unfold for me for a thousandth time. As I listen to the guide, I can repeat her words almost verbatim in my mind.






David and Stewart and Laura are mesmerized by her recitation. I could almost kneel in reverence here. I know every corner, every square millimeter of the place.






And as we complete the first circle, there it is.






The Great Մշոյ Ճառընտիր, The Djarendir of Moosh. The selection of Sermons and Interpretations of the wise and saintly. The largest mauscript in the collection. About 650 individual calf skins. Weighing over 65 kilograms.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. Part of the Sacred Scriptorium in the Monastery in Moush near Lake Van. The most sacred place of them all. The final resting place of dozens of Armenian saints and creative minds.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. In 1915, two elderly sisters decide to save it from the fate of the Genocide of my people. They decide that it is the only thing worth saving. It is too heavy for them to carry.






They split it in two. And then they walk, carrying the two parts on their backs.






They walk hundreds of kilometers back with the retreating Russian Army. To the part of Armenia that was behind the Imperial Russian borders. They walk facing starvation, thirst, disease, the elements, and the threat of wartime violence and physical annihilation.






No one knows how long their Golgotha lasted, weeks, perhaps months. One of them does not make it. In a last act of survival, she buries her half of the great manuscript in Ottoman Turkish territory near the town of Gareen (Erzerum). Her sister makes it to Armenia and delivers her half to Etchmiadzin, the Holy See of the Armenian Church.






The buried half is eventually discovered by a Polish mercenary in the Russian Army, it is unearthed, and then sold off in Russia to be rediscovered by Armenians in Baku, who purchase it and reunite it with its original half. The two are now one. The book is now whole. It rests here at the corner of the Main Exhibition Hall.






Two women, who recreate my people by bringing together what has been split apart.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. Whose story I cannot listen to without tears rolling down my cheeks.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. Whose story is the story of my people.






The splitting of Armenia and the Diasporas. And their reunification here in the ancestral land.






The splitting of my language into Eastern and Western and its reunification in The Great Scriptorium that houses the expression of our unified ancestral tongue.






The splitting of our history into the "Before and After of Genocide" and our coming together here to create something better than what has ever been.






The splitting and resplitting of our families and our dispersion to the four corners of the Earth, and our constant yearning to come together and finding our roots.






The start of the journey of my family from a place hitherto unknown, whose name is uttered by a person unknown to me until that morning and the sudden torrent of storylines that is woven instantaneously across a century of time and across many continents back into this place of our origins.






Coming together. And knowing it.






A consciousness of who we are, suddenly being born in ourselves, never to leave us. Ever.






A consciousness that is united within us. That unites us. Visceral and primordial, yet also ethereal and ultimately spiritual. Yin and Yang. Male and Female.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. The great manuscript upon which is now fixated the gaze of David. He knows what it is. Because it is its story that I was telling him in the early hours of that same morning.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. Reunited. Uniting me and David, me and Stewart, me and Alex, me and Laura, my children and their children, in a sudden discovery of our common place of beginning and becoming. Uniting. United. One.






Seeking to become one. All the time. Dying on the way to become one, but never stopping.






Kind of like our human urge to become one with the Creator. Never quite making it. In the image of the Creator, and yet so incomplete.






Perhaps the Creator is another incomplete being. Just like us. The Demiurge of the Gnostics.






But in reality, the only way to become one with the Creator is to create. There is no other alternative.






The Great Djarendir of Moosh. Created. Recreated. Continuously creating.






Stewart, a physician, is fascinated by the medieval Armenian medical texts. Armenians were great learners of the medical arts, mostly from the Arabs and Persians. But also, we have had two giants in the field whose work has withstood centuries and for close to half a millennium was the actual medical textbook of physicians in the region. Mekhitar Heratsi and Amirdovlat Amasyatsi.

My first ever research paper in Armenian Studies was the book by Amirdovlat, called Անգիտաց Անպետ (Ankidats Anbed – Useless for the Uninitiated), which was an exhaustive book on diseases and their treatments. I presented a summary of this work and highlighted its important contributions to the science of medicine. I was seventeen and was attending the Yervant Hiussisyan Armenian Studies College in Beirut.

Yervant Hiussisyan was the Vice President of the global AGBU. He had left an heirloom to the AGBU with the specific directive to create an Armenian Studies program of post-secondary level. It was called the Հիւսիսեան Հայագիտական Հիմնարկ (Hiussisyan Hayakidagan Himnarg – The Hiussisyan Institute of Armenian Studies).

Today, that institute is no longer. The mountain of love it instilled in me towards the culture of my people still remains.

Today, I lecture at the Montreal AGBU Manuel Keusseyan Armenian Studies Program. The last of its kind left in the AGBU network around the world. It is named after the great teacher, poet, essayist, writer, traveler and Armenian cultural expert, the founder of the Montreal Armenian Studies program and its principal lecturer, my friend Manuel Keusseyan.

Manuel Keusseyan is no longer. I delivered his eulogy.

The lecturers in the Armenian Studies program named after him have given themselves the task to recreate mountains in the heart of Armenians.

We are trying very hard.






We walk out of the Main Hall into the Temporary Exhibition Hall to look at an exhibit of examples of early Armenian printing. Including a map of the world published in the 17th century in Holland. Remarkably accurate.






I tell the guide that Armenians had been skilled navigators during mediaeval times. Especially after the founding of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia on the Eastern shores of the Mediterranean. That a replica of one of their ships was actually rebuilt recently in Armenia, was christened Cilicia and sailed successfully in the Mediterranean and through Gibraltar and then northwards. She nods in agreement. I then tell her that Armenians had settled early on in Italy, probably even before that period. I tell her that there is a lot of Armenian heritage that remains undiscovered in the Italian Byzantine city of Ravenna. She is intrigued and surprised. She asks for proof. I tell her that I am preparing a lecture on that. She laughs. I hope she believes me.






As I explain to my friends the details though, she keeps listening in. I then ask her about the ancient collection of magical writing known as the հմայիլ – hmayil which I had seen last time. She tells me that it is no longer available to the public.






I tell her that those secret writings of “magical” origin used by the Armenian village shamans to cast various spells have pre-Mashtotsyan roots and are very ancient. They are likely the remnants of our pre-Christian script from which Mashtots was partially inspired. She listens attentively to what I am saying.






- Դուք շատ տարօրինակ եւ հետաքրքիր մարդ էք: (Took shad darorinag yev hedakrkir mart ek – you are a very strange and interesting man), she tells me.






My wife would agree with her. Women are very insightful.






We walk out and go into the gift shop. Stewart is seeking out an English translation of the medical manuscripts. No luck, they do not exist in English. They have not been translated.





There is so much that remains to be done.






We are then greeted by Svetlana as we board the bus to the hotel. David, Stewart and Laura are also intrigued by the mathematical works that they heard about. Shiragatsi, after all, wrote the ultimate textbook in arithmetic in the 7th century AD which included the most complicated division tables ever devised. These remained unmatched well into the 17th century. His textbook was used for over a thousand years. I also tell them that Armenian manuscripts still hold many undiscovered and unstudied secrets, and that I had once given a lecture about secret ciphers and cryptography in those manuscripts. In fact, I had described two dozen different kinds of ciphers that appeared in those ancient books.






Svetlana is equally fascinated. She is listening attentively.






In the afternoon, Laura will switch places with Alex to look after their children. We shall be visiting Etchmiadzin. The Holy See of the Armenian Church. It is part of the Oriental Orthodox tradition. It recognizes only the first three Christian Ecumenical Councils. Its Christology makes it part of the oldest subgroup of Christian Churches. It includes the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Coptic Orthodox Church, The Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches, the Assyrian Orthodox Church, and the Malankara (Indian) Syriac Church.






Actually, Armenia was the first country to officially accept Christianity as a state religion, in 301 AD. Ten years ago, the whole of the Christian world celebrated the 1700th anniversary of that historical event.






It could be argued, that the Oriental Orthodox Christian tradition is the closest to the original tenets of Christianity. Its Churches are as old as the faith itself, plus, historically, their dogmatic systems have not been modified by successive group decisions (many of which were political in nature) over a period of a thousand years.






I have never been to Etchmiadzin, although I have visited it in my mind’s eye many times. It is not very far from Yerevan. I would even consider it a suburb of the capital.

Having experienced Geghard, I do not expect to be spiritually moved by Etchmiadzin. Also, since I am a baptized Armenian Catholic, it holds only an important historical and cultural meaning for me.

