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    New Model Armenia

    Geographical
    March 2004
    Vol. 76, Issue 3, p24

    Text and photography by Nick Smith

    With a history of persecution, natural disasters and political
    upheaval, Armenia has lurched from one crisis to another. But now it's
    poised to recover and, with the aid of a population in diaspora, is
    starting to reinvent itself as a heritage tourist destination.

    Not many people visit Armenia. In fact, as many people go to Lord's on
    the first day of a test match as go to Armenia in a year. Most of the
    30,000 visitors are 'heritage tourists', which is to say that they are
    part of the estimated four million-strong globally distributed network
    of the Armenian diaspora, descendants of refugee Turkish Armenians who
    fled this part of Central Asia during the Ottoman persecution of
    1915. Most come to rediscover their homeland, track down long-lost
    distant relatives and to commemorate their ancestors. They are a
    much-needed source of income for the two million or so Armenians who
    live in Armenia today.

    Once a far-reaching territory ranging from the Black to the Caspian
    sea, Armenia is now landlocked in the Southern Caucasus, covering an
    area little more than the size of Belgium. It is the smallest of the
    former Soviet states and was the most reluctant to become independent
    when the USSR collapsed in 1991. Armenia benefited from a longstanding
    and strong political alliance, relying heavily on the machinery of the
    Soviet economy. Now, with little of its own heavy industry or
    electronic engineering to support it, Armenia's youth has emigrated
    westward in search of jobs and tertiary education, while the elderly
    and unemployed have returned to the land to scratch out a living as
    subsistence farmers. War in the 1990s with neighbouring Azerbaijan
    drained the economy further, while migration in same period reduced
    Armenia's population by a quarter.

    It's a hard life, not helped by the fact that Armenia has a
    surprisingly dry climate that gives rise to vast areas of
    semidesert. More than 80 per cent of its arable farmland needs to be
    irrigated. Some relief from the unremitting hardship comes in the form
    of tourism: Armenia has an incomparable wealth of medieval (and
    earlier) religious architecture, to which members of the diaspora make
    pilgrimage. At the same time, Armenia has the most beautiful landscape
    imaginable -- the majestic scenery that the country's great composer
    Aram Ilich Khachaturian describes in his sublime 20th-century
    orchestral works.

    Khachaturian is buried under a slab of grey-black granite in the
    Pantheon of Heroes in Armenia's capital, Yerevan. You can see much of
    the city from his resting place: its drab centre fades into an even
    more drab urban sprawl, designed by Soviet architects with an eye more
    on utility than aesthetics. But there are redeeming features: apart
    from the recently refurbished Republic Square (formerly Lenin Square),
    there's an impressive, if defunct, Ferris wheel on the skyline, as
    well as the imperious Ararat brandy factory perched on a plateau high
    above Victory bridge.

    Armenians are proud of their brandy. And so they should be: its deep
    amber colour and smoky simplicity make the ten-year-old a fine match
    for any cognac. Boris Yeltzin likes it so much that he has his own
    barrels in the factory's cellars, as does singer, songwriter, actor
    and local hero Charles Aznovour. Recently, the brandy has been getting
    better and better. But it may be the only thing: for Armenians, life
    under the hammer and sickle was comparatively rosy. But since the
    disintegration of the Soviet Union, the country has become one of the
    poorest in the developed world, with an average annual inflation rate
    of 172 per cent. It has also ceded control of its energy utilities to
    Russia in lieu of debts.

    Not far from Khachaturian's grave is a bronze statue of Komitas, a
    composer whom Armenians hold in even higher regard than Khachaturian,
    if that is possible. As an ethnomusicologist, Komitas travelled the
    length and breadth of Armenia collecting its traditional folk songs,
    which he then wove into the fabric of his own music, music that
    defines Armenia as much as its red, blue and gold flag. As my guide,
    Nina Dadayan, put it, "He writes in the colours of the countryside,
    the gold and the green of the hillsides."

