PASADENA — Armenian students and their mentorship partners were sitting around a fire in the middle of a parking lot Sunday at St. George’s Armenian Church, contemplating the gravity of the millennia-old tradition they were about to undertake.
The group of more than 70 listened quietly as a pile of burning wood crackled under the evening sky, while Ara Arzumanian, executive director of the Armenian General Benevolent Union’s Generation Next Mentorship Program, explained why the pairs of mentors and mentees, most of whom were from Glendale, were preparing to take turns jumping over the flames.
Armenians have participated in the unifying ritual of jumping over a fire with someone else — a husband, wife, friend or relative — for thousands of years, as a confirmation of their mutual respect, Arzumanian explained. The event usually takes place about 40 days after the start of the new year.