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The key is in Armenia

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  • The key is in Armenia

    The key is in Armenia

    June 21 2014


    My contact with Glendale Mayor Zareh Sinanyan was very inspiring in
    several terms. First, I like when the officials display modesty and
    restraint in dealing with journalists. Or else, I remembered a head of
    the department at the Yerevan municipality, who in response to a
    journalists' question has said, "since I am the Head of the
    Department, I can only get in contact with the heads, in other words,
    with the editors." Secondly, of course, it was pleasant that the
    American city is ruled by an Armenian-origin young man, who in 1988,
    at the age of 14 left Soviet Armenia, and has gone through thanks to
    his personal merits by becoming a City Council member and then a
    mayor. Anyway, most importantly is his healthy attitude to
    Armenia-Diaspora relations. In the Diaspora, as I see, there are two
    extremes. "Traditional" Diaspora, if they are interested in Armenia,
    then only in the context of national problems the way they are
    perceiving these problems: the Armenian Cause, genocide, and demands.
    >From this perspective it seems to them that is does not so matter what
    kind of state Armenia is and what regime is here, just all of us
    pursue these problems. Our these countrymen do not consider it
    appropriate to talk about Armenia's political and economic
    development, about legitimacy and controlability of authorities. Those
    who have gone from here after 1990 (again, if they are interested in
    the homeland), they are talking about these very issues. But, the
    problem is that many of these "new Diaspora" are addressing our too
    painful issues with malice, as if subconsciously trying to justify
    their absence. "Build a good homeland, and I will return", is often
    sounded "in-between the lines" of what they say. We, Armenians,
    sometimes do not want to understand both the "traditional" and
    "non-traditional ones", on the contrary, in the mind or even in the
    public, we tend to blame them of why you were not and are not sharing
    our sufferings. The bases of such reproach is purely emotional, they
    must be eliminated. Zareh Sinanyan is free from all of these extremes,
    and his point is that we, Armenians, should once be genuinely
    "explained," but the explanation should not last for years. After
    accepting each other's sins and confessing of own sins, we need to
    move forward, having the undeniable provision in front of our eyes
    that the key to solving all kinds of national problems is here, in the
    Republic of Armenia.


    ARAM ABRAHAMYAN
    Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2014/06/21/165747/


    From: Baghdasarian
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