Karek 7/11/15
When we arrived
in Dilijan after a day of visiting churches and Lake Sevan, a nice man named
Razmig greeted us. He said he didn’t know we were eating there so he would be
embarrassed to give us what he had. But guess what he gave us? A beautiful
feast! The hotel we stayed in, The Daravand, is in the middle of a forest.
There is a river, but it’s hard to get to because most of the trails are
completely overgrown. Our cabin was very beautiful because there was lots of
art and the cabin was made out of unpainted wood. Razmig owns the hotel and
made the cabin himself.
Razmig, who made everything wooden you see in this picture by hand. |
Today Armenia is hospitable.
Arev 7/11/15
Today we
went to the Cascade museum, which is literally inside the Cascade steps, which
are big staircases leading up to an old Soviet monument in the middle of
Yerevan. My highlight of the museum was the very first piece we saw, which was
a wall piece that had three panels, each depicting a different era of Armenian
history. The first was a panel of Mesrop Mashtots, (The monk that invented the
Armenian Alphabet), depicted as a saint, with many various significant Armenian
priests, monks, saints, etc, crowded around him. The second, and largest, was a
painting of the famous battle of Vardanank, in which the famous Armenian
warrior, Vartan Mamigonian, fought and died against the Persians, who were
riding elephants,(My Armenian school teachers like to emphasis that fact to
show that the Armenians were in fact, the literal underdogs), who wanted the
Armenians to take back their Christianity. My grandfather was named after him,
and Shant’s middle name is Vartan. The third, and final, panel is my personal favorite.
It shows Mayr Hayastan, (Mother Armenia), in a crowd of famous Armenians, like
William Saroyan and Sayat Nova. Overall, I just really liked being able to see
Armenia’s basic history drawn out. As I was telling my mom, it was pretty much
all the history I have been learning in Armenian school, on one museum-sized
wall.
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We couldn't take pictures in the museum so I snatched this off of Google |
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Some of the exhibits in the hallways. This is a loop made of slate stone. |
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This sculpture was called "tattoo" and changed colors... |
Today, Armenia is air-conditioned. (Thank God) ;)
7/12
Amar
Today was Vardavar! It’s just a big water fight where
everybody throws water. We were walking
around and towards this big statue when suddenly this group of kids started
running towards us with water buckets and they just poured the water out right
onto us. Then we poured water back at
them! It made me feel excited and scared.
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Everyone started out as a good sport... |
They pushed Sevan and Karek into a bumper boat water pool so the boys
were soaking wet.
The best defense, is offense |
Suddenly, this man
poured a bucket of water on mama from behind.
I think she was surprised and cold.
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It's not just for kids, poor Mama! |
Medzmama didn’t get that much. I
think this is because she is older and they don’t think they should because she
might get frustrated or something. I
don’t know if it’s a good idea to have this day in America because sometimes
it’s really, really cold and sometimes it’s really, really hot. The day was a little less getting wet than I
thought because I thought EVERYbody would be splashing us. The best part was when it just started and I
got excited. The worst part was getting totally
soaking. Mara had the strongest reaction
to the water! She screamed and cried.
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Despite Dzovag's pleas, teenage boys looked her right in the eye with a baby in her arms and drenched them both. Mara's head was going to pop off!! |
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No one was spared...well, maybe someone was... |
Today, Armenia is drenched.
A brief history about Vartavad from Wikipedia:
Although now a Christian tradition, Vardavar's history dates back to pagan times. The ancient festival is traditionally associated with the goddess Astghik,
who was the goddess of water, beauty, love and fertility. The
festivities associated with this religious observance of Astghik were
named “Vartavar” because Armenians offered her roses as a celebration (vart means "rose" in Armenian and var mean "rise"), this is why it was celebrated in the harvest time.
Vardavar is celebrated 98 days (14 weeks) after Easter.
During the day of Vardavar, people from a wide array of ages are
allowed to douse strangers with water. It is common to see people
pouring buckets of water from balconies on unsuspecting people walking
below them. The festival is very popular among children as it is one day
where they can get away with pulling pranks. It is also a means of
refreshment on the usually hot and dry summer days of July or late June.
Great writing! Thanks to all the bloggers. How did you find Razmig's cabin? It sounds fantastic. I think we should start practicing Vartavad in Berkeley. But let's not tell anyone, let's just start doing it!
ReplyDeleteWe actually do Vartevar here in LA. after church liturgy. However, we use spray bottles. We probably would be fined for wasting water if we used buckets of water. Lovely posts, Hasmig and all contributors.
ReplyDelete