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Andre from America: Leaving For Yerevan to Become a `National Hero'

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  • Andre from America: Leaving For Yerevan to Become a `National Hero'

    Andre from America: Leaving For Yerevan to Become a `National Hero'

    hetq
    23:47, August 5, 2012

    By Edward Mirzayans

    Andre finds himself sitting in a café near the opera house in Yerevan.
    He is dressed all in black, and he places a pack of cigarettes on the
    table.

    I ask him if he smokes, he tells me that the only reason he carries
    the pack of cigarettes around is to blend in with the locals. He
    looks like a local, but in fact he is a young kid from America looking
    to start a new life here in Armenia. His journey to Armenia began six
    months ago when he was thinking about where his life had led him, and
    where he wanted to lead his life.

    `If someone said I was a villain or a hero, they will read this, and
    may or may not change their view. To this day, I do not know if I am
    the villain or hero. It is possible I am both. But from looking back
    on things I have figured out my true destiny, which is God's plan
    himself.'

    Andre, like many other Armenians who have come to Armenia, grew up in
    Glendale, California. He had a decent job that paid for his car, his
    exotic pets, and the apartment he was living in. He had a girlfriend
    who loved and supported him. He was going out and enjoying life with
    his friends, like any other twenty one year-old, but yet, deep down,
    he felt something was missing in his life.

    Andre had a lifelong dream. Throughout his young life, Armenia had
    been calling out to him. Armenia, however, was a land that seemed to
    be far out of reach for Andre. He told me, `There was a magnetic pull
    of coming to the land that I had no visual picture of, Armenia.
    Music, my favorite cartoon shows, even some of the amazing leader's
    autobiographies awakened me. I can't put a date on it, but at that
    moment, destiny arrived. I saw an advertisement for the vehicle that
    would take me to Armenia; a volunteer program that sponsors adults for
    maximum of a year in Armenia.' Andre found his golden ticket, and
    with that he was going to change the course of his life forever.

    >From that day, Andre began to plan his escape. He kept his plan a
    secret until his journey to Armenia was set. He wasn't sure if
    exposing his plans to the people around him was the right or wrong
    thing to do. He just knew that those around him needed to be aware of
    what he was planning. As he slowly began to reveal his plans to those
    around him, Andre quickly began to realize why he needed to escape.

    He was surrounded by doubters and people who lived in a bubble of self
    comfort. He was told by his fencing coach that `You have no idea where
    you are going, you are so lucky here. I lived there for so many
    years. Just go there once a year as a tourist, send money to a
    charity, and that's good enough, you don't have to live there." And
    his grandfather told him "I too tried to do the same thing, it didn't
    work. When I got there, someone asked me why I came here, all I said
    was I just want bread and cheese, and I will be happy with my life
    here. You will never find cheese here, I promise you."

    His father tried to do the same thing by going back to Iran, but he
    was spoiled by the American lifestyle and ended up returning back to
    the States. Andre didn't have good examples to go by, but he knew that
    his journey to Armenia would be different.

    The last month before his departure to Armenia was his most stressful.
    One by one he told his family members goodbye, and though he didn't
    have a close relationship with any of them, he still found it hard to
    say goodbye. Andre revealed to me that, `My family wasn't exactly a
    family, everyone hated each other, and they lied, cheated, and stole
    from another. I'm sure there are worse families, but I'm not sure if
    this even qualifies to be called a `family'. I have always been a
    smiling, innocent, gullible guy. So I eventually fell for some of my
    relatives saying that Armenia doesn't have hot water in most places,
    and electricity is a luxury. With that in mind, and my innocence, I
    believed it.'

    He went on to tell me, `Me being a spoiled American, I wasn't sure if
    I could handle that on my first day. So I conditioned my mind and
    body for the new life in Armenia. Ironically, I believed God had the
    same idea. My crappy childhood, my dog dying in my arms, being
    raped/molested/abused, and much more played a major role in `shaping'
    me to be able to endure what I endure now, and the journey ahead. I
    stopped paying my water and power bill, so I went 60 days without hot
    water and electricity in my apartment. I slept in my car a bunch of
    times, shivering in the cold, to prepare myself to sleep
    uncomfortably.'

    Slowly Andre began to cut ties with his life in America. He had made
    up his mind that he was never going to go back. He maxed out whatever
    credit cards he had, buying items he always wanted. He gave his cat to
    the local animal shelter, and he took his exotic pets to the local pet
    store. His fish were thrown into a garbage can where he watched them
    die. He told me at that moment he didn't have the desire to smile
    anymore. He faced the fact that he would never see his grandparents or
    other relatives ever again.

    The night before his departure, he told his soon to be fiancé goodbye.
    He knew that it would be the last time he would see her face, and he
    spent his final hours with her talking to her about life and the
    meaning of what he was doing. He said his goodbyes to his tearful
    girlfriend and returned to what was now an empty apartment. As he put
    it, `I stepped into the door and resumed packing my bags to fulfill my
    destiny.'

    He spent that night at his mom's house who he hadn't spoken to for
    over six years. But for his trip to Armenia, he made peace with her.
    She had told him that he was never her child. It was a statement that
    still haunted Andre, but in the end, he was glad to have made peace
    with her. Andre spent his final night in America sleeping in his old
    room. He remembered that he kept a journal; he wanted to find a quote
    he had written ten years ago. He told me he found the journal and
    flipped to the page where he had written, `I want to run away from
    home.' He said the quote gave him goose bumps. He showed me the page
    that he tore out from his journal. He still keeps it in his wallet.

    He is now in Armenia trying to find himself. He always asks himself if
    the innocent, smiling, loveable gentlemen is still somewhere inside
    him. He still doesn't understand why certain events in his life had to
    happen. Why they taught him to be cold, to lie, to cheat, and to
    steal. He still struggles with those questions. He told me, `One girl
    asked me in Armenia, `Is your soul sad?' I believe it is, but I am
    still that person. Another girl asked `Are you running away from
    home?' I smiled, but that wasn't the reason, I was moving on with my
    life. These traits have been acquired in my life because God made it
    so. If it weren't for those negative events, how would I survive for
    the events to come?'

    As our day comes to an end, Andre gives me a small smile. He doesn't
    look like the broken young man he told me about. He sits with
    confidence, like a person who knows how his life is going to turn out,
    and indeed he has planned his life leading up to his death. Before
    departing, he left me with these words,' I will be the National Hero
    of Armenia. I have my plan written in stone. This journey ahead, to
    climb through the ranks, to go through the politics, to lie, to cheat,
    to be cold, these are the traits I need to acquire greatness.
    Alexander the Great has always been my hero, I wondered how someone
    could be on par to him in this modern day, and now I see the road.
    All of this, this was merely the first step on my road to greatness.'

    (Edwin Mirzayans is an American-Armenian from Washington D.C.
    currently living in Armenia. He is a published author of two books:
    "The Unknown Thoughts Inside My Head," and "The Bubble")

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