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  • Indian Students In Armenia

    INDIAN STUDENTS IN ARMENIA

    Azg/arm
    12 Feb 05

    Viviek Kumar studies at the Yerevan State Medical University. He wants
    to become a cardiologist and says that the profession of a physician
    is one of the most respected in India. He used to live in a town
    near Calcutta and had an Armenian friend there. He learnt about the
    Yerevan State Medical University from newspapers. "I read about the
    medical University in one of the Armenian newspapers publishing in
    Calcutta. My friend studied there. He talked of both the University and
    Armenia with love," Viviek Kumar said. He learnt Armenian in 6 months.

    Not only Diaspora Armenians but also the foreign citizens have the
    opportunity of studying in the Universities of Armenia. The Deansâ~@~Y
    office of the foreign students at the Yerevan state Medical University
    opened in 1957. In the beginning the number of Diaspora Armenians
    prevailed among the students, but in the course of the last few years
    the number of the students from Syria, Iran and India increased. The
    Indian students prefer to study at the Medical University. About 700
    Indians study there at present. Itâ~@~Ys worth mentioning that they
    are paying $1500 annually in Armenia, while they have to pay several
    times more in their country.

    Ravindra Rara used to live in a three-storied house with 30
    relatives. He said it was difficult to get accustomed to living without
    the family. He visited all the remarkable places of Armenia, but most
    of all he admires the snow. "It seldom snowed in the Indian town I
    lived in. It is so beautiful when the snow covers the streets here,"
    Ravindra Rara said.

    The girls brought Indian dresses, bright adornments and various
    items from India for decorating their rooms. The posters of Indian
    matinee idols also decorate their rooms. "I like wearing Indian
    national dresses. Though I like very much the way the clothes that
    the Armenian girls wear, I prefer wearing our national dresses in
    Armenia," Ivsha Syet said.

    One can see the Armenian pomegranate beside the bright Indian
    adornments on the table in the room of the Indian students.

    By Arevik Badalian

    --Boundary_(ID_+oFPoqvNZSRQTii6RBzx8w)--
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