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Right at home in Armenia

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  • Right at home in Armenia

    www.csmonitor.com
    The Home Forum>Kidspace
    from the October 17, 2006 edition

    Right at home in Armenia
    By Donna Scaramastra Gorman

    Arpinka lives with her mother and her grandmother in a one- bedroom
    apartment in Yerevan, Armenia (pronounced Ar-MEEN-yuh). The apartment
    is cold in the winter and hot in the summer. It's small, but it's
    neat, with handmade lace curtains on the windows. Decorative rugs
    hang on the walls much as your family might have pictures on the walls.

    Arpinka is 8 years old. Her mother, Liliya, works as a nanny and
    makes $10 a day - but that's considered a good salary in Armenia,
    where it is very difficult to find a job.

    ARMENIAN GIRL: Arpinka, 8, lives in the city of Yerevan. She is in
    the third grade, and she speaks Armenian and Russian, and a little
    English, too.

    Before her mother found work, the three of them lived with Arpinka's
    aunt, her uncle, and her cousins, Katya and Rubik. Arpinka is happy
    to live in her own apartment now, but sometimes she misses her cousins.

    Armenia is a tiny country. It is south of Russia, east of Turkey,
    and north of Iran.

    Like most Armenian schoolchildren, Arpinka speaks both Armenian and
    Russian - and even a little English. She is in the third grade at
    school, where her favorite subjects are math and English. The school
    is close to her apartment, so she walks there by herself each morning.

    After school, Arpinka helps her babushka - that's "grandmother"
    in Russian - make blini, which are thin pancakes, or varenniki -
    dumplings stuffed with meat and cabbage or potatoes. She can even
    make an omelet by herself.

    Arpinka likes to cook. But instead of a stove, her family has one
    Bunsen burner - which is like a camping stove. Because of its open
    flame, she has to be very careful when cooking.

    >From their kitchen window, Arpinka can see all the way to Mt. Ararat
    in the neighboring country of Turkey.

    The mountain used to be part of Armenia, and for Armenians, it is
    considered a sacred place - some people say Noah's ark mentioned in
    the Bible is still somewhere on Mt. Ararat.

    The snowcapped mountain looms over her city, and as the day passes,
    Arpinka likes to watch it seem to change colors in different types
    of light.

    When Arpinka grows up, she wants to be a dentist or a fashion
    designer. She hasn't decided which yet.

    But she won't graduate from school until she is 17 years old, so she
    has plenty of time to make up her mind.

    For now, she enjoys playing with her cousins. Katya, who studies at
    the music conservatory, is teaching her to play the piano, and Rubik
    teaches her how to play chess.

    On weekends, Arpinka goes to the market with her mother. The market
    is outdoors, and the vendors sell cheeses, vegetables, bread, and
    spices - everything you could need for a meal.

    The meat at the market hangs on hooks. In warm weather, watermelons
    are piled up in the road. Tomatoes and cucumbers are stacked neatly
    together on tables.

    NAME YOUR PRICE: Sellers present a variety of cheeses at an indoor
    market in Yerevan, Armenia, where Arpinka lives with her family. Many
    Armenians shop at markets such as this one.

    Instead of paying a set fee for each item she buys, Arpinka's mother
    haggles or bargains with the vendors over the prices. Other shoppers
    do this, too.

    It is the custom in Armenia. Arpinka's mother says it helps her save
    money .

    The market is crowded, so Arpinka stays near her mother while she
    shops.

    Back home, her mother and grandmother can vegetables for the winter
    and turn berries into jam. They'll store all of the bottles and jars
    on their balcony, where it is cool year round.

    If the weather is nice, Arpinka can play with the other neighborhood
    kids in the courtyard of the apartment building.

    Sometimes, when her mom isn't working and it's not too hot, the two
    of them take a bus to the top of a hill overlooking the city. There
    is an old amusement park there, and they can walk in the shade or sit
    by the fountains. They can even buy ice cream from one of the vendors.

    At night, Arpinka, her mother, and her babushka curl up together
    to sleep.

    Arpinka doesn't like to sleep - there's too much she wants to do. But
    soon they all fall asleep, in the shadow of Mt. Ararat.

    http://www.csmonitor.com:80/2006/1017/p18 s02-hfks.html
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