An Armenian from Turkey in Los Angeles…

Markar ESAYAN
Markar ESAYAN


Date posted: May 22, 2013

Markar Esayan

Last week I visited Los Angeles to attend the fourth Anatolian Cultures and Food Festival, held between May 16 and 19. I wanted to write about my impressions before the effects of jet lag took hold and while my memories were still fresh. I was enthusiastic as this was my first visit to Los Angeles. I wasn’t enthusiastic just because I was making my first visit to a place or because I would see all the major historic or religious landmarks of Anatolia within a 60,000-square-meter area in Orange County. I also have many relatives and friends living in this city and across the state, most of whom I hadn’t seen for years.

Perhaps it would be possible to catch up with some of them on everything during my tight schedule. When I accepted the invitation from the Pacifica Institute, I didn’t know that Deputy Patriarch Archbishop Aram Ateşyan and Bishop Maşalyan from Turkey were to be in attendance, and it was a nice surprise. Esteemed Ateşyan is a close relative and is my father’s namesake. I also have had a very long friendship with Bishop Maşalyan. I hadn’t seen them for a long time due to my busy schedule. In addition, I was happy as I would see many journalist friends of mine thanks to this opportunity.

As a result, there were many Armenians in attendance, and I contributed to the political and daily debates in my own way. I must note that the group was very cheerful during the trip. With Turkish, Armenian and Kurdish songs and jokes made by Mr. Cemal Uşşak in his unique Laz accent, we once again had a sense of living together and brotherly feelings, albeit while being far from home.

From the first moment of the trip to the last minute, everything went smoothly particularly with respect to the organization of the festival. I was very impressed to see the discipline and sincerity with which people worked to make this festival happen. When I arrived at the festival area, I was glad to witness that many Americans had come to see a giant replica of Turkey and taste 99 varieties of Anatolian cuisine.

The organizing committee had worked day and night to come up with a spectacular event. As I entered the festival area and went through the Hittite, Urartian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Ottoman and Turkish gates, I realized that visual elements play an important role in human memory. It was a really interesting experience for me to understand once again miles from home that we come from a very rich historic background and that this is a very precious asset.

The giant replicas of Ephesus Theater, Sümela Monastery, Mardin, Cappadocia, the House of the Virgin Mary, Zeugma, the Double Minarets Madrasa, Topkapı Palace and the Fountain of Ahmet III — located at the very center of the festival area and offering different drinks from its faucets — all took people through a time tunnel. What impressed me the most was Akhtamar Church. After years of neglect, this church had been renovated and reopened to visitors, and I had attended the opening ceremony in Van, feeling happy for the ongoing change in Turkey. We Armenians have a painful past. We were not only dispersed around the world as the diaspora, but those who remained in Turkey are also treated like foreigners in their home country. Those who have long carried their identity, religion, race and language as a dangerous burden can really appreciate the beginning of this change in the state’s mentality.

Now, we have the opportunity to exhibit our rich culture in the biggest state of the world’s mightiest country. I believe that we have a right to understand that it is an asset to live together, stand together, cherish our differences and enjoy this awareness. Not long ago, we would have to whisper to each other in Armenian and we would have concealed our true names. This festival was a good testimony of the big change in Turkey. Thank you to everyone who contributed to make this happen. I will pen my other observations later.

Source: Today’s Zaman May 22, 2013


Related News

Orange County’s Anatolian Festival: A Meeting of Worlds

ARTUR ASLANYAN For the past five years, Orange County, Calif. has hosted the Anatolian Cultures & Foods Festival, a four-day event full of music, dances, food and family fun. The weekend of May 16th through the 19th continued the tradition, putting on the largest version yet. The event is described by many to be “the closest […]

Brooklyn Amity School crowned karate champion

Brooklyn Amity School has been crowned champion receiving 30 medals in 2013 Asckhar’s Kyodai Invitational Karate Championship held in New York. 320 competitors in total from four different countries participated the sport event. Brooklyn Amity School distinguished itself winning 13 golden, 5 silver and 12 bronze medals and thus ranking first in the total number […]

Dissidents of the Turkish government are living in fear in Canada

Turkey’s long arm and espionage activities against dissidents living in exile in Canada has become a growing concern. As revealed in a startling recent news report, 15 Turkish-Canadians have been targeted by the Turkish government within the scope of a “terrorism” investigation.

The Atlantic Institute announces the Art & Essay Contest winners

The Atlantic Institute has announced the 11th year winners of its traditional Art & Essay Contest. This academic year’s theme was “Compassion in Action… Caring Matters!” Awards Ceremony will be held at noon on Saturday, April 15th, 2017.

Imam Wahy-ud Deen Shareef: What we see in ISIL may be fire, but it is not illumination

American-born Imam Wahy-ud Deen Shareef, 64, the imam of Masjid Waarith ud Deen in Irvington, New Jersey, has said, “What the American Muslims see in the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) may be fire, but it is not illumination.”

Turkish Community Donates $40,000 To Sandy Damaged Gerritsen Library, Elementary School

A coalition of Turkish-American organizations forked over $40,000 yesterday to the Gerritsen Beach library (2808 Gerritsen Avenue) and Gerritsen Beach Elementary School (P.S. 277), institutions that have suffered in the five months since Superstorm Sandy rocked the community. The donation came from Turkish-American groups, non-profits and businesses, spearheaded by Helping Hands Relief Foundation, Kimse Yokmu, […]

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

In Case You Missed It

Former CHP Chairman Baykal supports joint mosque-cemevi project

‘Hizmet is a social movement worldwide, that has a heart, and it’s always from the heart.’

Mogadishu Governor visits KYM Headquarters

Çağ Education Company in Azerbaijan held a conference to celebrate the 20th anniversary

Kimse Yok Mu opens education complex in Kenya

False reports on Bank Asya breach laws

Turkey crackdown: Gulen sympathizers abroad are feeling the heat

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News