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A Step Up From The Chain Gang: Crafts Created By Armenian InmatesPri

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  • A Step Up From The Chain Gang: Crafts Created By Armenian InmatesPri

    A STEP UP FROM THE CHAIN GANG: CRAFTS CREATED BY ARMENIAN INMATES PRISONERS PROUD OF HANDIWORK
    Avet Demourian

    Toronto Star, Canada
    May 22 2006

    YEREVAN, Armenia-Men in black turtlenecks bend over the workshop
    tables, intently carving key chains, model ships, even an elaborate
    walnut backgammon set.

    These and other handicrafts will go for sale at the Prison Arts kiosk
    at a weekend market in the centre of Yerevan, the capital. It's part
    of a new program to occupy the time of Armenia's prison inmates.

    The program is the brainchild of Justice Minister David Arutyunian
    and the director of the ministry's prison reform program, Nikolai
    Arustamian. The inmate "is occupied, he creates and gets satisfaction
    from this," Arutyunian says. "For many, the financial aspect is
    secondary."

    The prisoners weave wall hangings and craft watches, religious
    medallions, slippers and leather cases for mobile phones and keys.

    Each piece gets a label in Armenian and English identifying the
    craftsman and describing what materials were used.

    The label does not indicate the sentence being served by the artisan
    or the crime - but the inmates eagerly volunteer that information.

    "I've been `inside' since I was 16," says 34-year-old Fyodor
    Matriashin, serving his sixth sentence for robbery. "I began making
    wooden boxes when I first arrived, but I used to give them away. Now
    I'm paid for them."

    Each of Armenia's 13 prisons, home to some 3,000 inmates, had some
    sort of manufacturing department when the country was part of the
    Soviet Union, but production shut down and most of the equipment was
    carted away after the federation broke apart at the end of 1991.

    An advocacy group, the Assistance to the Prisoner Fund, started
    prisoners making clothes and now is trying to revive the manufacture
    of ceramics and bricks at Erebuni prison, a facility in Yerevan for
    repeat offenders.

    But it is the crafts workshops that seem to give prisoners the
    greatest satisfaction.

    "Just about everyone in the prison uses my cigarette holders," says
    Abel Pogosian, a 32-year-old serving his fifth sentence for assault.

    "Now maybe someone on the outside will like them, too."
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