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Earthquake Survivor: Several Historians And A Single Orphan

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  • Earthquake Survivor: Several Historians And A Single Orphan

    EARTHQUAKE SURVIVOR: SEVERAL HISTORIANS AND A SINGLE ORPHAN
    Samuel Armen

    hetq
    18:10, July 7, 2011

    Part I

    On October 12, 1988, a boy who would become I, had the infinite
    blessing of being born in Gyumri, Armenia - the country's second
    largest city.

    On December 7, 1988 the ancient land shook violently with a devastating
    6.9 magnitude earthquake that collapsed schools and structures to dust,
    and ended the lives of at least 25,000 men and women - most of which
    2nd generation genocide survivors - and children who might have had
    a brighter future if their school ended five minutes earlier.

    25,000 strong Armenians were no longer dancing, singing, speaking,
    breathing, or living. I was 56 days old, a fragile infant of less than
    two months of age, presumably incapable of even crawling, yet, I lived.

    >From that moment to the age of five my life is shrouded in mystery,
    illuminated only by the details told to me by five individuals. What
    they told me is a series of miracles that has led me to a blessed
    journey of life. Surviving the Gyumri-Spitak earthquake was my first
    miracle.

    Just as the earth was created with the aid of the heavenly
    constellations, my life's fortunate journey to a family began with
    Stella.

    I heard the name a few times in stories - Stella Grigorian this,
    Stella Grigorian that. At the age of fourteen I was told she would
    have answers of my past that no one else could tell me. So through
    the help of Alice Movsesian - another of my past's historians - who
    tracked down Stella, I was able to speak to her. In the order of my
    known life, she would be the first person I knew to thank. I was
    fourteen, nervous and in my room clutching the telephone receiver
    tightly with sweaty hands and a racing heart as the phone rang and
    rang. "Samvel?" an enthusiastic voice suddenly sang with more than a
    hint of joyful youth. It was tranquilizing; her calming voice settled
    my nerves and our conversation began with a chapter of my life too
    obscure for anyone besides herself to find.

    She told me, my last name was originally Darakashvilli, my biological
    mother is half-Georgian, my father was a mechanic and the name of my
    orphanage. Stella worked across the street at Lenshintrest - the state
    construction offices - working for the JDC (Jewish Joint Distribution
    Committee) working to build the JDC Children's Rehabilitation Clinic
    and training local medical professions as physical and occupational
    therapists. Several times, she would see me outside from her second
    story window playing in the backyard of the orphanage.

    Being one to explore and one who is familiar both with children and
    children in need, she visited from across the street. She had already
    known this particular orphanage was for mentally disabled children,
    but could not understand why I was there. She found soon that my eyes -
    my cross eyed vision and appearance - was the defect that led to such
    a mistake. Because I was too young to express my intelligence, and
    because the medical departments were old and already outdated, I had
    landed in this particular orphanage for mentally challenged children.

    Stella wanted more than anything to adopt me then and there, but she
    was already pregnant, and was afraid of not being able to provide
    for two children so quickly. Fortunately, she would soon receive news
    from Alice Movsesian that I was in good hands.

    Between Stella Grigorian, Arthur Halvajian - the Armenian-American
    philanthropist involved in numerous outreach programs - and Alice
    Movsesian - who worked under Arthur - I would be brought to America
    with the excuse of having my eyes corrected. Without Arthur's
    approval of going to America to get my eyes fixed, I would not be
    given a visa, and thus remain in the orphanage. But in the times
    between any such surgery, they - especially Alice Movsesian - were
    determined to find me permanent parents. They were also determined to
    introduce me to America; to have my senses amazed by the sight of the
    towering Manhattan Skyscrapers, the rushing feel of an elevator rise,
    the soul-stirring sounds of Jazz, and the taste of biting into a New
    York City Burger.

    It would be in New Jersey at the age of 3 where I would find my first
    real home.

    Digeen Mariam (Ms. Mary-Anne) and Baron Krikor (Mr. Gregory)
    Saraydarian were my caretakers. But as they say, quoting a four-year
    old me: "I give you life." They were the first parents I truly loved
    and still love. They gave me my first friend, my first family, my
    first birthday at the age of four, and I nearly gave Digeen Mariam her
    very first heart attack when she lost me inside of a toy store. Even
    after my adoption, they would come visit or I would visit them and we
    would talk about anything for hours. They were the ones who told me
    about Stella Grigorian, and told me that Alice Movsesian could get
    a hold of her. They were also related to the first person to make
    a prediction about me. Baron Krikor's father, whom I called Babuk
    George, watched over me for an hour when no one else was in the house.

    When his son Krikor returned he told him, "That boy is either going to
    be something spectacular, or end up in a federal prison - watch him."

    (See the picture 1: Samuel smiling with his hero, Sesame Street's
    Big Bird.)

