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Vacation Armenian Style: A pilgrimage to the rock of ages

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  • Vacation Armenian Style: A pilgrimage to the rock of ages

    armenianow.com
    July 30, 2004

    Vacation Armenian Style: A pilgrimage to the rock of ages


    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    A big cave stands out against the background of a mountain opposite
    the road leading to Geghard Monastery . Two holes like eyes seem to
    peer from the rock keeping watch over the middle ages church. Anyone
    who visits Armenia learns of Geghard. Not as many, however, know that
    there was a time when the cave was a pilgrimage place where those who
    managed to survive the impassible road lit candles for realizing their
    dreams.

    God made the cave; man made the rooms
    It was (is) also a great retreat from summer heat and today has become a
    leisure spot. Nobody promises ''rooms with European design and
    twenty-four-hour hot and cold water''. But if your idea of a vacation (or
    even a getaway) is untouched nature, relaxing sounds and the gurgle of a
    river in an exotic environment, the Geghard caves offer it all. And Mother
    Nature gives it for free.
    For six years jeweler Robert Hovsepyan has been spending several rest days
    in this cave and although he can afford to enjoy more comfortable vacations,
    only here he finds complete harmony escaping from urban noise.
    This time in his favorite cave he received his friend from Georgia painter
    Maria Mehrabyan, who despite spending all her life in Georgia, has now
    decided to settle down in her homeland.
    This place is of particular importance for residents of the neighboring
    villages. The cave, as they call it Tchgnavor's Zagha (''cave'' translated
    from Turkish) or Kioroghli's Zagha (''cave of a blind man's son'' from
    Turkish), is a pilgrimage place for them.
    ''Even if somebody is planning to leave outside for work or is going to face
    exams or he has a dream then they necessarily go to Zagha for lighting
    candles and comforting their souls and only after that they do whatever
    they've planned,'' says 73-year-old Vazgen Kirakosyan.
    The cave was once used by Geghard clerics who devoted themselves to an
    ascetic life.
    According to spiritual father of Geghard priest Ter Petros Malyan, there are
    about 150 caves in the neighboring mountains of the church. There was a time
    when these caves served clerics for a hermitage. They says there is even a
    cave where Saint Grigor the Illuminator would live as a hermit.

    Mountain-side solitude
    According to Father Petros, these caves used to serve not only spiritual but
    also defensive purposes. Armenian historian of 17th century Arakel
    Davrizhetsi also bears record to that fact writing that during military
    campaigns of Shah Abbas villagers were taking refuge in Tchgnavor's Zagha.
    However, cunning Persians burnt wet grass below the cave and smoke choked
    women and children hiding in the cave. ''There were strange smiles on the
    faces of choked people as if they were favored with eternal rest,'' writes
    the historian.
    Of course, today this sad story has been forgotten and people hide in
    Tchgnavor's Zagha not from enemies but simply to escape from sun and
    pollution and the routine life of the city.
    For getting to the cave you have to walk a long road leading through thorny
    briar bushes and over a stony river. If you can successfully overcome the
    path then you reach the real challenge of climbing over the rock to reach
    the cave entrance. The mania of reaching the cave fills even the most coward
    visitors with courage. Regular visitors to the cave made the path easier in
    some measure. They dug foot prints in the ground and fixed rope for safety
    next to a 20 centimeter wide path leading over the rock.
    After a few mountaineering jumps the rock is conquered and the huge cave,
    which looked like a small hole when looking at it from afar, is before your
    eyes with all of its beauty.
    The cave is divided into several parts and only the first part is natural
    while others were dug by visitors. Walls and ceiling of the middle-sized
    rooms are completely covered in engraved graffiti, such as: ''One has to
    have more power to live than to die''.
    There was a time when clerics tasted that power of faith and life, isolating
    themselves from comfortable life and settling down in this cave.

    Big cave, small journalist
    Robert Hovsepyan believes that in this cave people really experience new
    feelings of self-assessment and self-knowledge and begin to look at life
    with new standards.
    ''Many people like to visit this place. Sometimes it even happens when there
    is no place to stay here,'' says Hovsepyan, who passes through 40 centimeter
    wide openings in the rock with the abyss below, as if walking around in his
    house.
    A most peculiar part of the cave is a place like a chair located on the edge
    of rock fragment. It is a narrow ''armchair'' dug in the rock, in which only
    thin people can sit. The whole ''armchair'' is in the air and it is
    connected with the rock only by a small part. Its upper part pushes out
    arch-wise and gives its guest a feeling of aloneness. This stone seat is
    also an echo chamber sending even whispers circling back around its guest's
    ears. Perhaps it was meant for praying?
    Almost every day guests go to Tchgnavor's Zagha.
    Varduhi Zohrabyan, a waitress at a café on the road to the cave says
    tourists visiting them are very interested in that cave and even old
    tourists venture to climb it.
    ''Every time I feel proud when foreigners say words of praise about our
    Geghard and I also feel happy when they pay attention to the cave too,''
    says Zohrabyan. "What do we have except for these beautiful, wonderful
    monuments? We should be represented to the world by them."
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