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Intersections: Breaking bread with two identities

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  • Intersections: Breaking bread with two identities

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Jan 4 2012


    Intersections: Breaking bread with two identities

    January 04, 2012|By Liana Aghajanian

    Every Saturday morning for most of my life, it has been the sweet,
    lingering smell of fresh-baked bread, rather than an alarm clock, that
    has lulled me out of a drowsy haze and brought me gently back to
    reality.

    In a ritual initiated by my dad, the piping-hot baked dough wrapped in
    a simple paper bag and delicately decorated with sesame seeds found a
    way home with him before ending up on the kitchen table, where its
    aroma swirled around the house until it found and awakened me.

    It was devoured almost immediately, while the loaf of toast routinely
    used during the week for peanut butter and jelly sandwiches that ended
    up in lunch boxes remained untouched. It wasn't just any kind of
    bread. It was barbari, an Iranian flatbread whose origins began many
    hundreds of years ago in a part of the world that I was born in, but
    that couldn't be any more different than the one I grew up in.

    The marriage of my multilayered identity, including our beloved
    barbari tradition, is perhaps most evident during this time of year.
    On Saturday, a mad dash to the bakery, followed by a feeding frenzy,
    took place. Soon after, gingerbread men were made, Ralphie and his Red
    Ryder BB gun was watched on a loop in `A Christmas Story,' and
    presents were wrapped. And a few days after 2012 was ushered in by the
    Rose Parade in neighboring Pasadena, the holidays will start all over
    again for many families like mine as we celebrate Armenian Christmas
    on January 6, better known around the world as `Epiphany.'

    Growing up as a child of immigrants is a harrowing experience,
    littered with pangs of insecurity and identity issues that stay with
    you. Pulled between two worlds, you find yourself not really fitting
    in anywhere, trudging through life with cultural issues that make that
    already awkward phase of adolescence and being a teenager all the more
    - well, awkward.

    Caught between the Verdugo Hills and the Caucasus Mountains, barbari
    and toast, Christmas and Epiphany, your dual identities wage internal
    war with each other. Your sense of now and here competes with your
    parents' sense of then and there.

    It happens that the weight of making peace with a multilayered
    identity is sometimes overwhelming. You feel an ultimatum must be
    made, a decision must take place; and embracing one surely means
    losing the other layers. But there doesn't have to be a sense of loss.

    http://articles.glendalenewspress.com/2012-01-04/news/tn-gnp-0105-intersections-breaking-bread-with-two-identities_1_identities-bread-dough

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