Armenian Catholics are a minority among Armenians. Many Armenians regard them as somewhat "lesser Armenians" because they are deemed to have betrayed their so-called “national” faith.

For me, they would be no different from ignorant fascists.

The contributions of Catholic Armenians to our culture and the preservation of our identity are immeasurable.

The last Armenian monastic order has been that of the Catholic Mekhitarists who settled on the island of San Lazzaro in Venice in the 17th century and then later in Vienna. From there, they founded over a hundred schools across the world. They single-handedly created and preserved the modern Western Armenian language. They researched and translated and published. They became the modern equivalent of the ancient scribes of Armenia. In fact, they have one of the three large collections of ancient manuscripts in the world, second only to the Madenataran and to the Armenian Monastery in Jerusalem.

The Mekhitarists were more Armenian than anyone else. They were so Armenian that they even taught Armenian to the great English poet, Lord Byron.

They also founded and ran the greatest Armenian school ever. The Moorad Raphaelian school in Venice. Which, for over a century and half, produced some of the greatest Armenian intellectuals. It was operational well into the 1990s.

The great Armenian poet and martyr of the 1915 Genocide, Daniel Varoujan, was a Catholic and a graduate of that school.

The greatest Armenian writer of modern times, Gostan Zarian, was a Catholic and attended that school.

My father, Alphonse Attarian (a.k.a. the writer Armen Tarian) attended that school up to the outbreak of World War II in 1939. He then had to return to his family in Aleppo, Syria. Two years ago, I went on a personal pilgrimage to San Lazzaro and to the Moorat Raphaelian school in Venice. I retraced the steps of my father and re-imagined the city of the 1930s. My companion was my wife, Datevik. My guide was the grandson of Gostan Zarian, the architect Ara Zarian who lives there.

You can learn about the Mekhitarist order here.

Since my family has been Catholic for at least six generations, I do not think that I have any right to change that. As for Etchmiadzin, I expect to be deeply moved by the place.

In Armenian, Etchmiadzin means “the place where the Uniparental One (Միածին - Miadzin) came down”. The Uniparental One is the attribute given in Armenian to Jesus Christ, since he was born of only an Earthly Mother, hence he had only a single human parent. The name of the place refers to the dream of St. Gregory the Illuminator, the first Armenian Catholicos, who converted the whole Kingdom of Armenia to Christianity, in 301 A.D. In his dream, he saw Jesus descend from heaven and strike the ground with a golden hammer. It is at that place that he built the Cathedral of Etchmiadzin, and it became the Holy See of the Armenian Church.

St. Gregory the Illuminator was not even Armenian. He was of Parthian origin. His father actually plotted to murder the Armenian king Khosrov and was executed for it. The Parthians were essentially a sub-ethnic group of Persians, who were ethnically in much closer kinship with the other Indo-European people to the West of Persia, mainly the Armenians. There are no more Parthians in the world. Armenians are most likely to be the only people who carry Parthian DNA, along maybe with some of the current inhabitants of the Khorasan region in Iran.

St. Gregory built Etchmiadzin on the site of a pagan temple.

There is a statue of St. Gregory the Illuminator at the Vatican, on the northern external wall of the Great Basilica of St. Peter. The adjacent courtyard is named after him.

The Great Basilica of St. Peter is also built on the site of a pagan temple.

My tourist guide in Rome had told me that underneath every single church in Rome was a pagan temple. He was a very smart and erudite man.

The statue of St. Gregory at the Vatican is a source of pride for Armenians. It should be. It puts my people at a historical landmark and clearly associated with the early history of Christianity.

The statue itself is very ugly in my view. About as ugly as the gigantic cathedral in his name that was built right in the heart of Yerevan to commemorate in 2001, the 1700th anniversary of the establishment of Christianity as a state religion in Armenia.

Armenia is full of great historical monuments and churches. In fact, no other country can match Armenia in this aspect. For all intents and purposes, Etchmiadzin is the monument to St. Gregory the Illuminator, and was 1700 years old in 2001. Building a new one was uncalled for.

Armenian churches, by their unique architecture, are integrated in the landscape of the country. They are monumental not by size, but by imagination. Otherwise, they are immensely intimate spaces for spiritual enlightenment.

The newly built cathedral is monumental in physical size (it can house 1700 worshippers) yet it is anything but intimate. And it certainly does not integrate with the landscape, it overshadows everything else.

I am yet to meet anyone who has discovered spiritual illumination at the Cathedral of St. Gregory the Illuminator in Yerevan.

It has become a tribute to megalomania. A tribute to the feeling that Armenians too can build gigantic structures. Someone was trying to compete with the Vatican.

As if such proof was necessary. Go figure.

The first president of Ivory Coast, Félix Houphouët-Boigny, has built the world’s largest church in his hometown of Yamassoukro. It cost $300 million to complete, and was consecrated in 1990.

That one was really competing with Vatican and the St. Peter’s Basilica. It is taller and the complex is bigger. In fact if you just look at its picture, you might think it is the Vatican. Externally, it is almost a copy.

Photos of the Yamassoukro Basilica can be found here.
Link



You can also see it here.





The copy of the Vatican, smack in the middle of one of the poorest countries in Africa. Just to get in the record books.

Now that is megalomania no Armenian can compete with.

Armenian megalomaniacs are not only building large empty churches. Many of them are oligarchs, part of the ruling politico-business elites, who build mansions and castles for themselves modeled after medieval and baroque palaces of European aristocrats, complete with their own chapels and even private zoos.

To each their own obsession.

The best of these megalomaniacs succeed at competing with former African presidents. Not even that.

Why?

Because they only build Memento Moris. Tributes of after-death memories. Basically, gigantic “tombstones” to be remembered by the living.

Etchmiadzin, on the other hand, is a Memento Vivi. Memento Vivis evoke the memory of someone by an action lived in the present. Because what they have done by their actions have led to us to our days. Etchmiadzin is a tribute to a Christian journey that started over 17 centuries ago and that continues to this day. Especially, in the Holy Lands where the epic story of Armenian pilgrims throughout the centuries have built roots that go to the foundation of the Christian faith.

It is that story that Ter Mesrop told in From Ararat to Zion.

It is at Etchmiadzin that all of that had started. On the way there, Stewart, Alex and Laura are discussing how to get to Vernissages, the Yerevan outdoor flea market. They have lots of gifts to buy. I offer to show them where it is, it is not very far from our hotel.

We arrive at the main gate of the complex. There is a whole new construction of giant arch. This is an addition after 2001. It depicts St. Gregory handing the Holy Cross to King Terdat (Thirtades) the Great. From the back, the two main supporting columns depict the Two Apostles, St. Thadeuss and St. Bartholomew who established the Armenian Apostolic Christian church in the 1st century A.D.

I like the new arch. It is modern in style and yet resonates with a hidden antiquity. The creators did a good job.

As she is explaining the inscriptions and the images on the arch, Svetlana is telling the stories of the arrival of Christianity to Armenia and the conversion of the Armenian king. She is very passionate about the stories.

She then turns to me and says:

- I hope you agree, Professor!

She is of course dead serious. The title of “professor” is a very revered one in Armenia and used with extreme respect. She had been listening all day to what I was telling my fellow pilgrims to these ancestral places and she has concluded that I must be one.

I am flattered to have left such an impression on her. I tell her that I do not deserve such a title since I am but a humble lecturer at the AGBU Armenian Studies Series in Montreal. She tells me that it does not matter. For her I am a professor who knows important things and likes to teach them and share them. She tells me that she has learnt from me and that was that. I have no choice but to accept.

The courtyard of the complex has many khatchkars on display. These are the unique stone crosses that are carved with intricate designs. Only the Armenians and the Irish have elaborated this art. The Armenian carved stone crosses however go much further in their sophistication of carving and imagery than anything else in the world.

You can learn about khatchkars here.






We approach the main Cathedral and walk in with reverence. Svetlana is explaining the architecture, the origins, the iconography, the intricate carvings and imagery. Svetlana is really an excellent guide. I make a mental note of seeking her out at my next visit.

We then step into the attached treasury at the back of the main cathedral. A local young guide takes over and describes the treasures on display. The Armenian Church has many important relics as well as historical vestments of the hierarchical clergy. There truly are amazing treasures here, including a relic reputed to be a piece of Noah’s Ark from an expedition on Mount Ararat in the late 18th century, a piece of bone of the right hand of Saint Gregory the Illuminator, many relics of the great Saints of the Armenian Church as well as the Lance that pierced the side of Christ on the Cross.

