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Yerevan Journal: For Young Armenians, Promised Land Without Promise

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  • Yerevan Journal: For Young Armenians, Promised Land Without Promise

    The New York Times:

    Yerevan Journal: For Young Armenians, a Promised Land Without Promise

    December 9, 2004
    By SUSAN SACHS

    YEREVAN, Armenia - In a smoky corner of the Red Bull bar, a favorite
    hangout for university students, Zara Amatuni mulled over the reasons
    she would leave her homeland.

    "It's poor, it has no natural resources, it has an undeveloped economy
    and it's unlikely to be developing in the next 10 years," she said
    with a small apologetic shrug.


    Ms. Amatuni, 21, imagines herself in London or perhaps Moscow. Her
    language skills might land her a well-paying job, and plenty of
    Armenians have marked the trail before her.

    "We can fit in anywhere," she said. "The only place we can't is
    Armenia."

    For young people who have come of age in an independent Armenia, a
    country the size of Maryland with a population of barely three million
    people, it is an awkward paradox.

    Their parents grew up in a captive republic of the Soviet Union. Their
    grandparents escaped the massacre of Armenians by Turks in the years
    of World War I. For them, and for the four-million-strong Armenian
    diaspora, the creation of a sovereign Armenian homeland 13 years ago
    was the fulfillment of a dream.

    Yet the promised land has proved too constricting and its promise too
    distant for the next generation's ambitions. Those who want to leave
    and those who want to stay are all trying to reconcile what it means
    to be Armenian.

    For some, no longer being part of the empire that was the Soviet Union
    means a loss of significance in the world. Then there were
    opportunities for well-educated Armenians to work in Moscow and
    elsewhere. Independence, they had hoped, would propel Armenia into the
    wider world, important on its own. Instead, they find themselves in a
    backwater with a double-digit unemployment rate and where most of the
    decent-paying jobs are with international aid organizations. "Let us
    build Armenia here," said Artyom Simonian, an acting student in the
    struggling town of Gyumri, 75 miles northwest of the capital, where
    residents are still recovering from a devastating 1988 earthquake.

    He is one of those nostalgic for an imagined past. Like many of his
    fellow students, Mr. Simonian, 21, was uncomfortable with what seem to
    be the country's choices, integration with Europe or tighter bonds
    with Russia.

    "We are trying to love foreigners too much," he said.

    He and some other students, gathered around a small table in the
    chilly cafeteria of the Gyumri Arts School, understand they have fewer
    opportunities than did their parents, who learned to speak Russian and
    assimilated Russian culture.

    So they long for a bigger, more muscular Armenia, a land that would
    embrace what is now southeastern Turkey where their ancestors lived a
    century ago. The snowy crest of Mount Ararat, now on the other side of
    the border, floats on the horizon beyond Gyumri as a reminder of that
    phantom homeland.

    "I won't consider myself Armenian until all of sacred Mount Ararat is
    in Armenia," said Alexan Gevorgian, a theater student. He saw the
    world as essentially hostile and neighboring Turkey, just 15 miles to
    the west, as "an animal waiting for its prey to weaken."

    His bitterness was too much for Ludvig Harutiunian, the student
    council president.

    "We young people should leave this hostility behind," he
    protested. "I'd like Armenia to be known for good things, not genocide
    and wars and victims and mourning."

    Mr. Harutiunian had evaluated his prospects. His father was already
    working in Russia, his brother was working in Spain and he was
    resigned to finding a chance for artistic expression elsewhere.

    "Leaving the difficulties aside, Armenian culture is not developing
    and you have to go out," he said.

    Mr. Simonian interrupted, chiding, "It's wrong to leave the country."
    The other students fell silent.

    The insular views of some of these young people dismay older Armenians
    who have a sharp sense of how their own horizons have shrunk since
    independence.

    "For 70 years we lived in a different country, where we were open to
    Russian culture and history," said Svetlana Muradian, a mother of six
    in Gyumri who used to work in Russia but now supports her family with
    odd jobs. "Kids now see nothing beyond Armenia. My only hope is that
    my three sons will grow up and leave."

    The students gathered in the Red Bull bar in Yerevan were struggling
    with a different facet of the same predicament. Fluent in English and
    Russian as well as their native Armenian, they were impatient with the
    growing pains of a post-Soviet state and cynical about politics.

    To Gevorg Karapetian, a doctoral student in computer engineering, the
    ideal leader would be a businessman, "someone educated and clever
    enough to make relationships with the neighboring countries."

    The present crowd of politicians did not measure up. "Our president
    and all the presidents before him just want to be president,"
    Mr. Karapetian said.

    Unlike the less privileged students in Gyumri, he and his friends in
    the capital have reached out beyond Armenia's borders. They get their
    news from the Internet and use the Web to chat with English speakers
    from around the world. They regularly meet Armenians from the United
    States and Russia who come to visit Armenia, to teach at the
    universities, plant trees or to set up charities.

    But their relative sophistication also makes them keenly aware of the
    contrast between their aspirations and their country's opportunities.

    Victor Agababov, 22, earns the princely sum of $650 a month working as
    a computer programmer in Yerevan, making him the best paid member of
    his university class. Yet he tends to mock his own achievement because
    his job involves doing outsourced work transferred from the United
    States and Japan.

    "We are a cheap work force," he said. "We're cheaper than Indians and
    probably 10 times cheaper than Americans."

    Mr. Agababov is considering moving to Moscow to find a technology job
    that might promise advancement and independence.

    As far the Armenian-Americans and other diaspora visitors who say they
    yearn to come to the new Armenia, Mr. Agababov and Zara Amatuni, the
    linguistics student, have a suggestion.

    "We can swap," Mr. Agababov said.

    "Right," said Ms. Amatuni. "They can come back and we can
    go there."

    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/09/international/asia/09armenia.html?ex=1103614490&ei=1&en=6d258 6ff32389cba
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