    During the First World War, Komitas saw firsthand the slaughter of
    those whose culture he had done so much to save. He survived the
    genocide, but having witnessed the rape and murder of his people, he
    was plagued by mental illness for the rest of his life. He was unable
    to complete his ongoing choral work, Divine Liturgy, which became the
    last music he ever wrote, and died in Paris in 1935 a broken and
    beaten man. If you look carefully at his statue in the Pantheon you'll
    see it is tarnished and covered with grime, apart from the right index
    finger, which shines like gold. This has been kept clean by the stream
    of Armenians who visit the cemetery to pay their respects by touching
    his hand.

    The genocide is an incredibly emotive subject. The Armenian section of
    the Financial Times World Desk Reference 2004 sums it up, somewhat
    dispassionately, as follows: "1915: Ottomans exile 1.75 million
    Turkish Armenians; most die." And while the book is very careful not
    to use the word 'genocide', the Armenians aren't so
    lily-livered. According to the Armenian National Institute (ANI) in
    Washington, there are 28 official genocide memorials in the
    country. The main one is at Tsitsernakaberd ('Swallow Castle') and is
    a 44-metre stele that symbolises the survival and rebirth of the
    Armenian people. Next to the stele is a ring of 12 huge basalt slabs
    --- closely resembling traditional khachkars, or engraved memorials --
    which encircle and lean towards an eternal flame. The steps down to
    the flame are extremely steep, and you have to look at your feet to
    avoid stumbling. This has the effect of making visitors appear to be
    in mourning. Why there is a need to create this illusion defeats me:
    most people I saw there were weeping.

    The current British government does not recognise the 1915 genocide.
    Fact. On the Holocaust Memorial Day in 2001, the UK, along with many
    other nations (including the USA), honoured the victims of genocide in
    the 20th century, including the Jews killed during the Second Word War
    and the Tutsis murdered in Rwanda in 1994. But there was no mention of
    Armenia. Nicholas Holding, an expert on the former Soviet Union and
    author of the new Bradt Travel Guide to Armenia, says, "So far as the
    1915 genocide is concerned, every Turkish government since has denied
    that it even happened, as have certain US academics. The evidence to
    the contrary seems overwhelming. I imagine that Tony Blair's
    reluctance to acknowledge it stems from his unwillingness for obvious
    reasons to upset Turkey, as well as his own ignorance."

    One "obvious reason" is that Blair and George W Bush need Turkish
    goodwill to secure permission for the use of Incirlik airbase, from
    where they launch air raids on Iraq. Critics of the British-US
    alliance see this denial as shameful -- as shameful as denying, say,
    Auschwitz to spare Gerhard Schroeder's feelings. Writing in the New
    York Press on the 2001 Holocaust Memorial Day, journalist Charles
    Glass said: "Alas poor Tony. Upon whose lack of integrity will he
    model his own when Bill [Clinton] departs? I suppose Al Gore or George
    W Bush is up to the job." Bush appears to have fulfilled Glass's
    expectations.

    The UK's current position is completely at odds with its historical
    record. The first official report on the atrocities against Armenians
    in 1915 was prepared for the British government by Viscount Bryce, who
    submitted his findings to parliament, which published them in an
    official document in 1916. Wartime prime minister David Lloyd George
    said that Ottoman policies regarding its Armenian subjects resulted in
    "exterminating and deporting the whole race". The foreign secretary
    James Balfour described the massacres as "calculated atrocities",
    while Winston Churchill, writing in 1929, ten years before the
    beginning of the Second World War, referred to the massacres as an
    "administrative holocaust".

    The facts and the record haven't changed. What has changed, says Dr
    Rouben Adalian, director of the ANI, is the willingness of the British
    government to concede to the Turkish government's insistence on
    denying the Armenian genocide. "The reluctance to affirm the
    historical record in the face of official denial implies participation
    in that denial," he says. "That is the major departure from the
    original position of the British government back in 1915."

