Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Generations after genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Generations after genocide

    Belmont Citizen-Herald, MA
    April 20 2006

    Generations after genocide

    By Melody Hanatani/ Staff Writer
    Thursday, April 20, 2006

    When Belmont resident Lois Malconian had twins, she thought it was odd.

    She asked her father, "How could this happen? It's not in our
    family." Her father replied that his grandmother had three sets of
    twins, all of whom were killed in the Armenian genocide.

    As the 91st anniversary of the genocide approaches, Malconian,
    a third-generation Armenian-American, is commemorating the tragedy
    with her family and her community this week.

    She remembers growing up in Belmont hearing stories about the genocide
    from her grandparents who immigrated to the United States in the
    1920s when they were still children.

    She and her husband Ron, whose grandparents also came to the United
    States around the 1920s, have passed on the stories to their own
    three children.

    Ron Malconian recalls how his grandmother refused to cut her
    hair because women shaved their heads during the genocide to look
    unattractive in order to avoid rape.

    "To her it was something precious," he said.

    Lois recalled how her grandmother would become angry and cry when
    she talked about the genocide.

    "Your great-grandparents went through a lot," Lois has told her
    children.

    As a 10-year-old, Lois would hear emotional stories about the genocide
    from her grandmother. Lois' children say their learning experience
    was less emotional.

    Vicky Tomasian, a first-generation Armenian-American whose parents
    both survived the genocide, said it was difficult for the immigrants
    to talk about their experiences.

    Tomasian, who grew up in Watertown and now lives in Belmont, said the
    younger generation of Armenian-Americans seem to be more knowledgeable
    about the genocide because there are more books and articles published
    about the subject.

    "So much has happened in the last 30 years," she said. "I know more
    now than I did growing up."

    Staying together

    Many Armenian immigrants arrived in Watertown around the early 1900s
    and began working at the former Hood rubber plant, according to Marc
    A. Mamigonian, director of programs and publications at the National
    Association for Armenian Studies and Research, located in Belmont.

    "Like any other [ethnic] community, others tend to follow," he said.

    There are numerous Armenian churches in Cambridge, Watertown and
    Belmont. Though religion helps bring the community together, Mamigonian
    said it also serves as a divider because of the different denominations
    within the Armenian community. The main one is the Armenian Apostolic
    Church, he said.

    Tomasian said family and religion are important to the Armenian
    community in and around Belmont.

    She stays connected to her culture through her church, and through
    the Armenian Women's Educational Club, which was co-founded by her
    grandmother who immigrated to the United States more than 80 years
    ago. Tomasian is the president of the club today, and her mother also
    once headed the organization.

    The club awards about four college scholarships each year to
    Armenian-American high school seniors from Metropolitan Boston.

    External factors also unite the ethnic group.

    According to Mamigonian, the current Turkish government's denial of
    the Armenian genocide has helped unify the local Armenian-American
    community.

    "That is certainly something that holds the community together,"
    he said. "Whether that is a good thing or not is a different story."

    Generational divide

    Lois and Ron Malconian have never been to Armenia, but their eldest
    daughter, Sarah, visited in 2004 as part of the Cambridge-Yerevan
    Sister City Secondary School Partnership Program, an exchange program
    to promote democracy, which brings high school students from Belmont
    and surrounding communities to Armenia each year.

    Now a sophomore at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst,
    Sarah said she sensed a cultural rift between herself and the native
    Armenians during her stay.

    She said she was chastised because she could not speak Armenian.

    Sarah said she definitely values her camaraderie with her fellow
    Armenians and Armenian-Americans.

    "A big part of being Armenian is keeping the Armenian bond alive,"
    she said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X