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  • Never Make Assumptions About Waiters

    NEVER MAKE ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT WAITERS

    Borders Today, UK
    May 11 2006

    I was humbled this week by an exchange with a young waiter.

    After some pleasantries about nothing in particular, I confessed I
    couldn't place his accent at all. He explained he was from Yerevan
    in Armenia, writes Peter Clarke.

    My ignorance of Armenia, I admit it, is almost total. I knew it was a
    former Soviet Republic and somewhere in the Caucasus. I knew they had
    been the subject of Turkish genocide and they have their own Orthodox
    Church. That is about it.

    My new friend disarmed me with his life story. He holds a PhD in
    engineering but has to earn his way as a migrant waiter as his nation's
    economy has shrivelled and stalled. I could see his intelligence behind
    his darting eyes and his merriment. He remarked Scots have little
    appreciation of how lucky we are. Our complaints about our lives are
    petty footnotes compared to the experiences of millions abroad.

    He observed that most migrants or immigrants, once they have picked
    up our language, love Scotland, or Britain, more than the natives.

    This is my feeling too.

    I was born in Venice, Italy, with family roots in the badlands of
    Belarus. Yet I think I know more and have a deeper affection for
    Scotland than most who have never known anything else.

    My new friend then disarmed me totally by quoting both Scott's,
    'The Young Lochinvar' and Burns 'My Heart is in the Highlands',
    saying Scottish authors are highly regarded in the mountains of
    Armenia. How many Borderers could quote these poems without flaw? I
    felt thoroughly diminished.

    The accession of the former Warsaw Pact nations to the European
    Union three years ago, with Bulgaria, Romania and possibly the former
    Yugoslav nations joining the EU next year, soon all the more humble
    jobs will be filled by these brave migrating people. As far as I
    can learn most want to return home as soon as they have accumulated
    some funds.

    This seems to me a genuinely new and largely unmapped phenomenon. In
    past centuries we operated a version of farming termed transhumance
    - living on upland shielings with our stock. Now we have a variety
    of this transhumance by way of young people travelling thousands of
    miles, grateful for jobs we are reluctant to take. I am resolved to
    try to be more thoughtful when I encounter them.

    We are told the Union Flag will be 300 years old in 2007.

    The Act of Union that abolished the English and Scottish parliaments
    to create one of Great Britain, never authorised the overlay of
    the St George's Cross on the St Andrew's Cross. It just came to be
    through usage.

    I like the notion that it evolved rather than being designed by a
    committee. St Patrick's diagonal red did not get incorporated until
    Ireland joined the Parliamentary Union in 1801.

    Recent research has confirmed the curious fact all the earliest
    representations of the Scottish emblem are shades of red, from scarlet
    through to pink. The blue, a sort of washed-out imperial purple,
    was a later accretion. I have seen it explained that red is the most
    readily available dye and that blue was just not possible in a form
    that could endure the weather.

    I have also seen it asserted that the saltire was pink as the first
    five Scottish Stewart monarchs were gay. I could believe anything of
    that dynasty, including the notion the last one, Bonnie Prince Charlie,
    was too. James VI and I was certainly not.

    I had the good fortune, if that isn't too incongruent a phrase,
    to attend a beautiful service to mark the end of a life in my valley.

    Ettrick Kirk is a perfect setting for a funeral. As it happened it was
    a fine spring day but the location works well on a bleak wet winter
    day too. Lonely kirks engulfed in ancient trees are difficult to beat.

    The life of Mrs Janet Scott of Cacrabank was remembered by several
    generations of relatives and her neighbours. She died rich in affection
    and honour and in her 93rd year without much discomfort.

    Samuel Sirocky, the minister, surely the first Czech divine in our
    glen, chose his words with felicity. At many funerals we go through
    the courtesies of giving thanks for a life but on this occasion with
    was no hint of the sentiments being contrived.

    It is not easy to make the leap of imagination back to the Borders
    she knew in her earliest years, in Peebles. There were barely any
    cars. Transport was by steam train or by cart. Work consisted of
    two options - the mills or the hills. The Liberals were running the
    country. Electricity and phones had been invented but not reached
    our rural fastnesses.

    She, and her friends, could have had no conception of the terrible
    wars and cruelties of the 20th century or of the technical advances.

    Janet Scott once perplexed me by boasting her remote and handsome
    home was so 'central'. Central?! "Oh yes," she said, "20 miles to
    Innerleithan and 20 miles to Hawick and 20 miles to Selkirk". I later
    realised that far back, you walked these distances without complaint.

    Mrs Scott's was a lovely life, in a lovely family in a lovely glen.
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