    In December 2003, the Swiss lower house of parliament voted to label
    the killings by Ottoman Empire forces as 'genocide' -- a move welcomed
    by the Armenian ambassador to Switzerland, Zograb Mnatsakanyan, who
    said on Armenian television, "The Swiss parliament has again confirmed
    its adherence to human values and justice."

    With the addition of Switzerland, the list of countries that recognise
    the genocide now has 15 signatories. This includes France, Argentina
    and Russia, but no UK or USA.

    John Hovagimian bounds up the perilously steep and narrow stone
    staircase up to the entrance of the Sourp Astrastatsatjin ('Holy
    Theotokos') of the Noarovank monastery. With his designer travel gear
    and chunky SLR slung around his neck, he looks prosperous and
    confident. To Hovagimian, his tour of Armenia's heritage with his
    newfound Russian and Georgian friends is a big party. And why
    shouldn't it be? He's glad to be home. "Come on down," he shouts,
    before quietly correcting himself, "er, up, I mean". Talking with him,
    it emerges that his exuberance is mostly superficial. "It's nice to
    know we have a history. It's a feeling of grandeur. Every Armenian
    feels this way, and we cry inside for the tragedy. But now you see our
    architecture restored, where once there were no roads."

    Most visitors are, like Hovagimian, members of the Armenian diaspora,
    usually from Canada, France or the USA. And most are fabulously
    wealthy by the standards of native Armenians. One Armenian
    philanthropist, who paid for so much of the restoration work and the
    reappointing of Republic Square in Yerevan, is billionaire Kirk
    Kerkorian, a man who made his money in Las Vegas hotels and Hollywood
    movies.

    And there is some serious urban development in Yerevan. Although
    estimates vary considerably, there seems to be a consensus on
    Kerkorian contributing somewhere in the region of $130 million (USD)
    for a major facelift of the civic centre of the country's capital. So
    you will see plenty of new pavements and resurfaced roads. In fact,
    there are 20 kilometres of new streets in Yerevan, there are five-star
    Western-style hotels and there are Gucci and Armani.

    Travelling around Armenia it's easy to see what donations by members
    of the diaspora are doing for the country, but not so easy to see what
    they mean for the people. Whenever there is a celebration, there is
    always money. (For example, when Armenia's war-damaged tourism
    industry decided to give itself a much-needed boost in 2001 by touting
    the year as the 1,700th anniversary of Armenian Christianity.) And yet
    only one in 1,000 Armenians owns a car and only 14 per cent of the
    population is connected to a telephone.

    Critics of the influx of funds from abroad say that there is no other
    rational conclusion than this: the money may well be restoring civic
    and devotional heritage architecture, but it's also turning Armenia
    into a rich man's playground and transforming Yerevan into a ghastly
    imitation of any Western European city you care to mention. Why
    rebuild quite so many churches, they ask, when Armenia has so many
    rare metals and semi-precious minerals lying underground waiting to be
    exploited? The aid money should be spent releasing the natural wealth
    of the country and helping the indigenous people on a day-to-day
    basis. The reply from the diaspora is that the development is
    creating employment and wealth in a country staggering under the
    burden of its own poverty as a result of the post-Soviet transition.

    But it isn't necessarily that simple. "Even a quick survey of the
    contributions of overseas Armenian organisations would show that
    members of the diaspora remain very concerned about the well-being of
    the population in Armenia," says Adalian. He offers the example of the
    largest of the philanthropic groups, the Armenian General Benevolent
    Union, which supports a range of services from soup kitchens to
    institutions of higher education such as the American University of
    Armenia which, Adalian says, is "preparing new generations of leaders
    and managers".

    However well planned, the spending of money from the diaspora is
    dictated by external events. "There was no choice but to seek to
    rehouse the 500,000 made homeless by the 1988 earthquake," says
    Holding. Also, the closure of several borders meant that road and rail
    routes to Iran in the south that passed through the Azeri exclave of
    Nakhichevan were now literally off limits. This meant that less-used
    routes -- such as that which connects Armenia with Iran via the Selim
    Pass -- which had suffered terribly from soil erosion and
    underinvestment, had to be rebuilt virtually from scratch.

