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  • Lecture & Perf by Lebanese-Armenian promoting understanding in ME

    FeaturesDS 09/03/04
    Lebanese-Armenian who works to promote understanding of the Middle Eastern
    diaspora Center hosts lectures and performances that explore this issue

    By Nana Asfour
    Special To The Daily Star

    `I'm a real diasporan person,' declares Lebanese-Armenian Anny
    Bakalian, as she sits, cross-legged, at her office at the City
    University of New York, overlooking the Empire State Building in New
    York City.

    `I like being a diasporan,' she adds laughing. `It gives you this
    ability, this mobility, and it gives you choice.'

    In that sense, Bakalian, who left her native Lebanon 23 years ago, is
    perfectly suited for her position as the associate director of the
    Middle East and Middle Eastern American Center (MEMEAC).

    The center, after all, was created to, among other things, promote the
    understanding of the Middle Eastern diaspora. As such, it has hosted a
    series of lectures and performances that explore this issue.

    Last year, MEMEAC organized a talk by historian Akram Khater about
    Lebanese immigrants, and a presentation of Kathryn Leila Buck's
    one-woman show, `I Site, ' about growing up multi-cultural.

    Under Bakalian's helm - and that of Mehdi Bozorgmehr and Beth Baron,
    MEMEAC' s co-directors - the center has become one of the leading
    venues in New York for Arab, Armenian and Iranian cultural events and
    studies.

    `We've done a lot in the two-and-a-half years we'vebeen in operation,'
    Bakalian says. `I really think we've been very successful.'

    With the help of a grant from the Ford Foundation, MEMEAC came into
    being in September 2001, merely one week before the attacks on the
    World Trade Center.

    At the time, Bakalian was a volunteer; she was in between jobs, having
    recently moved to New York from Baltimore, Maryland, where she had
    been teaching sociology for the past 10 years.

    She had met Bozorgmehr a few years earlier and when he asked her to
    come and help out, she happily obliged.

    `When we started out, we were in a tiny cubicle downstairs, we didn't
    have any windows, and we were barely managing,' Bakalian says.

    `Then September 11th happened. What timing! Right after that, the
    demand for Middle Eastern studies and for the diaspora became very
    evident.'

    MEMEAC, which was conceived as the first center of its kind to combine
    studies of the Middle East and Middle Eastern American, now saw its
    role taking on greater importance.

    Immediately thereafter, reports of violent attacks on Arab-Americans
    and Muslim-Americans began to fill the newspapers and the
    airwaves. Wishing to investigate the backlash, the National Science
    Foundation (NSF) sent out applications for short-term grants.

    `Mehdi and I talked about it and said, â=80=98Shall we go for
    this?' In three days, we wrote a proposal and sent it. In less than
    three hours, we heard that they were funding it, which was extremely
    unusual.'

    Ever since, Bozorgmehr and Bakalian, whose volunteer stint quickly
    grew into a full-time position, have been working on the NSF project,
    studying how Middle Eastern and South Asian American support
    organizations responded to Sept.

    11, 2001.

    `We have already conducted 7,500 interviews and we're now slowly
    getting the results out,' Bakalian says.

    Bakalian's responsibilities at MEMEAC have continued to grow over the
    last two years. Between planning events and lectures, organizing
    conferences (such as one on race and slavery between the Middle East
    and Africa which is scheduled for April), doing research for the NSF
    grant, and trying to create a BA in Middle East studies at the City
    University of New York, she has little timeto do anything else, let
    alone travel.

    This might explain why Bakalian has not been back to Lebanon since
    April 2001. `It's a long trip,' she says. But there is another reason
    why she doesn't often visit: not much remains of the Lebanon she knew.

    `On the one hand, it's very interesting to go back and try to figure
    out, where was this? Where was that?' she says. `On the other hand, I
    am very saddened by the fact that the middle class no longer exists,
    that there is so much poverty. There needs to be a middle class in
    order to have a stable society. I' m also still distressed by how
    parts of Lebanon are now a solid block of concrete. There's no urban
    planning, no sense of esthetics. What has happened to all the
    villages?' Bakalian was born in Beirut in 1953 to first-generation
    Armenian parents. She came into adolescence at a time when Beirut was
    in its glorious prime, and she has fond memories of the city of her
    youth.

    `Baalbek was a fantastic thing: Being 18, 19, or 20 at the time
    andseeing LaMama experimental theater, or Ella Fitzgerald - it was
    exceptional,' she says.

    She attended the American University of Beirut and graduated in 1973
    with a bachelor's degree in sociology (`I'm a very proud AUB alumni,'
    she professes). For her Master's she traveled to England, then she
    returned to Lebanon in the summer of 1975. She had hoped to find work
    but Beirut was now embroiledin war.

    `I was dodging bullets for a while,' she says. Finally, shelanded a
    part-time teaching position at AUB's off-campus program, and that
    opened the doors for more work opportunities. But the war continued to
    escalate and, eventually, she followed in the footsteps of the hoards
    of Lebanese fleeing the city.

    In 1981, she moved to New York to pursue a doctorate at Columbia
    University.

    For her thesis she toyed with the idea of going back to Lebanon to
    write about professional women - `I've always been interested in
    women's issues,' she says - but she feared that the fighting might
    prevent her from completing her dissertation.

    In the end, she opted to stay put, in the US, and to write a book
    about Armenian-Americans. `I realized nobody had done anything about
    it so I said to myself, let me do it,' she says.

    Soon after, she settled in Baltimore, Maryland, where she taught
    sociology at a small liberal arts college. She remained there for 10
    years.

    Living in New York - whose cosmopolitanism and chaos Bakalian likens
    to Beirut - and working at MEMAC, where she gets to use her many
    languages and engage on a daily basis with fellow diasporan, Bakalian
    feels that `thingshave come around full circle for me.' Although she
    misses her native country,Bakalian would never consider leaving
    America for good.

    `To be honest as a single woman, it's much more liberating to be in a
    place like this. No one here says min beit min inti? (What family do
    you belong to?), or Inshallah nifrah minneki (May we celebrate your
    wedding day). Here, at least, you can have an identity of your own.'
    She pauses for a moment, trying to think of a further explanation,
    then says, `I like it here too much.'
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