Video 1 Transcript
In Armenia, the holidays they celebrate are, with the exception of Christmas, like pretty much completely different from the ones we celebrate here. So, oh and Easter I should say, so you don't get your 4th of July or your Halloween, your Thanksgiving or Valentine's Day. What they do is from January 1st for about two weeks, although the bulk of it is in the first week, they have a New Year's celebration. And so the first few days everyone's off of work, transportation isn't even running in a lot of areas, and everyone is just, you know, living it up at home. There's lots of eating, lots of drinking. They all have a big, fancy table set up. They kind of leave the same food out on there for a few days. And so you want to be careful what you eat after, you know, January 3rd, January 4th. They also celebrate Christmas. They celebrate that on January 6th, but it's kind of overshadowed by the New Year holiday. It doesn't get quite as much as attention. And then when Easter time comes around, they like to make right, peel off with raisins and like crack eggs against each other, hard-boiled eggs. And whoever's cracks first loses.