The Armenian word for lance is geghard, the great rock hewn monastery of the same name was called Geghard because it was the repository of this spear. It now rests in Etchmiadzin.

I think it is doubtful whether this is that actual historical lance. Firstly, it has never been examined by historians and independent experts, secondly, it has never been carbon-dated to establish its age. The final piece of evidence against it being the real deal is that its shape does not correspond to the type of weaponry carried by Roman soldiers of two thousand years ago.

There is also no historical mention of this lance in Armenian or foreign records, prior to the 13th century. It is likely a spoil of war that was a replica of the lance. Either gained through the Crusader battles (the Armenian kingdom of Cilicia was an ally of the Crusaders armies) or it fell into Armenian hands during the numerous wars with Byzantium.

Relics however are powerful symbols that attract pilgrims and the faithful. The Armenian Church never lacked either. The lance is as authentic as the faithful believe it to be.

Ancient relics of an ancient place kept by an ancient people.

The greatest modern relic hunters who were literally obsessed with them were, of course, Adolf Hitler and his Nazi minions.

They wanted to create a powerful new religion from their ideology. They went crazy with the occult, and believed that by collecting all the important Christian relics of the world, they would be giving immense divine legitimacy to the Third Reich.

The demons collecting Christian symbols. Almost out of the Book of Revelations. Hollywood sure milked the idea for all the money it is (and is not) worth.

Those were dark times. For the world and for Armenia. The demonic hand of Stalin and his henchmen had just finished off the second Genocide of Armenian intellectuals. Hundreds of thousands of Armenian young men fought in the Soviet Army against the Nazi onslaught. Three hundred thousand perished.

Three hundred thousand! That represented a quarter of the population of Armenia at the time.

Comparatively, that would be the equivalent of 3 million Canadian soldiers dying in WWII. Or 30 million American soldiers! The quantities would be staggering, and it would be doubtful whether Canada or the USA would ever be able to recover from such a loss. They would not be the economies that they are today; that’s for sure.

During those dark times, the Diaspora Armenians were engaged in a large scale fundraising campaign to help their brethren. They raised enough money to help build the Armenian tank battalion called The Tank Battalion of David of Sassoon, after the hero of the same epic. That battalion took part in many historical battles and eventually made it all the way into Hitler’s den in Berlin.

A lot of that fundraising was done in the Middle East, in secret. The money needed to be smuggled through secret routes to get them safely to the hands of those who could ensure it arrived at destination. The secrecy was necessary, because if they were discovered, those involved would be immediately accused of being communists and summarily executed.

I know, because my grandfather from Atapazar was one of them. I have his diary as well as his meticulous records of the donors. That is a priceless historical relic for me and my family.

At the same time, there were close to 10,000 Armenian volunteers who fought in the Nazi armies against their own countrymen. They were led by a Nazi collaborator called Dro. He eventually got caught in Stalingrad, and was later unmasked as a CIA operative of the Cold War. After independence in 1991, he was reburied in Armenia in a special mausoleum as a national hero.

As far as I know, Armenia is the only country that has officially glorified a Hitler collaborator. Luckily, we also had great WWII heroes like Marshal Pagramyan, to wash away the sins of Dro. Pagramyan was instrumental in the defeat of the Nazi armies and pushing the frontline back into German territory.

Like I said, we are a nation of extremes.

The Etchmiadzin treasury also contains priceless personal objects, including the vestments and Catholicossal cane of Mkrtich Khrimyan, arguably the greatest of the modern Catholicii of the Armenian Church. He was so beloved by the people that they called him Hayrig, or the Father of the nation. There is the ceremonial head gear used at mass by Komidas, the greatest Armenian musician of the early twentieth century.

I watch in awe and mentally imagine the times, places and individuals who have used these priceless objects. The Etchmiadzin Treasury is special, because it houses these objects that are relevant for Armenians. Most non-Armenians would not know, let alone appreciate the importance of Komidas Vartabed or Khrimyan Hayrig. I have been raised with their stories.

A nation is identified by the common stories that form its ethos. Among other things.

In our case, stories are the only component of our ethos. Because Armenians are one of the few global nations, in that most Armenians live outside the lands of historical Armenia. The common thread that goes through the heart of every Armenian is not a bounded geographical landscape, a common language, nor even a common church; but rather our history and culture.

That and the memory of Genocide.

We walk back to the minibus. On our way back Stewart asks me about the details of the faith of the Armenian Church. I am no expert. I explain as much as I can. I explain the Nicene Creed and related dogmatic tenets. I explain about the Oriental Orthodox Churches.

He smiles and tells me that it is like the Da Vinci Code.

I tell him that the Da Vinci Code is fiction, but that numerous real codes and secrets remain to be unearthed in the Madenataran and our manuscripts. I then tell him that probably the greatest living expert on such theological matters is none other than Ter Mesrop. I make a mental note to myself to spend some time discussing the issue with Ter Mesrop. Maybe we can invite him to give a lecture on the topic at our Armenian Studies program.

Alex tells me he heard the news that we could be related. He tells me we are both weird enough that he would not be surprised. He then adds:

- You know, I have registered atapazar.com; maybe we can create and populate that site.

I promise to send him my grandfather’s two-hour interview. I will have to digitize it, edit it and dub it. What a project!

We arrive at the hotel. I run up to my room. There is a voice mail message. It is from the two young journalists that were sent to me by Andrew. Angela and Maryanna. I call them up.

Maryanna answers. We quickly arrange to meet up at the hotel lobby on Monday morning. It will have to be quick, no longer than an hour. She says they’ll take care of everything. All I have to do is show up.

I run back down because I promised to escort Alex and his brothers to the flea market. Laura has switched places with Alex again. They really are a team. We walk across Republic Square. In a couple of blocks we are there.

We run into Katherine S. and her husband M. He has purchased a set of djezvehs (a small coffee making pot for thick Armenian/Arabic/Oriental style coffee). He is somewhat of an expert on the topic and explains the intricacies of that kitchen appliance. David is fascinated and is certainly on a djezveh quest of his own. I consider my promise fulfilled and leave them there. I need to rest for an hour or so, before heading off for the evening with Sam, Silva and their VIP guests for dinner.

Evening is the best time in Yerevan. Especially in Republic Square. The hot burning sun is gone, it is sufficiently warm. But mainly, because the shadows elongate and create amazing effects over the building tufa façades. Tamanian was brilliant.

There are many in today’s Yerevan who are actively destroying his legacy. The great architect’s vision was as enormous as a mountain. Yet his capital city is being eroded away building by building, street by street.

The Poet of the All Armenians, Hovahannes Toumanian, after whom the Tumo Center is named, has said:

- Մարդ ինչ անի, իրան կ'անի: Mart eentch anee, eeran ganee. Whatever one does, one does to oneself.

You can never have enough Toumanian. You can never have enough Tamanian.

It is evening and we are meeting downstairs to take the shuttle buses to the restaurant. It is called The Club. We were there last time as well.


It is exactly as I remembered it. In a basement. Tastefully decorated, nice dining area partitions. But most of all, exquisite food.

I take a seat at the guest table. Stewart, usually taciturn, is more than excited about the discoveries he has made at the Madenataran especially about the scientific legacy of his people. David is fascinated about how this whole country reminds him of a gigantic family gathering. M. turns to Alex and tells him that he should develop a game about Armenian mythical heroes. Alex looks and me and smiles. You see, we had that idea over four years ago and we even exchanged emails and phone calls on the topic.

I tell M. that the idea has already been explored. Then I tell them that Armenian mythological characters are unlike any other and are completely unknown to the rest of the world. I tell them about Tork of Angegh.

M. is chewing on a piece of delicious թել պանիր (tel paneer-string cheese). He listens carefully. He then says:

- You know, every time you open your mouth I learn something fascinating. Someone should follow you around with a video camera. Then we can produce interesting short subject films to capture the imagination of young Armenians.

- I agree, answers Stewart.

He then pulls out his camera and tells me that his daughter Rachel is an amazing mathematics genius who has gone off to study at Princeton. Neither he nor his wife nor anyone else in their families has ever shown any talent for this science, and he has always wondered where that wonderful ability has come from.

- After today, and after listening to you talk about Shiragatsi and the other Armenian great scientists of history, I think I know. I want you to speak to my daughter and tell her where her roots are.

No one had ever asked me for such a thing. The red recording light is on. I am on the spot.

