Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sukhumi: Cafe Lika On The Brink Of War

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sukhumi: Cafe Lika On The Brink Of War

    SUKHUMI: CAFE LIKA ON THE BRINK OF WAR
    Zygmunt Dzieciolowski

    OpenDemocracy
    August 14, 2009

    I'm not sure I can recommend the Abkhazian house wine that gets
    served in the bars and restaurants of Sukhumi. The Abkhazians make
    some drinkable wine, like the 'Psou' brand that is served in Moscow's
    upscale Aromatniy Mir supermarket chain, but their rough and ready
    house wine is something to be avoided.

    That's why, on a summer evening in a Sukhumi cafe, in the company of
    tourists from St Petersburg, I was sticking to glasses of chacha -
    a local grappa that is as strong as hell and as cheap as bananas in
    Central America. Saturday evenings in Black Sea resorts are times for
    promenading, browsing the bars and restaurants and possibly planning
    a late night visit to a disco. At least that is what happens in the
    other resorts that circle the Black Sea, from Sozopol and Yalta to
    Sochi, Constanza, and even Batumi, just down the coast in Georgia.

    But this was Sukhumi, the capital of the self-proclaimed independent
    country of Abkhazia. I stepped out of the bar on to a side street away
    from the sea and was enveloped by silence and the feeling that I was
    lost. Side street met side street in the darkness, and I wandered past
    half-ruined buildings, their broken doors and smashed windows not yet
    repaired after the war that had finished a decade and a half earlier.

    Around one corner I at last found a sign of life, a poorly-lit grocery
    store that was open around the clock. A couple of customers were
    inside, buying beer and Coke.

    Something about the scene depressed me. This Black Sea town had none
    of the sounds, lights and life of a resort at the height of the summer
    season. It seemed rejected, outcast, cursed. What unspoken sin had
    it committed to be condemned to such total abandonment?

    Left, left, right, straight a bit and then left again. I wandered
    aimlessly through the gloomy streets, leaving the grocery store
    vignette behind, hoping to find something to lift my melancholy. On
    the corner where Lakoba Street met Confederates Street, I found it.

    Cafe Lika was still serving its guests. They sat outside, their drinks
    arranged on two tables set on the sidewalk. It was like a scene from
    a Jim Jarmusch film: strange types, absurd questions and answers,
    and all lit by dim, moody lights.

    A fat oriental-looking woman with black hair invited me to sit down. I
    sat, and we both watched two unshaven characters talking drunkenly
    in front of their damaged old Lada car.

    "At first I thought it was a UFO landing on my car," one of them
    explained.

    "Have you ever seen a UFO with horse's hoofs?" countered the other. "I
    knew it was a horse on the car from the moment it made a horsey
    noise. Jihahahhaaa!" The man started trying to neigh, just like the
    horse that had landed on their car.

    The two had been driving slowly along a bumpy, muddy country road,
    down from the mountains towards Sukhumi. Suddenly a horse had jumped
    out of the bushes, nearly killing them both.

    "Does this happen in your country too?" one of them asked me. "Horses
    jumping out and smashing up cars? Where else do things like this
    happen?"

    I ordered another glass of chacha, and watched the two guys driving
    away with a screech of tyres. The large woman who served me was Lika,
    the owner of the cafe. She too took another drink - rough house wine,
    drunk from a coffee cup with a broken handle - and began talking.

    It's a pity, she said, that we didn't meet twenty years earlier, when
    life was at its best. Back then she used to work for Sovyetskaya
    Torgovlya, the Soviet retail industry. At a time of massive
    shortages of food and consumer goods, working in department stores
    or supermarkets was a dream job. Her old store was located in the
    northern suburbs of Sukhumi. It was destroyed during the 1992-1993
    war against Georgia, its ruins a haunting reminder to drivers passing
    by of happier times.

    Back in 1992, when Georgian troops entered Sukhumi, her job put her
    on the mafia wanted list. Lika was thought to be rich, as everybody
    knew that shop staff accepted bribes or channelled goods to favoured
    customers at inflated prices. Luckily she was in Sochi when the
    looters came. If she had been at home, she would have been killed
    trying to protect her possessions.

