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  • 100 years of community

    Visalia Times-Delta, CA
    Tulare Advance Register, CA
    May 22 2004

    100 years of community
    Armenian congregation marks anniversary of first church service in
    Yettem
    By Mike Hazelwood
    Staff writer


    Ron Holman/Staff photographer
    >>From left, Sark Yahnian, Sylvia Yahnian, Araxie Menendian, Lucinne
    Bennett, Rosie Baramian, Carolyn Mikaelian and Hartune Neffian are
    members of the St. Mary Armenian Apostolic Church of Yettem. The
    congregation will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the first church
    service on May 30.



    Ron Holman/Staff photographer
    Lucinne Benett, 86, stands in front of a map depicting Armenian
    family homes in 1915 Yettem. Although an artist finished the map,
    Bennett and her sister designed it from memories of growing up in the
    area.


    How to attend
    What: Celebration of first Yettem church service 100 years ago

    When: 9:45 a.m. May 30

    Where: St. Mary Armenian Apostolic Church of Yettem, 14395 Avenue 384


    Cost: Services are free and open to public, but banquet to follow is
    sold out



    YETTEM -- As much as life changes in 100 years, much can also stay
    the same.

    Take the tiny town of Yettem, for example. A century ago it was a
    mere speck on Tulare County maps. But it was an area rich on
    religious faith.

    Today it's still a speck. And it's still a spiritual
    diamond-in-the-rough.

    "The church holds us together," says Araxie Menendian, 78, a member
    of St. Mary Armenian Apostolic Church of Yettem.

    Next weekend church members will celebrate the 100th anniversary of
    the first church services in Yettem, the blink-and-you'll-miss-it
    town north of Visalia.

    There was no church or clergymen, just a community of Armenian
    settlers embracing a new land.

    According to written records, the families met outside Tateos
    Davidian's home. Under a tree, the families of different
    denominations -- and non-Armenians as well -- read scripture, prayed
    and sang a hymn translated to "Morning of Light."

    It will all be relived May 30.

    "They did what they could," the church's Father Vartan Kasparian
    says.

    The anniversary banquet -- which follows a morning full of indoor and
    outdoor services -- is already sold out, though only a handful of
    Armenians still live in the Yettem area. Things change, as the
    settling families have branched out across the United States.

    But things stay the same, because many Armenians still consider
    Yettem a slice of home.

    "When you're in Yettem," Kasparian says, "especially when you're
    looking up at the Sierras, it feels like you're back in Armenia."

    He says many locals have grown and moved to bigger Armenian churches
    in places like Chicago or Los Angeles.

    But they still have love for the church in Yettem, an Armenian word
    for "Eden."

    Yettem certainly was a paradise in comparison to the homeland 100
    years ago, when the seeds of hate were being planted to become 1915's
    Armenian Genocide, which took 1.5 million lives. Armenians sought
    refuge around the world.

    "Those who stayed went through hell," Kasparian says.

    They sought religious and cultural freedom. And though they left
    their homeland, they found solace with each other in places like
    Yettem.

    "Everybody knew each other's sorrows," says Lucinne Bennett, 86.

    And it all started 100 years ago, under a tree, fueled by faith. And
    it will continue with next Sunday's services, under a tree, fueled by
    faith.

    Life changes, yet stays the same.

    "There are generations that will come after us," Kasparian says. "God
    willing."
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