So I tell Rachel, in English and Armenian, why it is important to understand where one’s roots lie. And why she needs to come to Armenia, not once, but again and again, to really understand herself. Why it is important to find out not only about one’s family. Why it is important through that same exercise to ultimately find out what makes us human. I promise her to meet her and be her guide through that great adventure.

We are then served a most Armenian dish. Մանթը. Mante. It is basically like little open-top raviolis in the shape of small boats, filled with spicy ground beef, baked in an oven, and then served in a chicken or meat broth mixed with garlicky yogourt (and sometimes chopped coriander). For added flavour, with a dash of sour red sumac spice on top.

Alex, Stewart and David are initiated into this delicacy. Katherine and M. are very familiar with the recipe and are savouring it because it is likely a rare dish in the San Francisco Bay area where they live. I feel privileged. I can taste this delicacy anytime I want. It is also a favourite of my older son Armen. All we have to do is call up my mother-in-law. In fact, our Montreal AGBU holds Mante days and sales all the time. They are very popular.

This one is as authentic as anything I have tasted in Montreal. Simply exquisite! You cannot get more Armenian than with Mante. Maybe with Հարիսա Harissah. The latter though is more regional or rural. Mante has a universal appeal and is a much more refined, sort of a city-dweller’s dish.

There is a young operatic tenor, accompanied by a pianist, delivering truly great musical masterpieces. From Sayat Nova to Komidas and all the great folk songs with which I have grown up. Sam and Silva are really classy.

Sam gets up and proposes a toast to all who have worked to make his vision come true. He thanks them. Silva follows him, equally gracious, she tells us why they did what they did.

To make their dream come true and with it, the dream of a whole new generation of the children of Armenia.

I get up to say my piece. I feel special. After all, after the immediate family and the initial personal discussion, I was the first who actually worked on the Tumo vision.

I have seniority.

I try to speak bilingually, in Western Armenian and in English. It is hard to keep the emotions from overwhelming me. I then tell the story of how I came about to write the Yergabadger - Diptych, the poem dedicated to Tumo. I tell them why I wrote it in Eastern Armenian, (to have it performed by the children of Armenia).






And I read it. Not as a performance, but as an author gifting his creation.

Just like Tumo has been gifted as a unique creative vision. I feel in an amazing harmony of ideas.

As I read the last lines. Sam and Silva hug me and thank me. It should have been the other way round. I had simply been inspired by their generosity of spirit.

Berge, Sam’s brother stands up and wants to express his feelings. He is overcome with emotion and has to pause. Then Elie, my classmate and Sam’s long time business partner “suffer”s a similar fate.

We are all touched, we all want to spill our hearts. One by one, friends and relatives express their feelings and gratitude for being right here, right now.

The present has never been so joyful. We are witnessing a great birth.

We leave for Tumo. Before we do so, I ask Sam to meet tomorrow with Ter Mesrop. He agrees. I call up Ter Mesrop and announce to him the good news.

Tomorrow is Սուրբ Աստուածածին Sourp Asdvadzadzin, the Feast of the Holy Mother of God. Ter Mesrop is celebrating Holy Mass. The meeting will have to be in the morning. I feel I have accomplished something very important. I have managed to secure the meeting of two great minds. And I shall be witnessing it.

Right now though, the focus shifts back to Tumo. Tonight is the second night of festivities.

There is a slight air of concern among the event organizers. Yesterday was a huge success with several thousand present and an equal number hitting the live streaming web site. Tonight, the Tumo event is in “competition” with the Opening Ceremonies of the Pan-Armenian Games, where thousands of athletes come from all over the world to participate and compete. That one has great opening acts, fireworks, parties and a lot of official support.

Ours has the coolness factor.

We are hoping that news of yesterday’s event at Tumo would have spread among the youth and that even more would show up today.

As we arrive, DJ Baxtar of Texas is already on stage and the gigantic mosaic message text is scrolling across the scene. The area in front of the stage is packed with youth. We spread out. I spot Marie Lou, Pegor’s wife and the director of Tumo. I hug her and congratulate her on the job she has done. She is very busy and disappears quickly into the building to take care of the myriad of emergencies that have sprung up.

I look at the messages on the mosaic display across the stage:

“Sam’s moustache rocks” reads one.

“DJ Johann Sebastian Baxtar” reads another. I don’t get it at first. Then I realize that the letter X in English is pronounced phonetically like KH in Russian. Essentially, making this a pun on his name, comparing him to the genius of the Baroque composer. I guess creativity has more than one way to manifest itself.

I am trying to explain this to Alex when I realize that Sam and Silva and their three daughters are on stage dancing. The crowd goes wild.

- He’s really busting a move, shouts Alex over the techno beat.

Sam is popular. I bet he could run for office in Armenia.

The crowd seems much larger than yesterday. This is good news. I later find out that we have had over 5000 attending and an even larger number hitting the live stream server.

“Who needs the Pan Armenian Games when we have Tumo” scrolls across the message display.

And then the really cryptic

«Հայեր դժժում ենք» - Hayer dzhzhoum enk .

The global conversation picks up again on the message board. Greetings flash from all over the world. Then, it seems that the two who were texting back and forth yesterday are online again.

«Խնդրում ենք էս բեմը չքանդել հանդիսութիւնից յետոյ» - Khntroom enk ess pemuh tchkantel hantissoutyounits hehdoh. Please do not tear down this stage after the festivities.

I guess that would be classified as a special request to keep the giant mosaic display running. Perhaps to satisfy the dialoguing couple. It would be really an expensive proposition. But I guess it never hurts to ask.

And once more

«Հայեր ջան դժժում ենք » - Hayer djan dzhzhoum enk .

This is a real puzzle. I am straining my grey matter over three words. Over one verb actually. What does dzhzhal mean?

It suddenly hits me. It is the Armenian version for “being buzzed” or “getting a buzz”. And even more, it is a replication of the phonetic English DJJ, which, I am guessing, comes from listening to a DJ.

So this verb would express in one word in Armenian the equivalent of “getting a buzz from a DJ”. And the flashing text on the stage would mean,

“Dear fellow Armenians, the DJ is giving us a buzz”.

It makes sense, if you think hard about it. The crowd is really “buzzing” with excitement. It is well past midnight.





The party keeps on, we take the shuttle back to the hotel.





As we step out. Swoosh goes the Stargate. It is Hermineh again. Kiss kiss.





- Who is this woman you keep kissing? asks M.





-It's alright, says David, she is his wife's cousin.

Tomorrow will be the official opening ceremonies. Serge , The President of the Republic will be there.

So will Serj of the System of a Down.

Tomorrow we’ll have a real crowd.

I wonder whether for Serge or Serj.

August 12, 2011

Day 2: What We Have Wrought

It is morning. Before I get up and go, I have to see an important man.




He is Ter Mesrop. I had met him also 4 years ago in Yerevan. And this year in Montreal.

I had been initially introduced to him by one of the "Fellowship of ideas", the most amazing David Y. He had made a remarkable impression on me at the opening of the physics lab of the Phys-Math School for Gifted Children in Yerevan.


Ter Mesrob is a man of the cloth. He is also a physicist who studied with David in Moscow.


He is also a filmmaker and media personality. And deeply spiritual. Every time I see him, I want to see him again.


I had worked with him in Montreal to introduce his amazing film, From Ararat to Zion, into the PBS network in the US. It was an overwhelming success and we broke all records of fundraising pledges.




I had been missing him for months.


Ter Mesrob is always busy. He has been working on an important project which will be no less than a revolution in education for the whole of Armenia and the Diaspora. He simply wants to build a network of schools that will be the best in the world. The content will be unmatched with an unmatched level of teaching staff.


Kind of like Tumo. Except that the focus is to create top quality in all fields of education, not just in creative technologies. Ter Mesrob wants to do it by building a prototype school. To achieve it he created the Ayb Foundation. You can go here to understand his vision.


-Hello Mr. Attarian; parev Der Hayr.





We look up from our coffee table. It is our friend, Prof. Zaven (Andrew) Demirdjian from California. All three of us participated in a Symposium about Unity in the Diaspora in March of 2011 that was held in Montreal. It "united" diverse speakers and diverse approaches. You can learn about that event here.





Andrew is an enthusiastic and passionate speaker with whom I have had interesting debates both on and off line. He is highly energetic and an eternal optimist about the potential of the Armenian people to be something more. I like Andrew. He is very direct.




He tells us that he has come to Armenia to rest a little. He is leaving Yerevan in a few hours and invites me to join him in his house in Garni. It is very tempting but I have not a second to spare, I am here only for four days. He definitely wants to meet up again. I give him my room number and he promises to call.





