Kỷ niệm ngày cưới em 80 năm
về trước
Chỉ 4 ngày nữa thôi hay November 2012. Cụ ông John Betar ở Connecticut sẽ làm lễ kỷ niệm ngày cưới em 80 năm về trước, em đây
tức cụ bà Ann Shawah năm nay cũng đã 97 tuổi.
John
Betar nay đã 101 tuổi, sinh năm 1911 họ đã cưới nhau ngày 25 tháng 11 năm 1932 lúc
mà chúng ta chưa sinh ra đời.
On Nov.
25, 1932,
FDR had just defeated Herbert Hoover, the daily newspaper cost two cents, and
Ann Shawah said "I do" to John Betar in Harrison, N.Y.
Fast forward through 13
presidents and 80 years to 2012: the Betars are still happily married. After
five children, 14 grandchildren and 16 great children, the couple from Fairfield, Conn., will celebrate their 80th wedding
anniversary Sunday.
"We are so blessed. We
are fortunate," John Betar, 101, said.
"We are very
fortunate. It can be repeated and repeated," Ann, 97, echoed. "It is
unconditional love and understanding. We have had that. We consider it a
blessing."
Humble Beginnings
John Betar met Ann Shawah
growing up in the same Syrian community in Bridgeport, Conn. Betar immigrated to America as a young child in 1921 with his
brother, he explained, joining his father who put down roots for them in Bridgeport. After attending grammar school,
Betar began working as a fruit peddler and met Ann Shawah, the daughter of
Syrian immigrants, in the neighborhood.
"I fell for her right
away," he said. "I used to have a Ford Roaster and I used to pick her
and her friends and drive them to high school. Gradually she liked me and we
got together."
It was slightly more
complicated than that. Ann was arranged to be married to another man, 20 years
her senior, whom her parents thought would be the best provider for their
daughter. The 17-year-old was less than pleased with the arrangement and taken
with Betar, then 21. Breaking with tradition and going against her family's
wishes, the two eloped.
"At 17, you wonder if
you're making the right choice," she said. "I had grown up with him
and we had good times together and we knew each other very well. And it's
turned out to be 80 years. ….God seems to have been with us. And we've been
very fortunate and wonderful."
The two built a life
together, a home, a family and lived out their own version of the American
dream. Betar continued peddling fruit and in 1938, opened up his own grocery
store, Betar's Market, in the south end of Bridgeport.
"We worked hard and
never got tired of making money," he said. "This is the land of
opportunity."
Ann stayed at home and
raised their children. "She was a great mother," Betar said.
"She raised five children and she was a wonderful caretaker."
Five children spawned 14
grandchildren and 16 great children. The couple said the later generations
"bring new life" and light into their lives.
"Last year at [John's]
100th birthday party ... there was group of little 2 year olds and 5 year olds
and a group that's just turning 19 and 20," Ann recalled. "We had it
at the beach and we had fireworks. It was very special. The younger children
went out on the beach and wrote 'Happy Birthday Jiddo,' [Grandpa in Arabic], in
the sand, all along the beach. ... How can you not feel God's right with you
and blessing you?"
Along with joyous moments
and good memories like this one came bad times for the Betars.
"The hardest thing in
our life was losing two of our children. That's the sad part. It's one of the
worst thing a parent can face is losing a child, no matter how old they are or
how young they are," Ann said.
But despite the trying
moments that can test or break a marriage, the two have stayed together.
"There are so many
things in a lifetime that can make you very, very happy and very, very sad, but
if you can do it together then it's happiness," Ann said.
That's easier said than
done for many couples today in the U.S. where the divorce rate hovers
around 40 to 50 percent. What's their secret?
"They have this
wonderful ability to accept life as it comes," their daughter Renee Betar
said. "They have a way of trying to look around at the things that they do
have -- the family and the blessings. They came from a generation where there
is such respect for each other and caring."
The Betars consider
themselves "fortunate." Hesitant to dole out advice to newlyweds,
they each offered simple, guiding mantras to a lasting marriage.
"Get along.
Compromise. Live within your means and be content," Betar said, before
adding, "And let your wife be the boss."
"We don't have
bosses," she said. Her advice: don't hold a grudge.
"You know what your
commitments are and you try to live by them and understand one another. If you
don't hold a grudge, you can face anything," Ann said.
The couple still lives
independently on the beach in Fairfield and has kept active, pushing the
boundaries of aging. In their later years, Ann discovered a hidden talent as an
artist and took up painting in oils and watercolors. The two cook soup
together, always from scratch. (The retired fruit peddler-turned-grocer
continues to make outings to shop for the best produce and can't help but
dispense recommendations to fellow customers at the store, his daughter
reports, saying: "Oh no, don't buy that tomato if you want to eat it
tonight.") They spend their days reading and proudly keeping up with
what's going on in the world.
Celebrating 80 Years of
Marriage
On Sunday, the couple will
mark their 80th wedding anniversary with a quiet celebration surrounded by
family and friends at the St. Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Church in Bridgeport, where they are original founding
members.
Ann said one of her
daughters ordered a cake for the occasion and the baker called back, slightly
confused, to confirm that it should read -- "Happy 80th Anniversary"
instead of "Happy 80th Birthday."
After eighty years, Betar
is still sweet on his bride and she is still sweet on him.
"He is a wonderful
man. He is a very giving man to his children, to his family, to people that
need it. He is a very generous, giving man," she said. "Can you blame
me for living with him for 80 years?"
To the later generations of
children and grandchildren, the Betars serve as role models for how to live and
love in life.
"I'm always blown away
by their incredible optimism, deep sense of compassion and modesty," said
granddaughter Heather Mitchell of Fairfield, Conn. "They are true beacons --
inspirational people who emit such joy without even knowing it."
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