    She isn't an ethnic Abkhazian, although that wouldn't have saved
    her. Lika Bogdanesyan is Armenian, one of the sizeable Armenian
    minority that has always lived along the Black Sea coast. Even now,
    over forty thousand Armenians live in separatist Abkhazia, making up
    a fifth of its population.

    When Lika returned from hiding with friends in Sochi, she found
    her flat looted and empty. There was nothing left. No carpets, no
    furniture, no television set, no clothes, no refrigerator.

    "Our Georgian neighbours did that. One guy who lived in another part
    of our apartment block was seen taking furniture away. Two others in
    the block tried to protect their belongings and were killed. But not
    all our Georgian neighbours behaved like that. There was one couple
    living next door - he drove a taxi and she was a nurse in the drug
    addiction clinic. We were like one big extended family. Whenever
    somebody needed something - sugar, butter, money, washing powder -
    we always knew we could borrow from the others."

    The couple offered to hide the valuables of their Abkhazian friends so
    the looters wouldn't find them. When the danger was over, they returned
    the items. But then they realized that Abkhazian troops were about
    to recapture Sukhumi and they fled. Lika has not heard from them since.

    Many other Georgians lived in their concrete apartment block in the
    northern suburbs. They were mostly Svans, highland Georgians who had
    moved in from nearby villages. They had all left, and when the war
    ended they were replaced by new tenants, mostly Abkhazian.

    "Shevardnadze and the Georgians shouldn't have started the war,"
    continued Lika. Even fifteen years on she could barely hide her
    anger. Her friends in the cafe felt the same. "The Georgians were
    our neighbours. We lived peacefully for generations. There were mixed
    marriages. And then in one single moment this peace was ruined."

    "How can I forgive a man who was my neighbour for years and then
    suddenly wants to loot and kill me? You never know what these Georgians
    have on their mind. Blood stains can't just be wiped away like water."

    But Lika doesn't hate Georgians. How could she? After all she married
    one. It was a true love story. They had founded Cafe Lika together
    ten years ago. Without her he probably would have left Abkhazia,
    moving away just like all his relatives.

    "Was it dangerous for him after the war?" I asked Lika. "To live as
    a Georgian among Abkhazians?

    He suffered terribly during the war, she replied. "He faced firing
    squads on three different occasions. The Georgians wanted to shoot
    him as a traitor. The Abkhazians wanted to shoot him because he was
    Georgian. Each time he walked away alive it was a miracle. But his
    heart couldn't take it. He had two heart attacks afterwards, and the
    doctors were able to save him both times. But then he had a third
    one a year ago, and the doctors couldn't do anything."

    None of his relatives came to his funeral - only Lika and her son. A
    few months ago his sister was allowed to make the journey from her
    home in Georgia to pay her respects at his grave.

    The couple had worked hard to make the cafe a success. In the
    beginning, penniless, they brought every cup, plate and glass from
    their own home for their customers to use. Friends also helped
    them. At first Lika and her husband lived in the cafe around the
    clock. Step by step they built the business up, buying new equipment,
    fridges, an oven and a microwave. Two or three years ago they had
    made enough money to hire a waitress and an extra pair of hands in
    the kitchen. In the summer season they helped visiting Russians to
    find holiday accommodation, bringing in a few more pennies.

    Lika agrees that life has improved in Abkhazia a great deal over
    the last few years. The worst time was straight after the war, in
    1993. Yeltsin's Russia introduced sanctions blocking supplies of food
    and medecine. People were surviving by shuttling back and forth to
    Russia, selling Abkhazia's most popular produce - tangerines. They
    were restricted to 20 kilos per visit. So Russian "kommersanty"
    would park their lorries just over the border, and set off back for
    central Russia as soon as they were full.

    I remembered that overcrowded border on the outskirts of Sochi from
    a visit in the nineties. Under the October rain thousands of people
    with bags, boxes, or trolleys full of tangerines were waiting patiently
    for their passports to be inspected. On the way back to Abkhazia they
    would take salt, sugar, rice and other basics.

    When Putin's Russia lifted sanctions and opened the border for its
    own citizens Abkhazia became attractive as a tourist destination. It
    did not matter to Russians who could not afford holidays abroad or in
    the neighbouring Sochi that service in Abkhazia was poor. Most were
    just happy to be able to return to a region they fondly remembered
    as a Soviet paradise.

