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Glendale: Giovanni, Arash and the tunnel

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  • Glendale: Giovanni, Arash and the tunnel

    Glendale News Press
    March 20, 2004

    FROM THE MARGINS
    Giovanni, Arash and the tunnel

    PATRICK AZADIAN

    The ordeal is almost over. This is the last of three parts sparked by
    a quote by Malcolm X: "The only thing I like integrated is my coffee."
    I took the analogy further in describing my high school's racially
    divided social scene: "Milk producers, coffee growers and sugar
    planters rarely came together to produce a smooth cappuccino." Readers
    have been inquiring about the true identity of these categories; my
    response has been consistent: "They are irrelevant." It is the late
    1970s; I live in Sacramento, and being an Armenian is still
    mysterious.

    Giovanni was one of my buddies on the soccer team. As far as I knew,
    he was the only Italian at our school. He was a product of a broken
    home and a jet-setter father. The most exciting things in his life
    were his athletic involvements and his sweet girlfriend, Karen. And
    she was the envy of everyone, including the football team's
    quarterback, Kenny. She was a victory for all of us on the unglamorous
    soccer team.

    Karen had a sweet way of filling the family void in Giovanni's
    life. She was one of the rare sweethearts who actually made and
    delivered sandwiches for her boyfriend after each and every soccer
    match. My Italian mate was smitten.

    Giovanni was popular among "sugar planters" and enjoyed all the
    benefits of having a solid peer group. One problem: Giovanni's friends
    did not approve of Karen. So one day, after a brutal two-hour soccer
    practice, Giovanni broke down in tears. His intensity suggested that
    his sobbing was not a product of his howling misses in front of the
    empty net during scrimmage; he had broken up with Karen. His official
    reason: "Hmmm 'cause I am stupid, man, just stupid."

    Translation: "Sugar planters" did not approve of her. My opinion:
    "Dumb move."

    Dumb got even dumber. Within a week Giovanni had a new girl from the
    more accepted scene, and within a month, she was pregnant. Beautiful
    an expectant father at the green age of 17. My Dodo bird curiosity
    immediately kicked in, and I posed the obvious question to his friend,
    Joaquin: "I personally have not seen this contraption with my own
    eyes, but isn't there something called contraception in this country?"
    Dodo bird received his answer in the form of "Hush that is against the
    teachings of the church."

    The grand lesson is quite clear, but allow me to be redundant. Lesson
    No. 1: Peer pressure can lead to losing your hot girlfriend,
    especially if your homies are involuntarily single throughout high
    school. Lesson No. 2: If you are going to be selective in following
    the teachings of Christ, pick and choose wisely.

    Arash was one of three Iranians at our school. Thanks to him and his
    monthly "Animal House" toga parties at his bachelor pad, I enjoyed a
    decent level of popularity. In spite of my superior looks, as well as
    my lack of a unibrow and a thick black mustache, our classmates could
    not tell us apart. They would often thank me for being invited to the
    toga bashes.

    Arash's gatherings could not have come at a better time, considering
    we were privileged to have experienced all the ill effects of the
    Iranian hostage crisis. But no one dared to openly get on our wrong
    side, as they feared being axed from the guest list. In exchange, we
    were denied entry to gatherings on a couple of occasions, but no
    worries, no resentments; we had a firm grip on our own social life.

    In addition to being quite popular with the girls, Arash had a
    beautiful girlfriend named Kelly. I could safely say Arash was one of
    the biggest party animals at our school, and enjoyed all the freedoms
    American society offered and tolerated. At the same time, he was
    supportive of the Islamic revolution in Iran.

    I posed a question to him once about this contradiction: "Would you
    like a brutal spanking from a bearded official every time you were out
    with Kelly?" His response: "That system is good for those people. I
    don't have to like it to support it." He went as far as inviting me to
    his pad to have his extremist roommate preach to me the virtues of a
    fundamentalist revolution. From that day on, our friendship was on
    ice.

    I am almost certain Arash eventually made a U-turn on his views. Like
    most Iranian students of that era, his anti-Shah, pro-democracy
    tendencies were temporarily allied with pro-revolution sentiments. His
    preaching roommate was a different story, however. He went on to
    benefit from the American educational system, only to go back and help
    coin the term "Great Satan" for America.

    Lesson No. 1: What's not good for you is probably not good for others,
    either. Lesson No. 2: Hypocrisy runs rampant in the world. Lesson
    No. 3: Revolutions can mess up good friendships.

    High school was my landing ground in America; sink or swim were my
    only choices. I left home at 14, traveled above gray waters, trekked
    through a jet engine-noise tunnel surrounded by dark clouds, and
    emerged in an entirely new universe. The tunnel was then sealed.

    Everything before the tunnel is surreal, but intact. Everything after
    the tunnel is real yet artificially detached from the past.

    The bridge is still under construction.


    PATRICK AZADIAN lives and works in Glendale. He is an identity and
    branding consultant for the retail industry. Reach him at
    [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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