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Pilibos Students Pledge to Speak Armenian and Fight for Hye Tahd

by Contributor
May 19, 2016
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Speak Armenian_This is Pilibos
This is Pilibos!
BY PATIL DER HOVAGIMIAN
Ambition: Motivation: Determination: Success: Spirit.
This is Pilibos!
An entire school day dedicated to exclusively speaking Armenian. Many doubted the will power of our students. Others questioned their potential.
Here, at Pilibos, our students are not just taught the Armenian language; they are exposed to its beauty and history.
Here, at Pilibos, our scholars do not only read Armenian literature; they live and breathe its authenticity.
Here, at Pilibos, our youth does not just acquire information about our past and our cause; they discover their roots and the influence they can have on its future.
Pilibos breeds Armenian spirited individuals who are driven to make a difference: youngsters who wholeheartedly sing in Armenian in preparation for a community event, individuals who collect supplies in order to send aid to our soldiers in Artsakh, students who diligently work to put together a program for their school to commemorate the memory of the lives we have lost and celebrate our triumphant existence.
Pilibos represents all things Armenian: spirit, culture, traditions, and education. We are the true depiction of what our forefathers sacrificed their lives for – we are the future of the Armenian people.
speak Armenian A Pledge to speak armenian
A Pledge to Speak Armenian
BY ANITA TOKATYAN
Rose and Alex Pilibos’s Speak Armenian campaign initiated a motivating competition amongst students and faculty who were asked to speak Armenian throughout the day. The task proved challenging, finding ways to discuss English literature, math, science, art, and more in a language that for many is foreign in regard to those subjects. Yet the spark was lit—students eagerly ran around trying to capture ribbons from those who weren’t speaking Armenian; teachers engaged in conversations with students beyond their respective subject matters; and the immense desire to prove that the challenge could be met and won permeated the classroom.
The campaign boosted the bravado of the many already comfortable speaking the language across the curriculum, and broadened the possibility for those still uneasy applying it outside their Armenian classes. For most of us born in the Diaspora, English tends to be the default language when explaining a lesson or expressing an idea; but what we often forget is that Armenian was our first language. We forget that, for a time, the early years of our development consisted of speaking, listening, and thinking in Armenian. Though time, location, and circumstance may play a part in forcing us to predominantly use English, the Speak Armenian campaign was one opportunity to sustain our native language and our roots.
We would assume that the teachers are the most prepared for the challenge, and expect that some students would need much encouragement. But walking onto campus, having two students rush toward you fighting to pin your ribbon, and enduring a week-long demand from the student body for you to speak Armenian, puts into perspective how inherent speaking and thinking in Armenian truly is for our youth.
Speak Armenian_Scholars take the lead
Pilibos Scholars Take the Lead!
BY MARIANNA AZIZIAN
On the morning of April 8th, as usual, teachers one by one were helping students enter the school’s gates, turning tired eyes and sleepy faces into bright smiles, it was Friday after all. However, this day was a bit different than the usual. At the gates, fellow students were anxiously waiting for their friends so they can place green ribbons on their school uniforms. With each ribbon, students promised to speak Armenian throughout the day, whether it was in the classroom, on the court, during lunch, or when talking to friends, they must express themselves in Armenian only.
Green ribbons spread throughout the campus and Armenian floated throughout the halls. The fun continued in the classroom where select students for every class, in every grade, were challenged to teach the lesson of the day in Armenian. The best part of the movement involved the teachers and students working together to remember scientific and mathematical terms in Armenian. Everyone, even the teachers, learned something new that day. Learning the parts and cycles of the volcano in Armenian was no easy task for the 6th grade students, but it was achieved! The 7th graders wrote poems in Armenian during creative writing and read them allowed for the class. Even students, who were reluctant to write, expressed themselves so passionately in Armenian. Thoughts seem to flow differently while writing with one’s mother tongue. In the end, students appreciated the density and richness of the Armenian language as they learned words they would not come across during a typical Armenian lesson.
Even though every day students read, speak, and think in Armenian, on this specific day, Pilibos students decided to take it further and have it ingrained into all aspects of their day. It became a part of their academic, social, personal, and emotional self. The author Ray Bradbury said, “You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.” The same can be said of language. As Armenians, it is our duty to preserve our mother tongue and moreover to safeguard Armenian institutions, like Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian School that stand as monuments of preservation in our growing and ever evolving community.

Pilibos students during the Hye Tahd Conference
Pilibos students during the Hye Tahd Conference

Development and Usage of the Armenian Language in the 21st Century
BY ARPI SINENIAN
Hye Tahd_03
On April 27, 2016, Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian School held its 3rd Annual Hye Tahd Conference. The Hye Tahd Conference was originated by the Administration to offer the opportunity for high school students to discuss, better understand, innovate, and even implement ideas that can benefit the Armenian communities in the Diaspora. The focus of this year’s conference was centered on the Armenian language and methods of incorporating it into our daily practices that revolve around 21st Century learning. Over the years, it has become more and more challenging to utilize Armenian in new emerging avenues of communication. The purposes of this year’s conference was to recognize that Armenian has become the secondary means of communication when using social media and other technologically oriented applications and to formulate ideas and possible integration of the language into future avenues of communication.
Hye Tahd_02The event created a space for Pilibos high school students and invited guests, Ferrahian School juniors, to take ownership of the language/technology issue, and under the guidance of experts in the field, offer plausible solutions that could be best applied in their daily lives. Students participated in a series of workshops led by Vahe Berberian, Arman Margarian (Antic), Margarita Baghdasaryan, Talar Chahinian, Shushan Karapetian, Hagop Gulludjian, Sevag Koundakjian, Ara Soudjian, Sako Shahinian, Jesse Arlen, Narine Jallatyan, Tamar Yardemian, Razmig Haroun, Karen Jallatyan, Chris Bedian, and Caroon Gharakhanian. Each workshop focused on a specific angle of language cultivation ranging from Armenian usage on social media, to production of young-adult literature, the role of Armenia, Armenian media, confronting our fears, and much more. At the end of the day, student-representatives from each workshop presented the various goals, ideas, and solutions that had emerged from their day’s work and offered further opportunities for discussion and reflection.
The Hye Tahd conference is only the beginning to a long and challenging road that will undoubtedly lead to the strengthening of our language, heritage, and roots in the present and new generations of Armenians living in the Diaspora. #ԾաղկիրՀայերէն
 

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