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  • Ray of light in family's black life

    BBC News, UK
    Sept 17 2004

    Ray of light in family's black life

    By Ruben Mangasarian
    For BBCRussian.com

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3665688.stm

    I received many e-mails at my photo agency after my photo story
    "Black Life" was published on the Karabakh Page of BBCRussian.com and
    then on BBC News Online.


    Ruben says baby Maria is the happiest in the family - because she
    doesn't understand anything

    The photos related the story of an Armenian refugee family from
    Azerbaijan living in desperate poverty in Bagratashen, near the
    Armenian capital, Yerevan.

    The conflict over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh - in
    Azerbaijan but claimed by Armenians - displaced thousands of people
    in 1988-1994.

    "I don't think in my life photos have ever moved me more," wrote
    Heidi Wallace from Los Angeles in California.

    "The depth of this poor family's plight is almost more than I can
    bear."

    "I would go through the ends of the world to send them a care
    package," added Christina Flanary, also from the US.

    I will never forget those overwhelming feelings. Thinking about
    taking those pictures, I realised what was hitting so hard.

    The mother Lida's "black life" was like a real hell on Earth - not
    the one for evil sinners.

    Tough lives

    The family was covered by a pall of smoke and soot from burning
    plastic bags in their kitchen stove - they couldn't afford normal
    fuel.


    Black life - one refugee family's struggle against poverty


    In pictures


    Everything was black: the walls, curtains, clothes, the faces of
    Lida's children.

    It seemed they had given up knowing any other life and kept only
    their love for each other.

    It was different in the summer. As the weather was warm the stove was
    taken outside.

    But life was, and is, still tough. They have almost no furniture -
    just two beds, several chairs and a bench.

    All the clothing is kept in big sacks.

    The only electrical appliance in the house is a bulb. No fridge, no
    radio, no TV and, what shocked me most, no toilet.

    I didn't have the courage to ask them how they survived without one.

    New clothes

    Jay, a BBC News Online reader from Britain, sent some money, so I
    paid local authorities to build a toilet cabin for Lida's family.


    Lida cooks an omelette - she will not eat herself, but give it to the
    children
    Then I needed to get them into new clothes. I wanted them to wear
    fresh shirts sent from Tokyo on their clean washed bodies.

    I asked the children - have they ever had a bath or taken a shower?
    They didn't know what they were.

    So I arranged for them to visit local communal baths. It was the
    first time they had washed in something other than a small tub with
    lukewarm water.

    Lida is the only person who knows the outside world - she goes out to
    earn some money.

    The rest of the family don't leave the house much - only to get water
    from a tap nearby.

    The children don't know what friendship is, they still don't go to
    school, they cannot read or write.

    Readers' help

    Yolande McLean, born in Canada, currently designs publications in
    Tokyo, Japan. She wrote:


    The family in their new clothes....
    "When I saw Ruben Mangasarian's photos of Lida and her family, I was
    struck by the compassion behind them. I knew the family must have
    endured circumstances as harsh as any I'd come across.

    "And then I thought, in spite of the soot and smoke, what beautiful
    kids! Armen had a shy, self-conscious smile; Mariam seemed pensive.

    I showed the story to Jay in England and said 'let's do something.' I
    think he said, 'Sure! Cool!'"

    "Ruben asked me why we wanted to help a family living in an
    unfamiliar country so far away. The simplest answer is, why not?" she
    went on.

    "The fact is, though, Armenia really doesn't seem so far or so
    strange. After you've travelled a while, borders, distances, and
    differences are not formidable obstacles."

    Yolande said she felt Lida could use a friend. "I'm no refugee, but I
    understood what it was like to be a stranger," she said.

    "I'm delighted to see Asya smiling and wearing her new cardigan, and
    is that my velvet baseball cap on Armen?"

    Colour in their lives

    Jay Dykes, 38, from the UK, wrote:

    "My friend in Tokyo, Yolande, alerted me to your haunting images that
    depict the life of Lida and her children.

    ... kindly sent by readers Yolande [left] and Jay
    "Words fail me... when I viewed your photos I was immediately moved
    by them.

    "I feel it was the strength of the pictures, the strength of my
    friend's words, and the strength that I could see in the eyes of the
    whole family peering out of the darkness that made me want to do
    something, anything, to try and help," he added.

    Yolande has sent from Tokyo two boxes with clothes and shoes, the
    third one is on its way.

    Jay sent some money. They were the first to spring into action to
    help Lida's family.

    But the family still need help to bring some colour into their "black
    life".
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