    Conservationists have objected to the reconstruction of the Selim Pass
    road because it travels within a few metres of an ancient Silk Road
    caravanserai. Increased tourism, they say, will ruin the magic of the
    place. They also claim, with more justification, that vibrations from
    the huge freight lorries that are forecast to travel regularly over
    the pass will damage the fabric of this ancient building.

    However, this is the only route into the Yerevan district of Armenia
    from the south. As such, it's an umbilical cord to Iran and, by
    extension, the outside world. Currently, the Turkish border is closed,
    as are the two Azerbaijan borders, and there's little sign of any
    immediate resolution. To the north, the relationship with Georgia is
    unstable, although improvements in the political and economic
    conditions there can only contribute to "reducing ethnic tensions and
    security concerns across the entire Caucasus region", says Adalian.

    PHOTO CAPTION Clockwise from right: the fourth-century monastery of
    Geghard ('spear') was built into the side of a mountain and later
    surrounded by walls. On the UNESCO World Heritage list since 2000, it
    is named after the spear that pierced Christ's side at Calvary;
    'temporary housing in Vayots Dzor is now well into its second decade;
    the Temple of Garni, which was built in the first century AD,
    subsequently destroyed by earthquake and renovated several times

    While it is tempting to think that the collapse of the Soviet Union
    could only have been a good thing, many Armenians would argue with
    this. Under the Soviet regime, people may have lived like "machines",
    says my guide, but at least it was all planned out for them. "There
    was no need to think for tomorrow," she says. There were holidays and
    pensions, and there was electricity and public transport. Now, one of
    the few trains that runs through Armenia takes six hours to complete
    its 70-kilometre journey (that's slower than a London bus on Oxford
    Street). "The problem is," says Nina, offering a somewhat unnecessary
    explanation, "there are too many stops and the train doesn't go fast
    enough."

    It's not just the trains that have fallen into disrepair. As you drive
    around Lake Sevan there is mile after mile of abandoned heavy
    machinery, now broken and idle. They stand by countless unfinished
    construction projects that became derelict before they were ever
    used. There are blocks of concrete crumbling to nothing, their metal
    reinforcements rusting away. There are sections of oil pipeline lying
    unconnected on scrubland by the side of the road.

    Most of the land around Lake Sevan is reclaimed. During the 1950s,
    Soviet hydro-electric power engineers decided to lower the level of
    the lake by 19 metres. As with so many Soviet schemes, the engineers
    were betrayed by their idealism and instead of benefit-ting from
    unlimited free power, new land for arable farming and livestock
    grazing, they got a wasteland. Most of the fish in the lake died and
    the land proved to be useless for cultivation. Only a gorse-like scrub
    plant now grows there in any abundance, while peasants working above
    the old shoreline dig up potatoes, for which they will receive
    100drams (7p) per sack, with their bare hands. In the background, a
    monastery stands on a headland -- once an island -- jutting out into
    the lake.

    Further along the shoreline there is the faded optimism of the 1960s
    Soviet residential areas of Sevan, with its close-packed blocks of
    apartments in estates with names like 'Gagarin', and the obligatory
    Ferris wheel in the luna park, the likes of which you can see in
    Zanzibar, Mozambique, and the former East Germany. It's what my guide
    calls, without a trace of irony, "good old Soviet architecture". It's
    hard to see what the nostalgia is all about -- they're every bit as
    horrible as some of London or Manchester's worst blocks of flats or
    Glasgow's tenements. It's a far cry from the splendor of Armenia's
    churches.

