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Queer/Armenian, Split Identity: International Women's Month

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  • Queer/Armenian, Split Identity: International Women's Month

    ianyan magazine
    March 20 2010

    Queer/Armenian, Split Identity: International Women's Month

    By Maral Bavakan on March 20th, 2010


    I like to tell myself (and others) that I am queer because of where I
    come from and the way that my identity in a changing political economy
    was formed. There was always a split, beginning with the fact that I
    was born a female into a tradition that saw my great-grandmother's
    birth as excessive and which led to her being called `Bavakan', the
    Armenian name for `Enough.' This became her name because her parents
    wanted a boy but kept conceiving girls, Bavakan being the 8th.

    I was taught from early on to be ashamed, as if inhabiting a female
    body was a sin. My mother more than once shut down my questions,
    whispering secretively in the car with a male driver for me to not
    concern myself with questions about pregnancy, that there were certain
    struggles for women to undertake and separate struggles for men. I
    remember declaring that when I grew up I was going to be the
    president's wife, already understanding from an early age that the
    world was set up in a way that excluded women from the position of
    presidency.

    When my family immigrated to the United States in 1997, a whole new
    split was created in my identity. One thing that happened within my
    own family was the fear of this new world, especially for my parents
    who had grown up under Soviet rule and regarded much of `American'
    traditions/practices as foreign and therefore dangerous and suspect.
    As much as I assimilated outside of the home, inside I was still
    subject to the patriarchal, Armenian understanding of the world. My
    father always reminded me that `I was born Armenian and I was going to
    die Armenian.' This was hard for me to undertake because my world was
    so split between inside/outside, who I was taught to be according to
    where I was from and who I was becoming according to the English
    language and the NYC public school system. It wasn't that I ever
    detested my Armenian roots or refused to speak the language, but
    somehow the Armenian words became replaced by the more easier and
    accessible English syllables and I found myself more and more involved
    in the melting-pot of NYC young adult life.

    By the time I turned 15, it made sense for me to be attracted to a
    girlfriend of my age in the Tae Kwon Do school I attended. I knew all
    about why it was wrong and shameful to be gay, I had heard all the
    stereotypes about LGBT folks from the Armenian family who `eased' our
    transition from Armenia to NYC in the summer of 1997. They warned us
    of the bad neighborhoods, introduced us to all the stereotypes against
    Black and Latino people, and told us to watch out for the queers in
    the West 4th stop of the D line. Once when I was still in junior high
    school, one of the girls in my class accused me of being a lesbian and
    I had no idea where it came from, but I remember feeling so terrified
    that the term was being applied to me and so wrongfully, I thought! I
    started crying. Maybe I knew.

    It didn't matter.

    By the time I was 16, I was cutting school to take the train to the
    West Village in search of some kind of home. I was now one of the
    `weird,' `shameful,' `wrong' gays of NYC and my gut told me to fight
    against this internalization. I was still the same old me. Why did
    this one slight change in what I desired or rather, was open to, mean
    that I would no longer be accepted?

    I have been meeting gay Armenians both in Armenia and in the US and
    telling myself that my parents cannot use the excuse of my
    assimilation to American culture as the reason for my rejection of
    heterosexuality. But it always comes down to that. When I moved out my
    parents could not understand why I chose to do so even though I felt
    like I was going mad living at home and leading such a double life. I
    still live a double life, but there is less anxiety over trying to
    maintain a lie, a shameful secret, who I have chosen to be, who I have
    become in this mixture of immigration from Armenia to the United
    States, from heteronormativity to queerland, from proper, passive
    woman to activist, feminist, artist. Because I cannot exist in a
    bubble, I claim an identity as a queer Armenian woman, but those are
    also secondary.

    I would rather not have to be face to face with a system that creates
    categories to separate people. I cannot chose where I was born and the
    impact the earth and air of that place has had on me, nor can I chose
    the effect that living in a female body has had on my spirit and mind,
    but I should not have to constantly prove how I am woman, or Armenian,
    or American, or queer, or straight, or artist, or activist, or
    spiritual. And there are so many of us, immigrants, exiles, who do not
    fit in a box or live our lives in a linear fashion. I believe we are
    the ones who can guard the future against decay, standing against its
    winds, with our very lives, resisting.

    http://www.ianyanmag.com/?p=2143
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