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Birthright From Both Sides: A Personal Reflection

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  • Birthright From Both Sides: A Personal Reflection

    BIRTHRIGHT FROM BOTH SIDES: A PERSONAL REFLECTION
    Mykil Bachoian

    Jewish Exponent
    http://www.jewishexponent.com/article/26008/Birthright_From_Both_Sides_A/
    May 31 2012

    Background

    I grew up in Los Angeles and currently reside in Los Angeles. I am a
    26 year-old attorney licensed in California. My father is Armenian
    and my mother is Jewish. Neither parent pushed their culture or
    heritage upon me and I did not speak Armenian or Hebrew. Coming
    from a family that felt the horrors of both the Armenian Genocide
    and the Holocaust, I always cared so much about both sides of my
    unique heritage and always hoped for more of a connection to both
    sides of family's cultures. I wished my father had taught me Armenian
    and my parents had sent me to Hebrew school. I felt like both parents
    should have embraced their heritage, but at the same time, I know that
    their marriage was not easy for either side of the family and that,
    by both of them remaining neutral, there was no conflict in terms of
    how my brother and I were raised.

    Identity

    While I am very close to the Armenian side of my family, most of my
    close friends growing up in my neighborhood were Jewish, and I always
    considered myself to be an Armenian Jew: ethnically/culturally Armenian
    and ethnically/culturally/religiously Jewish. I am not particularly
    religious, as I did not attend Hebrew school or have a Bar Mitzvah;
    however, I always wanted to attend Hebrew school and to have a Bar
    Mitzvah.

    I'm not a religious person, but I want to have more of an educated
    understanding of Judaism, because I appreciate Jewish religious
    traditions, the meaning behind them, how long they have endured over
    time, and how Jews throughout the course of history strived to continue
    Jewish traditions and ways of life even in the face of death.

    I always was proud to be Armenian, but being Jewish, I felt that
    I could not be 100% Armenian. Christianity is so intertwined with
    Armenian heritage that it becomes almost the same identity, especially
    in the Diaspora, where Armenian communities typically revolve around
    churches. So I always felt somewhat like an outsider, because I did not
    grow up speaking the Armenian language, going to Armenian school, or
    attending church, which are -- among many circles -- the standard for
    an Armenian identity in the Diaspora. Because I'm neurotic in general,
    and because I never fit into the restrictive box of what most Armenians
    think it means to be "Armenian," I had a lot of self-confidence and
    identity issues as an Armenian, more so than as a Jew.

    Of course, I also had similar issues within the Jewish community,
    but not to the same extent. So many friends of mine had Bar or Bat
    Mitzvahs, but were indifferent towards Judaism, and almost all of
    them lost their Hebrew-speaking abilities; accordingly, I never
    felt less Jewish than them. But being Jewish, I always felt "less
    Armenian." The problem is, I'm not sure how much of that was because
    of my own insecurities or how much of that was because there actually
    is a relatively narrow, yet common, description of what it means to
    be Armenian, which I clearly don't meet. Identity is a complicated
    concept for me, and my identity is certainly an evolving process.

    Birthright Experiences I participated in Taglit (Birthright Israel)
    in Summer 2007 just one week after graduating from UCLA.

    By chance, my best friend was our group leader, and also by chance,
    four or five of the forty kids in my group were friends of mine. In
    a 10-day span, I was able to see a great deal of Israel in terms
    of geography and connect with 8 Israeli soldiers of similar age who
    joined our trip, all while receiving a crash course on the history,
    demographics, and politics of Israel. Double-majoring in History and
    Sociology, I naturally had a lot of questions: I treated the trip
    as one giant classroom, certainly to a much greater extent than most
    others in the group, for better or worse.

