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  • Savouring life important for wine distributor

    Calgary Herald (Alberta, Canada)
    April 22, 2004 Thursday Final Edition

    Savouring life important for wine distributor

    by Kim Carson


    Alla Wagner is an impressive woman with fair skin, thick black hair
    and unwavering, pale blue eyes.

    She is one of 150 or so Armenians in Calgary and her baptized name,
    Ashkhen, is that of a third-century Armenian queen.

    The movie, The Passion of the Christ, was the first thing we talked
    about.

    "Have you seen it?" she asked. I said yes, and that I found it very
    moving.

    "To me, this movie is about cruelty -- a cruelty that doesn't exist
    between everyday people, but is driven solely by politics. Forgive
    me, I have strong opinions about this. This cruelty has always
    existed and it continues today. This is why we must remember history
    -- not so that anyone can feel self-righteous -- but so these acts of
    cruelty aren't committed again."

    This Saturday, April 24, is the commemoration day for the 1915
    Armenian genocide by Turkish troops in which more than two million
    Armenians were massacred or displaced.

    To date, neither Turkey, the U.S., nor even Canada has acknowledged
    the genocide. The general idea is that if Turkey apologizes, it will
    have to compensate.

    "But I don't want to say this is an 'Armenian' problem," Alla is
    quick to explain. "It's the problem throughout the whole world."

    This is not the first time Alla has expressed herself politically.
    For a young girl growing up in Armenia's capital city of Yerevan
    during the era of Soviet rule, taking part in political movements was
    a regular event. The closing down of Armenian language schools in
    favour of Russian schools was something she fought hard against.

    "Politics aside, I was quite an artsy-fart when I was a kid," she
    laughs.

    Alla studied art, sang in bands, and learned every kind of dance
    available to her -- Armenian traditional dance, Georgian and other
    folk dances, belly dancing and ballroom dance.

    "Armenian children are expected to entertain their family and guests.
    At some point, every child is expected to do something -- sing, play
    a musical instrument, recite poetry.

    "In that part of the world, if you're a child with talent, there is
    no way you will not be noticed. Whether or not your family has money,
    you will be singled out and your talent will be cultivated.

    "On the other hand, I wanted to be a ballerina -- to study in the
    state classical dance academy and dance at the Bolshoi. However, I
    was measured and tested and it was decided that I didn't have what it
    takes. That was the end of it. I cried my eyes out for days."

    Alla completed her degree in library sciences and bibliography. She
    went on to do her masters in St. Petersburg in 1983, just as Mikhail
    Gorbachev was coming into power and the Soviet Union began its slow
    collapse. Though she began as a teaching assistant at the Institute
    of Culture, she never finished her studies.

    "Academics were losing their positions in society. There was no money
    for them and, frankly, they had nothing to sell. They were people of
    respect and status who had suddenly become absolute nobodies with
    nothing. Many killed themselves.

    "As a young woman, I felt this situation held nothing for me. And I
    refused to follow my parents' advice, which was to marry and settle
    down."

    So 20 years ago, Alla came to Calgary by herself after getting the
    idea from some Armenian-Canadians she met at a wedding.

    - - -

    Alla's intelligence and tenacity grace her as much today as ever. She
    now lives with her two teenage children in the southwest
    neighbourhood of Somerset. Her parents and brother, having followed
    from Armenia, also live in Calgary.

    Over the years, she has cultivated a new passion -- wine.

    Alla is a wine distributor in Calgary, dealing in organic, old-world
    wines from Eastern Europe, particularly the republic of Georgia. She
    travels throughout Europe and has 17 hectares of Georgian land on
    which -- if the political situation settles -- she hopes to start her
    own vineyard.

    "This area, the east coast of the Black Sea, is beautiful. It's a
    place I traveled through every summer of my childhood. It's famous
    for its Saperavi grapes and it's similar in appearance and climate to
    the Okanagan Valley, only the winters are much warmer and
    frost-free."

    Alla has visited many of the vintners in this region. She's
    fascinated by their work, which involves ancient techniques (the wine
    history of Georgia is more than 5,000 years old). Yet each vintner
    has his own secret ways that are unique.

    "It's funny, these vintners don't even drink much wine. It's the
    work, more than the final product, that's an art to them. You could
    call it devotional. This is what I love most and what I want to learn
    from them."

    Yet as a woman used to overcoming obstacles, Alla's greatest
    challenge now is not related to politics or wine; it's the daily
    management of a condition she developed 12 years ago -- travelling
    rheumatoid arthritis -- in which parts of her body alternately become
    swollen and intensely painful.

    "Like all else, the most important thing is that it doesn't interfere
    with my life. Because I have no intention of stopping. Over the
    years, I've developed systems for dealing with it, but sometimes I
    overdo it and then my family ends up paying," she admits sheepishly.

    "Truly, I look forward to the day when I can relax a bit and do
    something more soulful."

    Politics, cruelty, passion, and day-to-day challenges aside, perhaps
    one day Alla -- Ashkhen -- will be able to live peacefully in her
    homeland, travel to the Black Sea area, and take up the art of making
    wine.

    If you know of an interesting candidate for Calgary in Character,
    e-mail Kim Carson at [email protected]

    GRAPHIC: Colour Photo: Kim Carson, for Neighbours; Alla Wagner
    relaxes in the verdant tranquility of the Devonian Gardens.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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