This is a radio discussion program embracing a large variety of topics. It focuses on the problems of Christian perception of the world, such as the laws of spiritual life, the mysteries and regularities of creation, the rites and messages of the Christian Church, and the Christian understanding of historic development and human thought. The program participants are seeking to find answers to the so-called “eternal” questions that have been posed by great thinkers of the mankind. At the same time, they try to understand those who haven’t seen the light of Christianity throughout their quest for the meaning of life.

She has been living in Germany reasonably long. She writes in German and translates Armenian prose and poetry. She writes in German now and calls herself "bilingual" because of thinking in German in spite of knowing Armenian excellently? Does she have the feeling of being a stranger among her own people and a stranger among foreigners because she is now here, now there? Why does she consider the state of emigrants a "condition of an orphan that has two mothers and a life-long date of expiry"? "God is a realist, and His works and gifts are real, tangible and sensible," she says in her literary text. Does this text have the same value for her both in literature and in life? Why does she consider the attempts of slipping into her life in the name of faith from outside encroachment? You'll get the answers to these questions in the portrait of German-language writer-essayist, translator Vanuhi Vahanyan.