    In the shadow of Mount Ararat there is a monastery called Khor Virap,
    where Gregory the Illuminator was imprisoned in the third century
    AD. Despite his title, he wasn't a manuscript illuminator
    (illustrator). He got his name, and was subsequently imprisoned, for
    casting the light of Christianity into the dark comers of Armenia. For
    a small fee, you can release doves from this monastery, in the same
    way as Noah did as the flood subsided and his ark came to rest on
    Mount Ararat. In this case, however, the doves fly back to their cages
    and their owners 'sell' them again to the next unsuspecting diaspora
    tourist.

    It's a place of mixed feelings. In the local orphanage, children are
    encouraged to draw pictures of Ararat and Noah's ark. These crayon
    drawings are stuck on the wall next to US flags. One class has
    obviously been taught to write, "We love George Bush."

    I wonder if the children who made these drawings have been taught that
    Ararat, the national symbol of Armenia, is in Turkey and that they
    will never get the chance to climb it.

    Visiting Armenia

    Nick Smith travelled to Armenia with British Mediterranean Airways (0845
    772 2277;www.britishmediterranean.com).

    Regent Holidays can organise trips to Armenia (0117 921 1711;
    www.regent-holidays.co.uk).

    Armenia with Nagorno Karabagh by Nicholas Holding is the first
    English-language guide to Armenia. It is published by Bradt.

    PHOTO CAPTION Clockwise from top left: men in Vayots Dzor trade smoked
    fish from Lake Sevan; old women meet in the 'Field of Khatchkars', whose
    900-or-so engraved stone memorials are a national treasure.

    PHOTO CAPTION Noaravank monastery, built in the 13th and 14th centuries
    and renovated in 1998 with money from the diaspora.

    PHOTO CAPTION Clockwise from right: high above the Yeghegis valley is
    the fifth-century fortress of Smbataberd, guarded on three sides by
    steep cliffs.
    Local legend has it that it fell to the Seljuk Turks in the 11th century
    when they used a thirsty horse to sniff out its water supply; the
    eternal flame at the genocide memorial at Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan;
    the memorial's 44-metre stele.

    PHOTO CAPTION Top: standing just below the top of the Selim Pass
    (2,410metres), the caravanserai at Selim, one of the best-preserved in
    the world, used to be an important resthouse for traders following the
    Silk Road; Above: subsistence farmers scratch out a living growing
    potatoes at the Selim Pass.

    PHOTO CAPTION Clockwise from top left: Gregory the Illuminator kneels
    before King Trdat in a 17th-century Turkish manuscript; Mount Ararat and
    the monastery of Khor Virap (deep dungeon), where Gregory was imprisoned
    by King Trdat in the late third century; a child's drawing of Noah's ark
    on Mount Ararat.

    *************************************
    Earthquakes in the Caucasus: a shaky history

    As the recent earthquake in southern Iran tragically showed, the
    collision of the Eurasian and Arabian tectonic plates has turned this
    part of Central Asia into an earthquake danger zone. Although it lies
    to the north of Iran, Armenia sits on the same boundary and is subject
    to the same catastrophic geophysical forces.

    As tectonic plates move, they often grind against each other, slowly
    building up stress until one of them moves suddenly. When this
    happens, the result is an earthquake, a natural phenomenon with which
    Armenia is all too familiar. Historical accounts describe how
    earthquakes claimed thousands of lives, destroyed the ancient cities
    of Erznka, Erzroom, Basen and Dvin and ruined the temples of Garni
    (below left) and Zvartnots.

    On 7 December 1988, northwestern Armenia was struck by a quake
    measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale. It devastated the cities of
    Giumri, Vanadzor and Spitak. Countless houses were obliterated,
    leaving more than half a million people homeless. Manufacturing, as
    well as cultural, scientific and educational institutions, were
    destroyed. According to the UN Development Programme, more than 45,000
    people were pulled from the rubble, 25,000 of whom were dead. In 2000,
    the UNDP estimated that 20,000 people were still displaced and living
    in temporary housing (left).


    Geographical is the property of Campion Interactive Publishing
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