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  • ANKARA: Barbed Wire Fence Dividing Two Neighbors

    BARBED WIRE FENCE DIVIDING TWO NEIGHBORS

    Hurriyet
    Dec 4 2008
    Turkey

    YEREVAN - Despite diplomatic relations picking up in recent months
    with President Gul's visit to Yerevan, the border between Armenia and
    Turkey remains closed. People that remember once breakfasting in Turkey
    and lunching in Armenia, now have a barbed wire fence cutting them off

    There is a lake between Turkey and Armenia that separates the
    two countries. The Armenians call it "Aghuryan," and the Turks,
    "Arpacay." The lake is so fertile it is swarming with fish. Neither
    Armenians nor Turks can fish in the lake. Just 20 minutes from the
    lake, barbed wire splits a railroad in two.

    It is just one segment of the immense railway that stretches through
    Armenia to Turkey. The entrance to Haygazsor Village at the north
    of the lake is under the control of Russian and Armenian soldiers. A
    sharp lookout is kept at the border of the village. It is forbidden
    for an ordinary Armenian to enter the church of the village, even
    for the Sunday service. The only way to attend the service is with
    special permission to enter the village.

    Before sunrise, in a cab driven by a Mr. Suren, we hit the road for
    Gyumri, the closest border point to Turkey and the second biggest
    city in Armenia. We spoke with Mr. Suren throughout the journey and
    occasionally stopped at villages to speak to villagers. We were told
    by 90 percent of villagers that they escaped from various cities
    and towns of Anatolia, especially Kars, during the events of 1915,
    to Armenia, which was then under Soviet rule.

    The Armenian language they speak has an Anatolian accent. Every village
    has its own special dialect. Because of this, it is sometimes hard
    for people in neighbouring villages to understand each other. The
    villages are no different from typical Anatolian villages and neither
    are the villagers. They have named the places they live in after the
    towns and cities in Anatolia they migrated from. Nearly all of the
    villagers understand Turkish, even if they do not speak it.

    Protecting the churches The major problem these villagers face is
    the regular supply of water. While Yerevan, the extremely modern
    and European looking capital of Armenia, is only 40 minutes away,
    these villages are still without pipes. The villagers also face great
    difficulties when the temperature drops below -40 degrees during
    winter. Heating is as much of a problem as water.

    We traveled from Yerevan to Gyumri in just over two hours in fits
    and starts. The first stop for the Hurriyet Daily News was at a
    journalist's club in Gyumri called Asparez. Without delay, we continued
    on to the border with the club president, Levon Barsexyan. Along
    the way Barsexyan acquainted us with the city. He told about the
    one storey houses built precaution to Gyumri's location on a fault
    line. Barsexyan said the streets and houses in Gyumri were similar
    to those in Kars. "The Armenians migrated from Kars to Gyumri and
    brought their lifestyle with them to this city."

    Barsexyan's grandfather was born in Kars. Before the closing of the
    border, they used to go to Kars for breakfast and be back in Gyumri
    for lunch. According to Barsexyan, the Soviet rulers demanded the
    demolition of the churches of Gyumri but the people cleverly built
    tall buildings around the churches, hiding the churches in within the
    buildings courtyards. They saved many thousand-year-old churches from
    demolition this way. When the Republic of Armenia gained independence
    after the fall of the Soviet Union, the tall buildings were demolished
    and the churches were visible once more.

    During Soviet rule, Gyumri was called "Leninagan," in homage to
    Lenin. Barsexyan said the city was now known by both names. There
    are still visible traces in the village of the 1988 earthquake. We
    walked around Gyumri under Barsexyan's guide and reached the border
    with Turkey.

    Barsexyan warned us to hide our cameras as a precaution as we
    approached the barbed wire. A few minutes later, we passed down the
    road, walking along the railway line, half of which extends into
    Turkey. We reached the border between the two countries, and looking
    through the mesh of barbed wire, I gazed upon the country of my birth,
    before rounding up my week long trip to Armenia.
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