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Languages provide
another religious connection
BY BILL TAMMEUS
Knight Ridder
Newspapers KANSAS CITY, Mo. - (KRT) -
I was reminded anew about
America's many sources of people and religions recently when
I met Boris and Irene Stephen. They are the parents of my friend
Kristin Amend, a member of my church. Boris, of Assyrian heritage,
grew up speaking Aramaic, the language Jesus spoke. Well, Boris
at least spoke the 20th-century version of it that was spoken
where he was born in what is now northern Iran. Irene also is
of Assyrian descent but was born in the United States and never
has known more than a few Aramaic words.
Aramaic has received lots
of attention recently because of Mel Gibson's movie "The
Passion of the Christ." The actors in it speak mostly Aramaic
(how well is a matter of debate). Aramaic has been around about
3,000 years - and, like Hebrew, is a Semitic language - but only
a few hundred thousand people in the world still speak it. "Until
I was 6 years old," Boris said, "I couldn't speak a
word of English. Well, one word, `no.' I
started kindergarten and didn't know English. In the first week
I was sitting in the corner as a `dunce.'"
Much the same thing happened
to my mother. She was born in the United States but first learned
Swedish, the language her immigrant parents spoke. Since immigration
laws were relaxed considerably in 1965, new waves of people have
come to America and are working through much the same process
of language assimilation.
Boris and Irene have not
seen Gibson's movie, though they said relatives who have seen
it"caught a few words" of the Aramaic. They may or
may not see the film because, as Boris said, they are Christian
and "we know the story."
It's estimated that nearly
half a million people who identify themselves as Assyrians live
in the United States now - perhaps a fifth of them in the Chicago
area, where both Boris and
Irene spent most of their youth. (Boris was not quite a year
old when his parents came to theUnited States in 1924.)
Assyria became a major
Middle Eastern power after creating an independent state in the14th
century BCE (the term scholars now use to mean Before the Common
Era), or BC. The Assyrians had several ups and downs. The final
version of their empire was destroyed shortly before 600 BCE.
But many people today,
like Boris and Irene, still consider themselves Assyrian. Boris
Stephen's parents lived near Lake Oroumieh, or Urmia, between
the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. It's in the far north of Iran,
close to Iraq to its southwest, Turkey to its west and Armenia
and Azerbaijan to its north. When World War I started in 1914,
the Russians were onthe allied side, opposite the Turks of the
Ottoman Empire.
"The Russian soldiers
had come down and occupied that area (where his parents lived)
to ward off the Turks," Boris said. "So when the Russian
Revolution started in 1917, the Russians pulled out" and
went home.
At that point, the Turks
came in and began killing local residents, who were mostly Christian,
he said. So "our people fled." His parents went first
to Russia. Another part of his family went to Iraq, then Afghanistan
and then to India, China and Japan before arriving in San Francisco.
America is full of families
with stories of flight, religious persecution and forced or unforced
choices - Jews running from Hitler's killers, Muslims seeking
new opportunities in freedom, Christians fleeing oppression.
And that doesn't even count all the Sikhs, Hindus, Jains, Buddhists
and followers of other faiths here.
You don't have to go far
to discover these fascinating stories. I'd heard my friend Kristin
speak of her Assyrian heritage, but I hadn't appreciated much
about that until her parents, who live now in Florida, visited
her recently.
The thread from Kristin
and her parents leads all the way back to the language in which
Jesus told parables, preached sermons and offered words of encouragement
and instruction to his followers. I know Jews who still speak
or read Hebrew, Moses' language, and I know Muslims who converse
in Arabic, the language of the ProphetMuhammad and the Quran.
These linguistic connections
give us a religious way of understanding the complex truth of
the American motto, E Pluribus Unum - from many, one.
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