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Glendale's Abril Bookstore An Outpost Of Armenian Culture

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  • Glendale's Abril Bookstore An Outpost Of Armenian Culture

    GLENDALE'S ABRIL BOOKSTORE AN OUTPOST OF ARMENIAN CULTURE
    By James Ricci, Times Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Aug. 10, 2006

    Abril Books in Glendale is a touchstone for immigrants and their
    Americanized offspring.

    Thirty years ago, with his native Lebanon going up in the flames of
    civil war, Harout Yeretzian, a Lebanese Armenian, came to Hollywood
    and joined his brother in founding a magazine devoted to the Armenian
    language and culture.

    One thing led to another. The magazine spawned a print shop, which
    spawned a bookstore, which spawned a small publishing house.

    Three decades later, the brother is gone. So are the magazine and
    the print shop. Yeretzian's dedication to his people's literature,
    art and music, however, remains, domiciled now in a cottage-like
    brick building near Glendale City Hall.

    Abril Books, which claims to be the largest of the half-dozen
    Armenian-language bookstores in the United States, is light-filled,
    as befits a place of cultural illumination. Open doors, front and back,
    send air currents eddying among shelves and stacks of Armenian-themed
    books, including the handful that Abril publishes each year, as well
    as periodicals, greeting cards and music CDs.

    Unseen loudspeakers lightly bathe everything in classical cello music.

    The 62-year-old Yeretzian is a small bear of a man with a bristling
    mustache and wavy, gray, sweptback hair. His voice is deep and abraded
    by a daily succession of Marlboro Lights.

    His mission is to help his fellow Armenians maintain their ancient
    identity. It's not an easy matter for a people that, in the 1st
    century B.C., ruled an empire stretching from the Mediterranean to
    the Caspian Sea but since has been scattered by economic privation
    and persecution to the far reaches of the Earth. With only a tiny,
    recently independent, Armenian state to serve as a point of contact
    for ethnic sensibility, Yeretzian says, literature, art and religion
    have had to play central roles in sustaining a sense of cohesiveness
    among the world's Armenian communities.

    He cites, as an example, author Krikor Beledian, whom Abril Books
    publishes. "This guy lives in Paris and teaches at the Sorbonne. He
    writes in Armenian about Lebanon, and I'm here in L.A., and I publish
    his books," Yeretzian says.

    Abril - in Armenian the word means both "April" and "hope" - contains
    about 5,000 titles, among them histories, novels, volumes of poetry
    and treatises on Armenian art and music. The books include works in
    Eastern Armenian, the language of Armenia proper, and Western Armenian,
    the language of Armenians who hail from more westerly parts of the
    Middle East, such as Lebanon and Syria. The differences between them,
    Yeretzian says, are significant, including variations in word suffixes
    and verb conjugation.

    The challenge of multiple languages, however, is not insurmountable
    for a small ethnic group that has had to live for so long in foreign
    lands. As a boy in Lebanon, he says, he had to learn Armenian, Arabic,
    English and French.

    "It's not really hard to learn languages," he says, with something
    like incomprehension at the American aversion to the task. "But here,
    the American people don't even learn English very well."

    Preserving the Armenian language among young Armenian Americans is
    becoming a bit of a problem, however. Yeretzian says that at his
    original store, off Santa Monica Boulevard in Hollywood, 80% of the
    books he carried were in Armenian and 20% in English. In his present
    store, which opened in 1998, Armenian-language books constitute only
    about half of his stock. The other half is by Americans of Armenian
    descent - such as Peter Balakian, author of "Burning Tigris: The
    Armenian Genocide and America's Response" - who write in English.

    (Yeretzian notes that nearly half of the books in English refer to
    the massacres of Armenians by Turkish authorities from 1915 to 1923,
    while barely a quarter of the Armenian-language books deal with the
    subject. Both of Yeretzian's grandfathers died in the executions and
    forced starvations, which took the lives, it is estimated, of 800,000
    to 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children.)

    Abril sold books to the Los Angeles Unified School District when
    instruction for newly arrived immigrant children was conducted in
    Armenian. Those sales ended, a significant blow to Abril's business,
    in 1998 with the passage of Proposition 227, which virtually banned
    bilingual education in California.

    As with other ethnic groups, assimilation of the young into American
    culture is a concern to many older Armenians. The experience of
    Yeretzian's own son Arno, a 30-year-old filmmaker, is a case in point.

    Arno, the only child of Yeretzian and his artist/gallery owner wife,
    Seeroon, attended Armenian private schools through high school. All
    of his friends were Armenian. Then he enrolled at UC Santa Cruz and,
    as one of the relatively few Armenian Americans there, befriended
    students of different ethnic backgrounds.

    "The clash with American culture was very strong," Yeretzian says.

    "Now he says we should have exposed him to more American culture when
    he was a kid. Most of his friends are Americans now." Yeretzian has
    faith, however, that the strength of Armenian families will keep the
    Armenian sensibility intact among the next generation.

    "A lot of people who are engaged to marry Armenians, or already
    have, come in and ask for books on the Armenian tradition and
    language. So, the assimilation goes both ways," he says with a
    grin. "If a non-Armenian girl marries an Armenian, she has to learn
    some Armenian words just to be taken into consideration as a human
    being by his family."

    That the bookstore is a sanctuary of Armenian identity is apparent
    in the motivations of those who visit.

    Narine Gabouchian of Glendale came into the shop one morning and
    before long was carrying an armload of books, in Armenian and English,
    as gifts for her daughter Margaret's 16th birthday. Margaret came
    with her family from Armenia when she was a toddler, and her parents
    strove to teach her to read and speak Armenian.

    Now a student at a private school in Pasadena, Margaret "knows she's
    Armenian and is very proud of it," her mother said. "She would like
    to know more about her motherland."

    Later that day, Avetis Bairamian, a sportswriter for the Armenian
    language weekly Nor Or, dropped in on Yeretzian to exchange
    pleasantries and discuss Bairamian's self-published book, whose title
    translates as "Famous Armenians in the World of Sports."

    It contains the exploits of competitors of Armenian heritage,
    including tennis star Andre Agassi, chess champion Garry Kasparov
    and a succession of champions in weightlifting, a sport in which
    Armenians have long excelled.

    Bairamian proudly noted that at the 37th Chess Olympiad this spring
    in Turin, Italy, the Armenian team won the gold medal. (China won
    silver, and the United States, whose squad included 23-year-old
    Varuzhan Akobian of Los Angeles, bronze.)

    Ruzanne Barsegyan of Tujunga, meanwhile, was scanning the CD
    shelves for a copy of the "Sonatina Toccata" by Aram Khachaturian,
    the most famous Armenian composer of the 20th century. Barsegyan,
    18, an animated recent high school graduate headed for premedical
    studies at UC Irvine in the fall, is also a pianist.

    Her conservatory-trained Armenian piano teacher wanted her to begin
    learning the Khachaturian piece for a recital, she explained with a
    mixture of excitement and dread.

    "It's very structured, and you have to find the rhythm and the rhythm
    is hard to find," she told Yeretzian. "It's very difficult, very,
    very .... "

    "Strong?" he offered.

    "Yes. Strong."

    Yeretzian shrugged knowingly. "It's Armenian," he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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