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Georgia New Edu. Law: Do Javakhk's Demographic Changes Stand Behind?

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  • Georgia New Edu. Law: Do Javakhk's Demographic Changes Stand Behind?

    GEORGIA'S NEW EDUCATIONAL LAW

    Do Javakhk's Demographic Changes Stand Behind?

    Azg/am
    22 Oct 04

    Dali Aghdgomeladze is a teacher of Georgian in one of Akhalkalak's
    schools. She speaks Armenian brilliantly. I asked her whether
    Georgian is ignored in Javakhk. "Some people try to picture it like
    that but there is no ignorancein fact. Everything hangs on parents and
    families. When parents explain children that they should learn
    English, Georgian, they do so", Dali said.

    Georgian language has been a school subject in the schools of Javakhk
    since the Soviet times but only 1 out of 100 school graduates knew
    Georgian letters. Though Georgia's new authorities make efforts to
    teach Georgian to Armenians of Javakhk there is hardly any progress
    today. There were cases when teachers sent from Tbilisi to remote
    villages of Javakhk learnt Armenian but none of pupils learnt
    Georgian.

    But Georgia's "rose" leaders never give up. A draft law on "Public
    Education of Georgia" is to be discussed in the parliament in near
    future. "81 per cent of Javakhk's population is acquainted with the
    coming changes and support reforms", Haravayin Darpas, Javakhk's
    Armenian newspaper quoted education minister Kakha Lomaya as
    saying. "Those who understand the meaning and purpose of the reforms
    support the project. But there are also people opposing it. Those are
    the corrupted directors of schools", Lomaya said.

    The draft law was not welcomed in Javakhk and in Azeri populated Kvemo
    Kartli. "We are against this project, as well as Azeris", Levon
    Levanian, representative of Georgia's ombudsman to Akhalkalak and
    Ninotsminda, said. He said that law's 3d article's 5th and 6th points
    are the most worrying.

    The 5th point reads: "Georgian is the teaching language in all
    educational establishments. Abkhaz language together with Georgian is
    the teaching language of Abkhazia". The 6th point reads: "If the
    language of an educational establishment does not correspond to the
    mother tongue of a pupil, the guardians' board may include programs of
    teaching pupil's mother tongue or else subjects in the mother tongue
    but only within the frames of the current financial support of the
    state".

    In case the law is passed, all subjects at the schools of Javakhk will
    be taught in Georgian except for Armenian language and literature. 99
    per centof teachers of Javakhk's schools do not know Georgian, and one
    can hardly fancy an Armenian teacher explaining to Armenian pupils
    Mendeleyev's law in Georgian.

    People think in Akhalkalak that the new educational law has a
    far-reaching aim of shifting the region's demography. Head of Virk
    Party Davit Rstakian says: "The state pays 500 lari ($270) those who
    will come to teach in Georgian. There is a guileful aim behind the
    law: an attempt to change Javakhk=80=99s demographic picture. As soon
    as the law is passed, hundreds of teachers will come to the region
    with their families and Armenian teachers will drop out of the
    schools".

    "Georgians always note that Georgia is in the 2d place with number of
    Armenian schools after Armenia. That's true but that is not due to
    Georgians but comes from Armenians habit of living in communities. The
    fact that Armenians inhabit whole regions has been disturbing all
    Georgian governments since 1918. They made every effort to bar the
    Armenians. They succeeded in Akhaltskha", Rstakian says.

    Levanian is also concerned but is suspicious whether Georgians will
    stand Javakhk's winter. "Even if they inhabit region with Georgians
    they will hardly stay here. It's awfully cold here. The government has
    already sent few dozens of teachers this year, we'll see if they will
    stand the cold or not", he says.

    A branch of Georgia's state university opened in Akhalkalak 3
    yearsago. "They teach only in Georgian at the university and 100-150
    students come tostudy from all over Georgia annually. The state
    provides good conditions for them. The state attempts to change
    demography of Javakhk artificially. The university will release
    semi-educated Armenians, because they don't know Georgian, and
    well-educated Georgians. The latter ones will settle in Javakhk for
    5-6 years for their studies, will occupy positions and eventually stay
    here", a resident of Akhalkalak, Vartan Hakobian, says.

    Artur Yeremian, head of Akhalkalak Region's Administration, noticesno
    sign of Javakhk's demographic shift. "We know from the experience that
    only Armenians can endure Javakhk's conditions", he says reminding
    that in 1989 newly inhabited Georgians could stand only one winter and
    soon left, leaving the houses especially made for them.

    By Tatoul Hakobian
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