The sidewalk café in front of the Yerevan Marriott is like Stargate. Everyone in the universe will show up there at some time. It is the convergence place of Armenian space-time. If you happen to be there at the right moment, you will meet people you had not seen for years or even decades. Right there at that moment. I would not be surprised if one day I met even Mesrob Mashtots there.




But then again, I meet Mesrob Mashtots every time I visit the Madenataran. Every time I pick up a book in my library. Every time I pick up a pen or go to my keyboard to write in Armenian.




The power of ideas.




I have less than an hour to spend with Ter Mesrob. He tells me that he is overwhelmed with the work that needs to be done to open the Ayb School. It needs to open in less than a month. Ter Mesrob and Sam have so much in common. They can move mountains. I have to make them connect. Excellence only thrives upon excellence. Now I know why I miss both constantly. It is once again a question of inspiration.

Speaking of mountains, Armenians have always worshipped theirs. The great modern Armenian writer and our most recent potential hope for a Nobel literary prize, the recently deceased Hrant Matevossian has written a whole novel called Մենք ենք մեր սարերը (Menk enk mer sarereh - We are our Mountains). The book was made into an equally wonderful film by the poetic filmmaker Henrik Malian.


Armenian mythology contains a character called Tork of the house of Angegh. He was the great grandson of the founding father of the Armenian nation, Հայկ Նահապետ Hayk Nahabed. He had superhuman strength. His legend tells us that when enemy ships approached the shores of the Armenian lands, he would literally rip pieces of the adjacent mountains and would hurl them on the ships and sink them. Tork would move mountains. There is a monument to Tork in Yerevan.

Here he is







They are all gone now. But the mountains remain.

The greatest modern Armenian novel ever written is called Նաւը Լերան Վրայ (Naveh Leran Vra - The Ship on the Mountain). It is written by the internationally renowned author, scholar, traveler, teacher, lecturer, poet and unmatched intellectual Gostan Zarian. It is a direct metaphor referring to Noah's Ark that landed on Mount Ararat and eventually repopulated the earth from the land of my people. It is also about the relentless perseverance of Armenians to make an impossible dream a reality.

Gostan Zarian is also gone. But the mountains remain.

Ter Mesrob has to run. He wants to meet Sam and I promise to arrange a meeting. He says he'll leave a mobile phone for me at the front desk, to contact me when he has some time. He will rearrange his schedule to make the connection with Sam. Now the ball is in my court.

It is really hot in Yerevan in August. It is 37 degrees Celsius. I am sweating and I have to run upstairs to change before going to Tumo. I need one more cup of coffee to keep my energy up. I have only slept for a couple of hours.

After changing, I run down to the lounge to get my caffeine fix. A beautiful, tall, dark-haired and dark-eyed Armenian woman greets me and hugs me. She is Katherine S. of California. Another one of the original "fellowship" who helped create Tumo. Katherine came from Pixar (now part of Disney), and has produced some of the best known digital animation classics in the world. I had not seen her for about four years since we last met in Yerevan. She introduces me to her husband M. She tells him that I am the smart Canadian she always mentioned. Coming from someone of her brain power, I am more than flattered. M speaks Armenian in my favourite accent, Iranian Armenian.

Iranian Armenian is my favourite because they speak Eastern Armenian, which means that they have kept the original phonetic pronounciations of our language.

Western Armenian, my mother tongue, has evolved to a point that it no longer distinguishes between the three vocalizations of consonants that make Armenian distinct and wonderful.

The Eastern Armenian used in the territories of the former USSR, i.e. in Armenia, Georgia and Artsakh has a major fault though. It uses a Soviet spelling which is a horrendous crime against the genius of Mesrob Mashtots, the inventor of the Armenian alphabet.

Mashtots was the greatest linguist in the world in the 5th century AD. He created an almost perfect foundation for our linguistic and cultural evolution. By butchering his orthographic rules, the Soviets cut off the natural evolution of our language and its connection to our millennial literal tradition.

Western Armenian has kept the Mashtotsian spelling.

The Armenian of Iranian Armenians has the best of both worlds. The correct pronunciation and the correct spelling. That is why it is my preferred. Plus their Armenian has the added musicality of Farsi.

"You know I gave up on you", says Katherine. "I kept reading it but you never completed your blog". She is absolutely right and dead serious. She sounds upset and has waited over four years to tell me this.

I promise her that not only will I write a new complete one for this trip, but that I'll also complete the previous one. I shall not let her down.

I cannot repay Katherine enough. One of the most moving experiences in my life was when we were at Geghard Monastery in 2007. We went into the miraculous rock-hewn church, and then climbed to the second floor upper chamber. And there, right there, in the perfectly acoustic surrounding of the place of ancient ritual, Katherine sang the most beautiful Hayr Mer (The Lord's Prayer in ancient Armenian Grapar language) that I have ever heard in my life. It is the only experience that gives me goose bumps every time that I recall it. It is there that I decided that if God exists, He must have been present at Geghard and at that moment. Of course, an omnipresent God is everywhere all the time, but His presence could be felt then through Katherine's angelic vocalization.

I tell M that he must make a point of experiencing such a moment with Katherine. He promises me that he'll do that.

Sam and Silva walk in. I hug him. He beams at me. “I am so glad you are here” he says. He is hugely excited. He asks me to join him in the car to Tumo. Tonight is the first of a three-day opening celebration.

When I heard about the opening, I decided to give a special gift to the Center. It is a poem for group recitation. I wrote it in Eastern Armenian, because I wanted the youth at Tumo to perform it in their mother tongue.

I have never written anything in Eastern Armenian. This was a first. I dedicated it to the dream of Tumo. It took me a few days, but I did it. I wrote it in the original Mashtotsian orthography. The way it should be.

Here it is .

Sam and Silva tell me they loved the poem and would love to see it performed.

I also translated into English.

It is here.

In the car, Sam gets a phone call. He gets upset in the conversation.




-Tell these pieces of s*%t that I've had enough of their extortions and lame excuses. I have been fighting this battle for over a decade. I want those items cleared from customs now, as they promised, and we are not going to pay them bribes. It has to be done immediately. Otherwise, I'll get the highest authority in the country on their back.

Sam is outwardly a very calm person. But clearly someone had touched a wrong nerve. There is no need for further comment.

He then asks me what I think of TED Talks. Apparently, they have expressed interest in holding a TED Talk at Tumo.




If you don't know about TED Talks, then you can learn about them here. I watch their lectures at least once a week.




I tell him that TED Talks is ultimately about ideas that would change the world. It fits perfectly with the mission of Tumo. If that event is held there and then it becomes a regular event, this would expose Tumo, and by extension the ideas of Tumo, to the whole world. It would create interest about Tumo at a global scale among millions who believe in the power of the human mind.




I just gave Sam an immense task. The Sam I know will do his homework. I am hoping that he'll include me in such an initiative. I tell him that I am ready to assist in any way. Our eyes meet, and he smiles. I know Sam understood me.




It is a wonderful feeling to be able to connect with someone at a deep level without talking. Saying the minimum and getting across much much more. To be able to do that with a visionary like Sam is truly precious. I look across the seat, Silva is smiling too. I feel more than special.







As we pull into the parking lot of the center, old memories get rekindled. There is an army of workers still doing last minute work. There is scaffolding, a crane on wheels, painters and floor pane layers, people working on ladnscaping and an even bigger army of media technicians preparing the stage and audio visual equipment. No one of course is wearing hard hats. Many workers are wearing stylish, leather-soled sharp-tipped shoes. I am not kidding. Dusty, but stylish.

-No one wears hard hats here, says Sam in a resigned way. A worker in one of those fancy shoes climbs up the scaffolding quickly and starts putting on the paint primer of the back entrance hallway.

Armenians always amaze me. In more ways than one. Their preoccupation with self-image is often grotesquely funny. Sometimes it is surreally tragic. We are a people of extremes.




I ask Sam permission to photograph and videotape the place. He tells me that no one is more entitled than me, since I was there from the beginning. I am flattered. I want to capture the dynamism of the place in unedited emotion. I know there is history in the making here. Definitely for Armenians, but also likely for the world. It is important to capture the raw emotions, the excitement and yes, even the frustrations. It would be part of the "Making of ....".




Sam walks the corridors and gestures left and right about the use of the rooms. The last time I saw this place it was just a concrete structural shell. But the spaces are familiar. We had discussed and imagined them as they are today and they are now real. More real and much better than what we had in our minds.







Dreams that do not get realized turn into recurring nightmares.

