Los Angeles Times, CA
Jan 4 2010
For many Los Angeles-area Armenians, it’s two days till Christmas
The traditional date of Jan. 6 is still observed by many Southern
California Armenians, who find it more meaningful and spiritual — and
less commercial — than the Dec. 25 celebration.
By Esmeralda Bermudez
January 4, 2010
Never mind the stripped Christmas trees cast out along the driveways
or the holiday house lights that stopped shimmering over the weekend.
According to Richard Dekmejian’s Armenian calendar, Christmas is now
two days away.
The choir director at St. Peter Armenian Church in Glendale must tune
his singers’ voices one last time. His wife must prepare a feast for
the family. And when Jan. 6 arrives, he will proclaim to those he
knows:
"Kristos dzunav yev haydnetsav!" "Christ is born and revealed among us!"
On a date that comes later (or, some might argue, much earlier), than
traditional Western Christmas, Armenians across Southern California
will gather Wednesday to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ and his
baptism in the Jordan River. Many will flock to Orthodox Christian
churches to participate in a solemn, centuries-old service in which
people drink holy water believed to contain some of the same oil used
to baptize Jesus. Then they will gather, generally without gifts, to
dine and rejoice in their homes.
The celebration, known to some as Theophany or simply Armenian
Christmas, follows the original Julian calendar as opposed to the
standard Western or Gregorian calendar. When Christians began to
celebrate Christmas on Dec. 25 as dictated by the Romans, Armenians
held to the original Jan. 6 date.
It is not to be confused with El Dia de los Reyes or Three Kings Day,
which is celebrated by many Spanish-speaking Catholics on Jan. 6 and
marks the adoration of the Christ child by the kings, or Magi.
For Armenians living in America, the dual holidays add more cheer to
an already-packed season.
"We double-dip," Dekmejian said. "It’s an extended Christmas period
from the 24th until the sixth."
For those who emigrated from formerly Soviet-ruled Armenia, where
religious events were banned, Christmas may be a relatively new
concept. For many, the holidays typically revolved around New Year’s,
when gifts were exchanged and relatives filled the streets visiting
one another’s homes.
In America, some families have adapted to new customs, gathering for
dinner on Dec. 25 or, in some cases, adding the all-American staple,
turkey, to a traditional Armenian menu of fish and rice with raisins
and nuts.
"Some in the new generation, they want more American Christmas now,"
said Robert, an Armenian father of two from Glendale who declined to
give his last name. "Armenian Christmas, it doesn’t mean so much."
But for many who observe their native country’s Christmas, the Jan. 6
date carries a deeper meaning. Without gifts, malls or Santa Claus,
Suzie Shatarevyan, 30, of Van Nuys said, her family is able to focus
more meaningfully on family and church.
"It’s a real Christmas," she said, "none of that commercial stuff."
At Armenian churches across Glendale and the San Fernando Valley, the
tradition was alive and well in recent days as priests prepared
parishes for hundreds of visitors, each seeking a few ounces of holy
water to carry home. In Montebello, where Armenians once lived in
great numbers, Father Ashod Kambourian readied his church to host a
community dinner for about 600 guests.
"In old days, the priests would visit the homes and bless them," he
said. "It’s good news. It’s happy days."
At St. Peter Armenian Church, Father Vazken Movsesian said he hoped to
take all the extended good cheer and put it toward charity. The
church’s volunteers doubled their year-round outreach efforts in
December, delivering toys to local children and sweaters to nearby
hospitals.
Jan. 6 "is nothing more than a date," he said. "We want people to let
love be born in their heart every day."
e-beliefs4-2010jan04,0,7407808.story