    Although Birthright Israel was short in duration, I extended my stay
    in Israel and was able to see more of the country on my own. I was able
    to appreciate Israel's natural beauty and contrasts in topography from
    the Golan Heights to the Red Sea. The program gave me an overview of as
    much as Israel as possible in such a short timeframe, and naturally,
    I felt a spiritual connection with Israel. The caveat, however,
    is that we were never left to explore Israel on our own during the
    Birthright trip -- we were required to remain with the group at all
    times. Additionally, to the best of my recollection, we did not tour
    the West Bank or Gaza, nor did we see the Security Barrier, Jaffa,
    or Nazareth.

    Nonetheless, after experiencing just a small taste of the country,
    Israel quickly felt like home. During my 3L year at the Sandra Day
    O'Connor College of Law, I returned to Israel in 2011 on a joint
    Dispute Resolution program taught by my mentor at Arizona State
    University and his colleague at the Marquette University Law School.

    The program was completely different from Taglit, and focused on
    alternative dispute resolution channels in Israeli society and the
    Israeli legal system, as well as multi-layered conflict resolution
    between Israelis and Palestinians, both within Israel proper and
    overall on a larger scale.

    My second trip to Israel made me think about my first time there with
    Taglit, and I wondered whether it would be possible to have a similar
    experience in Armenia. After graduating from law school and preparing
    for the grueling California Bar Exam in July 2011, I was looking for
    a chance to pause my life, reflect on the past, and contemplate my
    future. My dream was to volunteer in Armenia on any sort of project --
    not simply take a vacation which in my mind I thought I deserved. Once
    I conducted research, I realized that my dream was possible: I simply
    needed to commit to volunteering 30 hours per week for at least 8 weeks
    in Armenia, participate in Birthright Armenia's scheduled forums and
    havaks, and attain a conversational level of the Armenian language. If
    I met those requirements, Birthright Armenia would reimburse me for
    my airfare and set me up with a host family in Yerevan.

    What more could I ask for? I departed for Armenia just ten days after
    the Bar Exam. Birthright Armenia allowed me to immerse myself in
    Armenia by giving me the tools and nothing else. It was a hands-off
    approach -- Birthright Armenia brought me to Armenia, set up my living
    arrangements with a host family, and provided language classes and
    community forums on various topics relating to Armenia, but the rest
    was up to me. I learned the most about Armenia by spending time with my
    gracious host family, my cousins in Armenia, local Armenian friends and
    my supervisor at the Armenian Young Lawyers Association. I also learned
    what life in Yerevan was like by experiencing it myself and living
    life like the average Yerevansi, albeit one with a lot more Armenian
    language homework and a more regimented schedule to balance all of
    the activities. On weekends, Birthright Armenia scheduled optional
    excursions to different areas in Armenia outside of Yerevan, and, for
    a minimal cost, provided transportation and meals at the excursions.

    Essentially, Birthright Armenia deliberately left it to volunteers
    to make their own experiences. For example, during my second week in
    Armenia, an unrelated organization called Counterpart International
    took a group of Diasporans (some from Birthright) to a Sassounsi
    village about 45 minutes outside of Yerevan. There, we witnessed the
    first day of elementary school and a remarkable dance performance
    by kindergarteners, learned beautiful Sassounsi dances, and shared
    our common Armenian traditions yet diverse experiences growing up in
    different regions of the world. For that particular outing, Birthright
    volunteers merely received a text from the Director of Birthright
    about an optional day trip to a village sponsored by Counterpart.

    Moments like these are far from rare for Birthright Armenia
    volunteers. Volunteers can be as little involved or as heavily involved
    as they wish; they can have as strong or as little a connection to
    Birthright Armenia as they wish; they can live with host families
    or live on their own -- every volunteer's experience with Birthright
    Armenia is customized to exactly what he or she makes of it.

    To summarize, the experiences of Birthright Armenia and Birthright
    Israel are not comparable in any way, except for the fact that both
    provide their respective Diaspora with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
    to see and experience their respective homelands -- an opportunity
    that many individuals -- would not have had but for the sponsorship
    of those programs.




    From: A. Papazian
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