Dreams that get realized become miracles.

I am witnessing the last stages of a miracle being born. It is awesome.

Sam walks into a room in the back hall. He introduces me to Maral A. She springs up and shakes my hand. She is a teacher of Armenian from Texas, who, for the past 3 months, has been organizing the youth coaches and setting things up for the opening events.

She tells me that the poem I wrote is "outstanding!". She then proceeds to analyze it, she mentions influences of Kevork Emin, Barouyr Sevag, Hovhannes Toumanian, Gibran Khalil Gbran. She herself is outstanding. I am more than impressed. I am deeply moved. I tell her that she has missed one subtle detail, the poem is structurally paralleling one of the greatest inspirational pieces in Western Armenian, The Ode to the Sossyats Woods by the great Vahan Tekeyan (Գեղօն Սօսեաց Անտառին - Keghon Sossyats Andarin).

"Aaah", she says, "it's obvious now, how could I have missed it".




She then starts reciting that Ode immediately out of memory. I get shivery every time I hear that poem.

Maral is definitely a guardian. I suddenly realize that there still is a whole army of them in the world. That the real miracle of this dream is that they have now come together to defend the only thing humanity has left going for it.

Hope.

Maral says that she will definitely be staging the performance of my piece. Whether here in Armenia or back in the US or both.

She walks me around the center. She introduces to many young men and women. From the creative personnel to the technical staff to the administration folks to all the coaches and specialty area leaders. I can't remember all their names but capture them on video. They are all young, cheerful, excited and both from Armenia and the Diasporas. What a wonderful place this is.




Tumo proves to me that Armenians can be united. Around a purpose, around a vision, around an idea.

So much for conventional "wisdom". It looks more like conventional stupidity to me now.

Pegor P. appears around the corner. He also has not changed. He is dressed in an impeccably ironed white shirt. I wonder how he maintains that in this hectic environment. Pegor is one half of the duo who have made the vision of the "fellowship of ideas" a reality. A visionary himself, yet highly detail-oriented. We hug. It is great to see him again.

He has too many details to take care of. He sits down at a computer and starts working. Sam joins us and walks me to other areas. He shows the ultra flat and thin display panels hanging from the ceiling, designed to display the best of the work of the youth who will work here.

He then tells me that he has personally designed the lighting system of the center where each of the lighting units can be individually controlled by computers. He tells me that the whole center as a building with all its subsystems can become one gigantic work of artistic creation if the right project came along and that he is relying on the creativity of Armenia's children to demonstrate the impossible.

Sam is an engineer by training. I wish all engineering schools taught creativity and faith in the human spirit. Sam could run such a department. It would be called Creative Engineering for Humanity or Engineering for Creativity or something like that.




Sam tells me that only the best and latest technology has gone into Tumo. He tells me that Armenia does not deserve anything second rate. He says that if we want to produce something that is the best in the world, then we cannot compromise on the ingredients.

He is of course right on. The same should apply to the people and their ideas I add. He agrees.

Pegor walks by, Sam questions him about a patent application. Pegor says that he doubts whether they'll make it. It has something to do with a gigantic outdoor game that will be played using light inputs and a giant display showing a game developed at the center. The concern is that the provisional patent for this technology will not be filed before the game is played and the use becomes available in the public domain. The patent lawyer is in Chicago.

Sam turns to me and asks if I could write the patent application. While I have worked on patent documents before, I never did it under such a tight (i.e. impossible) deadline, and never on a topic I was unfamiliar with.




Sam believes in miracles. I cannot let him down.

Pegor gives me a preliminary paragraph he had authored, as well as a template. I go to work.

I work on it for over an hour. I expand the concepts in the application. I create further application examples. In the end, I realize that what I am trying to write the patent for is another version of the Star Trek Holodeck.

I call Sam in and show him my work. He tells me he is amazed how far I have taken the concept. I tell him that I was inspired by Tumo. However, I still need a technical design diagram on how the innovation will work. Otherwise, I cannot send the application.

Sam sits down, and in a real tour de force, sketches in my handbook the engineering high-level block diagram. He explains to me the functional processes involved. From one engineer to another, this is probably the fastest design ever conceived. He has not lost the amazingly sharp mind of his youth. If anything, it is enhanced manifold. I can barely keep up with him.




In the meantime, one of Pegor's sons who was closely involved with the project, has come up with a logical flowchart. I incorporate that too in the patent document. We have all the components. I send it off to Chicago about 30 minutes ahead of schedule.

I realize that we just achieved something remarkable. Probably in world record time. If it ever gets issued, I would have actually authored the patent of the Holodeck. Sam created its technical drawing and we as a team at Tumo, actually created the first intellectual property item that belongs to Tumo. We did it on the frst opening night of the center. And we did it in about 90 minutes.

Now that's history in the making. That is inspiration!




How many people can have the Holodeck patent on their CVs? Now that is some bragging right!

I am sweating even more. Surely it is the excitement too. I need to go back to the hotel to change. I share a taxi with Silva's brother Raffi and his wife. They are equally gracious. He has been working on the mechanical systems, she has been landscaping the whole park. Every member of the family has contributed to this great labour of love. And it shows.




We arrive and I have about an hour to freshen up and grab a quick bite. I run to my room for a shower and a change of clothing. I am not very hungry and decide to grab a quick snack from the lounge and continue writing. There is a message on my phone from Andrew.




I call him. He is in Garni. He tells me that there are a couple of young TV journalists who have interviewed him about the Unity Symposium in which we participated and that they would like to interview me as well. He tells me that they'll be calling. I am here on a very tight schedule and have no clue how I can accomodate them. But I cannot refuse Andrew, he is my friend. I consent.

It is now about 8 p.m. I run down to catch the shuttle to the Center.

-Yeghpayr Viken, I hear coming from my back. It is a very familiar voice from my past which I haven't heard for perhaps 4 decades.

I swivel back and I stare at a man with a thick moustache. He has no hair. He is smiling.

I look into his eyes and I say:

-Hovig!

And then we hug. Hovig O. was one of the younger scouts in my troop at the AGBU in Beirut. The last time I had seen him was literally 40 years ago. I had nothing but the memory of his voice to guide me.




I then look up at the smiling face of a tall beautiful woman..

- How is your darling family? She asks. She is Hermineh D. The global director of the AGBU youth programs. She is from France. She is also my wife's first cousin. I hug her and we plant kisses on each other's cheeks.

Swoosh. Swoosh. I just witnessed the Yerevan Marriott Stargate in action.

I tell them I have to run because I have to catch the shuttle to the Tumo first opening party. I run and drop into my seat. Katherine and her husband M. are already there.

I disembark from the shuttle at the center. I run in to get my VIP badge. The stage is already in full operation. There is an Armenian reggae band playing called Reincarnatsia. Yes, an Armenian reggae band. They are very good.

There are thousands of youth in the park, in front of the stage and preregisering with the staff. Then the DJ is introduced. DJ Baxtar from Texas. Techno music starts to blurt from the loudspeakers.




You could send a message through the Tumo website as well as from SMS and Twitter. It is directly transcribed into the large scrolling display on the stage. That is really cool.

Messages start coming in literally from all over the world. Most of them are local but I can see many from Europe and the US as well. The event is broadcast live on the Internet. Later, Sam tells me that they had over 4500 watchers on the Internet for the first day.

I go out to be closer to the action. I see the outline of a familiar figure. It is my old friend Alex S., one of the "fellowship" of the initial eight. I approach him and hug him.




Alex introduces me to two men who are his brothers, David and Stewart. We chat. I tell Alex that I called him a leading intellectual in a lecture I gave at Columbia University. David asks why. I tell him it is because Alex changed the computer gaming industry forever, and with it, the perception of Hollywood about that industry.

We reminisce a lot. Alex is here with his wife and children, but they are back at the hotel. The music continues. The messages coming in from Armenia and the world resonate with a strange vitality. There are a couple of messengers who are using the stage as a gigantic cross-continental chat relay. I have no idea where they are but they keep answering each other, back and forth.




Within an hour, Armenians have created a new communications tool out of stage production technology. The whole world being witness to their conversation. How cool is that?




Katherine and M. join us. We decide to climb to the upper terrace on the top of the building to see the show from the highest point. We climb the staircase to the top, literally, about 10 storeys high.

The place looks different from this vantage point. Also the light show is spectacular. After about 30 minutes we go back down to witness the 3-D building projection show and the crowd virtual game which I have been working on the patent for.