    When I turned four years old, Digeen Mariam and Baron Krikor surprised
    me with my first birthday party. Baron Krikor had his brother dress
    up as Big Bird from Sesame Street. When the doorbell rang and Mariam
    and Krikor asked me to get it, they could hear from any corner of
    the house the wild delight of a young boy who had come face-to-face
    with his hero. At some point during this party, Big Bird lifted me
    in his arms and one destiny-weaving photographer took a picture of
    me - a young boy with a patch on his eye smiling from ear to ear -
    which would eventually appear in the Armenian Reporter.

    One week later and 25 miles away in Long Island, New York, in a
    blessed moment in space and time, my third miracle began. A man named
    Dr. Garo Armen received a call from a family friend that there was
    a photograph of a boy in the Armenian Reporter up for adoption who
    sort of looked like his own son, Zachary. After speaking to his wife,
    Valerie, the two wanted to at least see this boy.

    By the time Garo and Valerie began their drive to the Saraydarian
    house in New Jersey I was four-and-a-half and their daughters Alice
    Saraydarian and Karen Arslanian, I was sort of an attraction in the
    Armenian community in New Jersey. Families would ask to borrow me,
    take care of me, feed me, have me sleep over, and meet their own
    children. To this day I find it quite strange that I know a family
    of beautiful Armenian girls whose parents could have adopted me,
    making all of them my sisters.

    No matter who wanted to adopt me, Baron Krikor and especially Digeen
    Mariam were very strict. The parents had to be good enough for this
    young boy they had grown to love. And through the nearly-mystical
    precision of Armenian hospitality and the placement of a blanket,
    that family would be known.

    When the Armen's first called they were turned down because another
    family was taking care of me.

    It was this one family that came, that seemed alright, and that wanted
    to adopt ,e. Krikor and Mariam allowed the family (like many other
    families whom they knew) to take care of me for a week. As they got to
    know them, Digeen Mariam rose to serve food, and frowned clandestinely
    when my potential mother did not budge or even offer to help.

    Nevertheless, they let them take care of me for a week. Before leaving,
    Digeen Mariam isolated the mother, handed her my favorite blanket,
    and whispered to her that she should put that on or near the bed I'd
    sleep on, as it would comfort me.

    When Digeen Mariam visited me in my potentially new home, she was
    infuriated with what she saw: The blanket - my favorite blanket -
    was tossed aside, collecting dust in some room far from where I slept.

    After interrogating the mother, Digeen Mariam's mouth dropped when she
    stated that "it's okay - we're giving him a cleaner blanket." Needless
    to say, this family had lost their change of adopting her little boy.

    But it was during my stay with that family that the Armen's called
    and had to be turned down. After Digeen Mariam excommunicated the
    family from me (so to speak), the Armen's were called back.

    At the time, my father was in Dublin, Ireland. When he received
    the message from the other side of the globe, he began calculating,
    and it wasn't long before he decided that a 3,187 mile flight and
    half-hour drive was worth seeing me.

    When Digeen Mariam rose to make food, my mom leapt upwards. When she
    told them about the blanket, they nodded with a sincere countenance.

    When Digeen Mariam visited, she saw me wrapped comfortably in the
    blanket and sound asleep.

    It was then decided, these would be my new parents.

    I was told this news in New Jersey, and began crying instantaneously.

    I asked to Digeen Mariam and Baron Krikor, "Why can't you take care of
    me anymore?" sensing that perhaps I had done something horribly wrong.

    To this they responded, "We are too old." I turned lugubriously to
    Garo and Valerie Armen and asked them "Are you too old?" Fate had it
    that they were not.

    Picture 2: Samuel (right) and Zachary (left) playing at a family event.

    Just as Digeen Mariam and Baron Krikor were the first family to make
    me feel loved, they were the first family to break my heart. I was
    convinced, for some reason or intuition, that I would never see them
    again as I sobbed in the backseat of the Armen's car. Fortunately,
    that was definitely not the case. By the age of 5, I was adopted into
    the family and slowly becoming very close to my English and Armenian
    speaking brother, Zachary. As we grew older we played, we fought,
    and most of all, we learned from each other and still from each
    other today.

    Today I love them like family, because family loves, cares, and
    teaches.

    Today brings me to why I am writing this. My life and many of its
    mysteries can only be found in Gyumri. In less than five weeks I
    will be going to Gyumri to lift off the veil of my past as much as
    possible. There are still too many questions I have: Where did I live?

    Are my parents alive, were they killed during the earthquake, or did
    they already pass away in the last two decades since they've last seen
    me? Why was I cross-eyed? Why do I have particular phobias? Why do I
    look the way I look? Why do I have three small scars on me since as
    long as I can remember? Why do I write? Why do I calculate people so
    much? Who gave me my eyes, my nose, my voice, my chin, my face? What
    was I like as a baby? Did I cry and talk too much like I talk too
    much today? Why is my hearing so sharp and my vision so blurred?

    I write this all in Yerevan, and my hands shake at the thought of
    being somewhere I haven't been in twenty-one years. When I come back,
    I will write my experience, detail any and all of the answers I have
    found, and introduce to the best of my ability the complexity of what
    it truly feels like to be adopted.

    Picture 3: Samuel Armen at age 21 - Photo taken in 2010

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