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Jerusalem: A Souvenir From The Armenian Quarter

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  • Jerusalem: A Souvenir From The Armenian Quarter

    JERUSALEM: A SOUVENIR FROM THE ARMENIAN QUARTER
    By: Gayane Khechoomian

    Haytoug Magazine
    http://www.haytoug.org/3246/jerusalem-a-souvenir-from-the-armenian-quarter
    Dec 1 2011

    In Memoriam: Vahik Aroustamian, Beloved Uncle (1955-2007)

    Last summer I woke up on the rooftop of a hostel in the Jewish
    quarter of Jerusalem's Old City. Before the sun had a chance to let
    me know I had been sleeping outside, the Islamic 'call to prayer'
    sounding from the mosque speakers reminded me that even at 5 a.m.,
    God is Great ("Allahu Akbar" in Arabic). Three hours later, the church
    bells commanded my attention. I was wide-awake, living a dream.

    This ancient part of the world, where the four corners of the earth
    meet, is the sight holiest to the three Abrahamic religions. The
    Jewish, Christian, Muslim and Armenian Quarters make up this 0.35
    square mile fortress-like city. Here, the cobblestones of narrow
    streets are a time machine to a time long ago and every road has its
    own idea of the elevation and direction that humans should walk. The
    daytime bazaar is like a scene out of Disney's Aladdin where everybody
    is "my friend" and everybody has something pretty to sell to a
    pretty girl.

    The smell of herbs and pastries fill the Muslim Quarter, where a
    non-Muslim cannot venture too far without being stopped and told to
    return. The sounds of people gathering at the Western Wall on Shabbat
    (the Seventh Day of rest in Judaism) fill the Jewish Quarter every
    Friday. The sight of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the Christian
    Quarter, which was once that of Jesus' crucifixion, is headquarters
    to the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem.

    The story of how I ended up in the Old City doesn't go back quite
    as far as the presence of Armenians in Jerusalem, which predates
    Christianity. It was five years ago in my Armenian history class
    at UCLA that Professor Richard Hovannisian described the age-old
    tradition of Armenian pilgrims in the Armenian Quarter. It was then
    I started dreaming about the day I would embark on a solitary journey
    to the historical city.

    Out of the four quarters, the Armenian is the smallest and the most
    walled off. Home to roughly 500 Armenians, it makes up one-sixth of
    the city. Armenian cafes, taverns, restaurants and souvenir shops
    selling famous ceramics are found on streets with Armenian names
    written in Arabic and Hebrew scripts.

    For hundreds of years, Christian pilgrims have made journeys to the
    Holy Land, taking with them one souvenir:

    "What kind of tattoo do you want?" Wassim Razzouk, my Harley-riding
    tattoo-artist asked.

    "Give me what you give Armenian pilgrims," I said hoping he'd know
    what I was talking about.

    Turns out he knew exactly what I was talking about. The year before,
    he had tattooed seven Armenians from New York, all around my age. In
    fact, one of the first tattoos done by Wassim's ancestors was one of
    Armenian letters dating back to 1749. That was around the time his
    Coptic Christian family moved from Egypt to Jerusalem, where they
    have tattooed Christian pilgrims for the past 250 years.

    My uncle hoped to be one of those pilgrims. As the ink settled into
    my arm, I thought about how he dreamed to one day be at the very spot
    I was. And it dawned on me that it had been exactly four years to the
    day since his passing. But if there were ever a time and place where
    surrealism reigns, it would be the Old City. Because here, there is
    no sense of time, no separation of modern and ancient. The religious
    air has pervaded throughout the centuries and permeates every corner
    of the old town.

    I escaped into the Armenian Quarter where the St. James monastery
    has stood since the 14th century. The church that provided refuge to
    Armenians during the Genocide, now provided refuge to me from a world
    where the struggle for cultural survival follows each generation. The
    familiarity of the Priest's voice echoing within the church walls
    resonated with my soul. I walked out of the ornate room and rounded
    the corner to a courtyard surrounded by Armenian dwellings. That's
    where I saw the majestic cross-stone statue standing in front of me
    like an epiphany.

    "I have no idea what it is like to be an Armenian," William Saroyan
    wrote in his short story Seventy Thousand Assyrians. "I have a faint
    idea of what it is like to be alive."

    And looking down on the ink on my right forearm, I smiled to myself.

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