The 3-D show is inspired from a "Drop of Honey", the wonderful fairy tale by Hovhannes Toumanian. The whole building façade becomes a projection screen. It is impossible to describe the effect. You have to see it to appreciate it. Luckily, there is a version of it on YouTube.

Here it is.




The game is a lot of fun and is equally successful. By now it is about midnight. The party is still going on but we walk back to the shuttle for the hotel. It will be a long day tomorrow.




Alex and his brothers were in Garni and Geghard today. Apparently they have a very good guide called Svetlana. They want me to meet her. They invite me to join them tomorrow as we shall be going to the Madenataran. The great scriptorium of the Armenian people. I agree. How can I say no? I could literally live in the Madenataran and not have enough of it. David and I keep talking as we board the shuttle. At the hotel, we decide to stay a while at the lounge to grab a couple of cold bottles of water.

We sit down and talk. Our conversation lasts well into the early morning hours. We talk about everything. David is very erudite. We talk about friendship, literature, creativity, Japanese culture, Armenian culture, history, the meaning of life and death, identity, our ancestors, the discovery of our roots, our parents, and we talk about the Madenataran which we shall visit tomorrow.




By the time I enter my room, I am more than exhausted. I cannot sleep. I sit down and write a few notes for myself and then I blog a little.

I switch on the TV. A strange thing is happening on one of the Armenian channels. They are showing a Chinese martial-arts war movie, it is dubbed in Armenian.

Even the grunts and the screams are done with Eastern Armenian voices. It is the funniest thing I have ever seen.

This is the place where anything can happen.

August 11, 2011

Day 1: Fast Forward

I have left things unfinished last time. When I came back from Armenia, the endless urge to write and create subsided quickly. Like coming off from a drug-induced high. Not that I'd know.


I have mostly half-written unedited chapters from last time. Along with a pile of notes. I shall finish them of course. I am hoping that soon.


My writing is unfinished. Just like me.

In the end, perhaps that is what ultimately consciousness is about. The realization that we are an unfinished business. An incomplete creation.

We might have passed the concept stage, but we are definitely still in beta testing.

The atheist would say that that alone is a big argument against God. How can such a perfect existence create such a failure as humans?

The believer would say that we can never know the mind of God. Even incomplete, we are here for a purpose. The beta testing will be over when we die. The rejects will get eternal damnation, and the good concepts will pass quality control and will be integrated in the final product forever. It will be perfect.

The problem is that the Judaeo-Christian/Islamic spiritual metaphor has no place for other modern business management concepts like continuous improvement, product innovation and so on. Maybe Hinduism and Buddhism do, since they believe in Karma and reincarnation.

The best that an agnostic like me can hope for is that the doubt of being in a continuous dream (perhaps in the mind of the Creator) will be dispersed or confirmed one day.

I am in Armenia again.

This time, it is a real fast forward. I am back again, yearning for what I left behind.

I am Bilbo. The ring that has become my curse is what I experienced in Armenia, what now seems like ages ago.

Endless inspiration.

How did I get here again?


My friends, the wonderful couple Sam and Silva, have decided to invite me to the opening ceremonies of their great gift to Armenia, the Tumo Center.




Yes, my great adventure that culminated four years ago here with the "Fellowship of ideas" from all over the planet is now a reality.




What is the Tumo Center? It is a Center for Creative Technologies.


What does that mean? It means there is nothing like it in the whole world.



I can't describe it. Just go here to see it for yourself.





On the way to Yerevan, I spend a few hours at the airport in Amsterdam, and then, for the first time in my life, I board Armavia, the airline serving independent Armenia, displaying Mount Ararat as its tail insignia. The plane is christened Viktor Hampartsoumyan.





Viktor Hamparsoumyan was probably the greatest Armenian scientist who has ever lived. He was the co-founder of the Armenian Academy of Sciences. He was also the founder of the Soviet school of astrophysics. For many years he was the president of the International Astronomical Society. His accolades and achievements are too many to even mention.

In April of 2009, I gave a lecture in Montreal about this uniquely inspiring man. You can watch it here.




I thought I'd be beyond it by now, but an internal pride awakens in me and fills my being. I can't help it.





I am sitting in the emergency exit row. The flight attendant explains to me my duties in case they would be needed. It is called վթարային անցք (vtarayin antsk) in Armenian. I like that. It sounds like poetry to my ears.





For some reason, all the staff on the plane address me in English. I reply to them in Armenian, they show bewilderment and continue addressing me in English.


I guess they think I am not Armenian but have learnt to speak the language. They are being courteous.





Just before takeoff, there is a commotion at the back of the plane. I had seen a couple of stern looking men board the aircraft. They spoke to each other in Dutch. They were escorting a young family of Armenians, father, pregnant mother and a toddler. They had all taken seats in the back.






The mother is screaming and crying. The father raises his voice and threatens the two Dutchmen with violence. They hold him down. The flight staff rush to the back, airport security comes in. The situation is getting worse by the minute.


A passenger pulls out a video camera and tries to film the incident. He is immediately chastized by the head flight attendant. She tells him to switch it off.





-Չէ՞ք ամաչում: Սա ձեր գործը չի: Ահա այս է պատահում երբ բռնի տեղափոխում են մարդկանց (tchek amatchoum? Sa tser kordze tchi. Aha ayss eh badahoom yerp prni deghapokhoom en martgants - Aren't you ashamed, this is none of your business? This is what happens when they forcefully remove someone from a country).


It turns out that the Dutch authorities are deporting the family back to Armenia. The commotion lasts for over half an hour. Regular passengers from the back are moved to the front. The mother keeps wailing.


It all dies down gradually, and the plane takes off. The standard announcements are made in Armenian and in English.


-Շուտով ձեզ հիւրասիրելու ենք սուրճ, թեյ կամ հիւթեր, ինչպէս նարինջի, սեւ հաղարջի, պանանի եւ ելակի. նրանց ընկերակցելու են համեղ բլիթներ: (Shoodov tsez ge hyourasirenk soordj, tey gam hyouter, intchbes narintchi, sev haghardji, banani yev yelagi; nrants engeragtseloo yen hamegh plitner - We shall soon serve you coffee, tea or juices, like orange, blackberry or banana-strawberry; they'll be accompanied by tasty snacks).


I have no idea how she knows that the snacks are tasty. I am amused and decide try the banana-strawberry mixed juice; it tastes horrible, as do the stale baked snacks. At least on the issue of airline food, we are up to par with international standards.


They did sound mouth-watering though in Armenian. While my palate did not approve, my ears were certainly more than satiated and content.

There is a medical "disorder" called synesthesia. People afflicted with it have a mixup of their sensory inputs. They "hear" colors and "see" sounds for example. Since we have five senses there are many potential forms of synesthesia. On a one to one mismatch, for example, there could be twenty different kinds (e.g. "smelling" of touch input). Not all potential cases have been documented though, nor have even been proven to exist. But synesthesia goes beyond the general five senses into its subsets. It has also been associated with language (lexical-a specific subset of auditory input) and letter-number shapes (graphical- specific subset of visual sensory input).






Synesthesia has been associated with art and creativity, especially as it relates to musicians who are able to see sounds, and painters who are able to draw sounds.


Some of my most favourite minds were synesthetes. Franz Liszt, Vladimir Nabokov and arguably the greatest genius of modern physics, Richard Feynman.

The rarest form of synesthesia is lexical/gustatory. This means that words evoke tastes.

I have always wondered about that. I have imagined this alien race in a SF story which communicates strictly by taste. The only way to communicate with them and learn their wisdom of eons would be to eat them.


Maybe that's what all those "mean" Hollywood aliens are trying to do. They are not really bad dudes who want to gobble us up; they are misunderstood. They just want to communicate.


See how far this simple announcement has taken me?


A young man is restless in his seat, he is upset with the previous incident. He calls the chief flight attendant.


- Ես չեմ ուզում ներվայնանալ բայց ներվայնանում եմ: (Yes tchem oozoom nervaynanal bayts nervaynanoom em - I don't want to get upset but I am getting upset).

The flight attendant tries to calm him down. He goes on


- Ես չեմ կարողանում հասկանալ թէ Արմավիան, իմ հայրենիքի ինքնաթիռի ընկերութիւնը ոնց է մեղսակից լինում եւ ինձ էլ մեղսակից անում, թոյլ տալով որ իմ հայրենակիցների հետ այսպէս վարուեն: (Yes tchem garoghanoom hasganal teh Armavian, eem hayreniki inknatiri engerootyoune vonts eh meghsagits linoom, yev ints el meghsagits anoom, tooyl dalov vor eem hayrenagitsneri hed aysbes varven - I cannot understand how Armavia, the airline of my country, is becoming complicit, and making me complicit as well by allowing them to treat my compatriots this way).


