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CSUN Student Helps Educate Others On Armenian Culture

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  • CSUN Student Helps Educate Others On Armenian Culture

    CSUN STUDENT HELPS EDUCATE OTHERS ON ARMENIAN CULTURE

    Daily Sundial, CSUN, CA
    Oct 29 2014

    Published on October 29, 2014 in Features
    By Alik Ourfalian

    Khodanian, 21, a history major with a minor in Armenian Studies,
    often heard his grandparents telling him stories. These were stories
    about their childhood, their parents and about their people.These were
    stories about deportation, starvation, rape and death. Stories about
    people being forced out of their homes, about an entire population
    being marched through the Syrian deserts with no food or water,
    mass burnings and drownings that wiped out hundreds of lives at a time.

    Nearly a century later, Khodanian continues to feel the effects of the
    Armenian Genocide of 1915. "It affects me today because I am part of
    a large group of Armenians that live outside of Armenia," he said. "I
    was born and raised in Los Angeles instead of my ancestral homeland
    because of the genocide."

    Khodanian now serves on the CSUN Armenian Students Association (ASA)
    Executive Board. As the ASA's cultural director, his job is to plan
    events throughout the year in order to educate students about the
    Armenian culture through events that highlight the culture.

    "The Armenian Students Association was created in order to foster an
    environment that celebrates the rich Armenian history and culture,"
    said Christine Dashdemerians, ASA president. "The CSUN chapter of this
    organization holds a unique responsibility, since this university
    houses the largest Armenian collegiate student population in the
    United States."

    Dashdemerians said she is proud of her ethnicity and loves how the
    Armenian culture has contributed to the diversity on CSUN's campus.

    "ASA is my way of giving back to my homeland and my ancestors while
    also bringing awareness of this beautiful culture to my peers,"
    she said.

    During this time in history Khodanian refers to, over a million and
    a half Armenians were killed by Turkey's Ottoman Empire, during what
    is considered to be the first genocide of the 20th century. However,
    Turkey denies the genocide to this day, blaming the casualties on
    World War I activity.

    Khodanian's great-grandparents were from the Marash region of Western
    Armenia. When they heard about the massacres taking place across
    the Ottoman Empire, they took their five children, gathered their
    belongings and started their journey towards the Syrian border where
    they sought refuge.

    Along the way, all five of the children were separated from their
    parents and, eventually, only one of them survived the harsh conditions
    of the march through the desert. A few years later, the parents found
    their child at an orphanage near the Syrian border.

    The family settled in Lebanon, and the parents had five more children,
    one of which was Khodanian's paternal grandmother. Khodanian's parents
    later immigrated to the United States before he was born.

    Off campus, Khodanian is a member of the Armenian Youth Federation
    (AYF), a grassroots non-profit organization "committed to the moral,
    social and intellectual advancement of Armenian youth," according to
    the organization's mission statement.

    Khodanian is part of the San Fernando Valley chapter of the
    organization and helps plan events, such as the Cycle Against Denial,
    an annual bicycle rally to raise awareness of the Armenian Genocide,
    and the AYF's annual protest in front of the Turkish Consulate in
    Los Angeles on April 24th, the day Armenians commemorate the genocide.

    "We strive to mobilize the Armenian youth and be involved in our
    communities through various programs and events," said senior Arpa
    Hatzbanian, 22, chairperson of the Armenian Youth Federation. "We've
    all heard our great-grandparents' and grandparents' stories of the
    genocide and that just drives us to keep working for our cause."

    Khodanian also works on the AYF's Special Needs Basketball Program,
    a free program offered to children in the Armenian community with
    special needs.

    "I try to stay involved with other Armenian youth in order to establish
    strong community ties so that our history, culture and traditions
    remain in good and strong hands," he said.

    This past summer, Khodanian took his activism abroad to Armenia,
    where he volunteered in the AYF's Youth Corps program. For six weeks,
    Khodanian and 24 other volunteers from across the United States hosted
    day camps for underprivileged youth in five villages across Armenia
    and the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

    "Youth Corps gave me the opportunity to work hands-on with the youth
    in Armenia, to teach them English and give them a fun place to spend
    their summer," he said. "I also got to experience my homeland for
    what it's really worth and I fell in love with it."

    Khodanian is an active participant in his community and a determined
    activist for genocide recognition. This in turn also means a
    much-needed recognition of his story.

    "My family's stories serve as a constant reminder to me of what
    happened almost a hundred years ago, and what should be done today in
    order to preserve our Armenian culture, history, heritage, and to keep
    our family's traditions and stories alive," said Khodanian. "Those
    stories are what inspire me to remain active in my community, on and
    off campus."

    http://sundial.csun.edu/2014/10/csun-student-helps-educate-others-on-armenian-culture/



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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