He continues


- Ես հասկանում եմ որ նրանց բռնի վերադարձնում են Հայաստան, դա Հոլանդիայի իրաւունքն է, բայց ինչո՞ւ Արմավիայով: Թող ուրիշ ընկերութեամբ հետ դարձնեն մարդկանց: Ես ուզում եմ պաշտօնապէս բողոքել Արմավիայի այս քաղաքականութեան դէմ որ տրամադրութիւնս փչացրեց: Ես վեց տարի է չեմ եղել Հայաստանում եւ մեծ ուրախութեամբ վերադառնում էի մօրս տեսնելու: Ես չեմ ուզում սցենա անել բայց դուք իմ զգացումները թունաւորեցիք: (Yes hasganoom em vor nrants prnee veratartsnoom en Hayasdan, ta Holandiayi eeravoonkn eh, payts intchoo Armaviayov? Togh oorish engerootyamp hed tartsnen martgants. Yes oozoom em bashsonabes poghokel Armaviayi ays kaghakaganootyan tem vor dramatrootyouns ptchatsrets. Yes vets daree eh tchem yeghel Hayasdanoum yev medz oorakhoutyamp veratarnoum eyi mores desneloo. Yes tchem ouzoom stsena anel payts touk eem zkatsoumnere tounavoretsik - I understand that they are forcefully repatriating them to Armenia. Holland has the right to do that. But why use Armavia? Let them return people using another airline. I want to officially complain against this Armavia policy that ruined my mood. I haven't been to Armenia for six years and was looking forward to see my mother again. I don't want to make a scene but you poisoned my feelings).


He is almost teary-eyed. I know he is sincere.


Another passenger barges in and tells him to shut up. Yet another mumbles that they let in Turks and send back Armenians, what kind of a Christian country is that?


I cannot tell him that Armavia is a private company, it is not a state airline. In any case, they have to obey the local authorities and aid them in this "dirty" deed. Otherwise they might lose their landing rights. Also, the plane is half empty, so they are probably happy to carry the full-fared four adults and child. They might even have charged a premium.


As for Christian countries, there is only one in the world. It is the Vatican. Armenians everywhere have a problem understanding this basic concept of separating religion and state.


The flight attendant is efficient and a no-nonsense kind of gal. She quiets the disrought passenger by arguing that the deportees should not be behaving so badly and endangering the lives of the other passengers. He insists that he will complain. She promises to give him the official coordinates to do so.


In the end, I agree with the emotionally disrought passenger. I don't defend him though. Not because I don't like revolutions. I just don't think that they should be started in the confined space of an aircraft at 10 km. above sea level.


It is a long flight and I had packed my reading material in my suitcase. I pick up the inflight Armavia magazine.


It is the April 2011 issue. We are in mid August. I guess budget cuts have mysterious ways of manifesting themselves.


The cover advertises interesting content. Monasteries and temples of Armenia. I leaf through it, impressive indeed. High quality glossy print with color photographs. The accompaying text is of very good quality. Bilingual, in English and Armenian. Obviously good research has been done for historical content.



As I turn the pages though, it hits me, and hits me hard. All the advertising is almost exclusively about casinos. Most of it in Russian and some in English. Millionaires' Club with VIP Room. Cabaret Charlotte promising an "enchanting" strip show with "hottest girls", photos provided as proof. Sports bookmaking with live bets via their website.


Someone should advise the editors about the appropriateness of mixing these two topics in a single publication. But then again, about 2000 years ago, the Son of the Creator is supposed to have cleansed the temples from the moneylenders. Maybe this is a foreshadowing of the second coming.


I think he'll need a third, fourth, fifth and even more comings. Even the Creator does not have that much time to clean up all the mess.


I guess that's why He prefers deluges or, in our case, earthquakes. He throws away too many babies with the bathwater though.


Even one would be too many for my taste.

On the last page, there is a more "decent" advertisement. It sings the praises of a gated community. It's slogan is "տուն ձեր դիրքին վայել" (Doon tser tirkin vayel - a house worthy of your stature). I guess status consciousness will drive us behind walls.


It's back to the Middle Ages for us. If only with it we could get back our great thinkers, scientists and saints.


The plane lands at Zvartnots airport. I can't help admiring the majesty of Noah's mountain.


This is what I saw at the airport.






It is the evening of August 11th. August 11 is a special day for Armenians.


In the ancient Armenian calendar, it is the day that Noah descended from Our Mountain to repopulate the Earth.


In the ancient Armenian calendar, it is on this day, over 45 centuries ago that the founder of our people, Hayk Nahabed, killed with his long bow, the evil king Bel of Babylon who had come to subjugate us.


It is this day that marks the start of the month of Navasard, and it is the first day of the ancient Armenian New Year.


I have not come to repopulate, I have come to be populated by the spirit of my ancestors.


I have not come to conquer, but to be conquered by great ideas.


Navasard is the celebration of starting anew. I have come to restart my relationship with the deepest part of myself.

I walk in serpentine corridors and eventually get to the visa counter. I know the routine already. I fill my questionnaire. I have to pay 3,000 Armenian drams. Unfortunately they don't take any other currency.


I run to the money changing counter. There is a long line up there. Unlike last time, there is now also a gleaming new money changing machine that takes cash exclusively. No one is going there though.


I ask the person in front of me whether the machine is working. He says yes, I then ask how come no one is using it.


- Ո՞նց կարելի է մեքենային փողի հարցեր վստահել: Եթէ սխալ անի ո՞ւմ բողոքեմ: (vonts gareli eh mekenayin poghi hartsyr vsdahel. Yeteh skhal ani oom poghokem? How can I trust money matters to a machine. If it makes a mistake, who do I complain to?).


He does have a minuscule point. I don't have the appetite to tell him that all financial transactions in the world are made with machines. That in fact, money does not exist at all. It is nothing but a collection of electronic signals residing in other machines.


I have given up on scoring points. That is not what life is about.


What is it about? It is about Inspiration and Creation.


It is about what Tumo will do.


The Tumo driver greets me at the exit and drives me to the Marriott. My old residence when I was here the last time. I am even given a room on the same floor.


I drop my luggage and start blogging. I keep at it for an hour. I have no concept of time.


Then I run down to the lounge to grab a coffee. I am jet-lagged but excited.


As I enter the familiar room, I am greeted by a smiling Silva who hugs me and welcomes me. Gentle, cheerful and ever so caring she has made a huge contribution to the realization of the great dream of Tumo.


She tells me that I should be seeing Alex and Katherine as well. I can't wait to meet up with them. They were part of the original "fellowship" that started it all. I have really missed them a lot.


Silva is another one I'd call a guardian.


Then Elie approaches me beamingly. His wife Anna at his side. Elie is my high-school classmate. Always sharp, always insightful. I'd seen him last two years ago in Dallas when I gave a lecture there. Our paths have crossed again.


We sit down and talk. I share my adventures with him and do most of the talking. He slips in a comment or two, but always makes me think and keeps me on my toes. I am glad he has not changed.


And then my other classmate Berdj walks him. He is Sam's younger brother. He smiles and gives me a deep hug. I hadn't seen him since 1975. We have lots to catch up on. He doesn't waste time and asks me what I think of Tumo. I tell him that along with the Armenian world chess champion team, Tumo is like a dual summit Ararat. It will also put Armenians on the top of the world.


"This is the first time that I have heard it expressed this way", says Berdj. His wife Sona walks in. He introduces me as the Hayaked (the expert on Armenian topics). I tell her that I have known her husband before she has. She smiles graciously. Berdj joins in. He still has that mischieveous spark in his eyes which he always had in his adolescent years. He was and apparently still is a soccer fanatic. He has not changed either.

In our change-obsessed world, it is actually an amazing feeling to have a sense of constancy. Most people try to find it in their families. Then there are a few lucky ones like me. We actually have people with whom we can restart a conversation that had started over 3 decades ago and pick it up where we left off. All the while, knowing full well that we are still good friends.


I cannot ask for anything more.


Tomorrow, I shall cross the Hrazdan bridge and experience what I helped come true.


I am exhilirated. I crave the excitement.

I go back to my room and keep blogging. I am running on adrenaline.

I think this will be so for the next few days.

I need to get some sleep, but somehow I don't think I'll get enough.

It really does not matter.