    "Of course there are more customers in summer. But if only the
    politicians could sort their problems out it would be even better."

    The locals keep coming even in the winter months. Now that her husband
    is dead, it is their companionship that keeps Lika going with the
    cafe. She meets people, she socializes. Otherwise she would suffer
    the bitter loneliness of living alone at home.

    "Now they are preparing for war again". Lika watched TV every night
    and had no doubts about what the politicians were cooking up in their
    political kitchens. "They don't care about us ordinary people", she
    says. She had lost any respect for presidents, ministers or members
    of parliament a long time ago. "Saakashvili, Putin, Bagapsh, why don't
    they sit down together at the negotiating table and sort things out?"

    Lika's monologue was suddenly rudely interrupted by the sound of a car
    being badly parked in front of the cafe with the engine being revved to
    breaking point. When it was switched off a different noise took over.

    "Liiiihhhhahaaa!"

    "Brouhhhh hhahahhhhaaaa!!"

    "Jiaaahahhehaaa!!!&quo t;

    The two drunken men were back, still trying to make the sound of a
    horse landing on their car. They had also picked up a passenger, the
    owner of that very same car-damaging horse. The three were determined
    to have at least one more drink before the night ended, and Lika's
    cafe was the only one remaining in Sukhumi open so late. How lucky,
    I thought, that they had not tried to bring the horse along too.

    I returned to my Ritza hotel room late at night. From the balcony I
    watched the dark sea barely lit by the moon and the stars. The room
    in which I was staying was very special: none other than Comrade
    Lev Trotsky, one of the top Bolshevik leaders, had stayed there in
    the early twenties. Stranded in Sukhumi, unable to return to Moscow
    for Lenin's funeral, he delivered an inspired speech to the local
    residents praising the achievements of the leader of the October
    Revolution. His absence from Moscow cost Trotsky dearly. Stalin took
    firm hold of the reins of the communist party and several years later
    expelled his chief rival from the USSR.

    This was life in Abkhazia in early August 2008. The holiday season
    was quiet: increasing tension over the preceding months meant that
    there were fewer visitors. The border with Georgia had been closed
    after the spring terrorist attacks in the south Abkhazian district of
    Gali and there had been media reports of military incidents involving
    unmanned aircraft.

    Officials in Sukhumi were alarmed by Tbilisi's summer military
    exercises. Even before that they had the impression once or twice
    that the Georgians might attack at any time. Abkhazia's armed forces
    had been on the highest degree of combat readiness for months. Their
    biggest worry was the enemy military presence in the upper part of
    the Kodori gorge.

    "For the Georgians it is the shortest way to recapture Sukhumi. Their
    military vehicles can be here in two hours," pointed out Nugzar Ashoba,
    speaker of the Abkhazian parliament, before proposing a toast for
    peace. We were sitting in a small cafe on the outskirts of the capital,
    tasting Abkhazian wines and eating that favourite dish of Abkhazians,
    mamalyga, better known as polenta.

    Ashoba, a former Soviet Komsomol apparatchik, had become an expert
    on wine since the fall of communism. Using his Russian passport he
    had travelled to France and South America to learn more about wine
    production. He much preferred discussing chardonnay or merlot grapes
    to talking about politics. A couple of years ago he had invited a
    well known Georgian wine grower to come to Abkhazia and establish
    up new vinyards. A Georgian? I was more than surprised. Wouldn't
    he be afraid to come here? He should not be, Ashoba replied, for he
    personally would guarantee his safety.

    Ashoba is confident that if Abkhazia's soil is fertile enough to grow
    first class tangerines, it can produce wine of the highest quality. He
    looks forward to the day when Abkhazian wines will be able to hold
    their own in Moscow, or any city in the world.

    After the first bottle we discussed the Abkhazian budget. The breakaway
    republic did not have its own currency. It used Russian roubles. At
    one stage he feared that the state budget would not be able to meet
    its obligations. But for the last few years the thousands of Russian
    holidaymakers who had flooded into Abkhazia, the old Soviet Union's
    Costa del Sol, had brought with them badly needed roubles. Even those
    who just came from Sochi for the day spent at least 100 dollars a
    head. For those who remember the good old Soviet days, Lake Ritsa,
    the monastery Novy Afon, Stalin's dachas scattered round Abkhazia
    and the old resorts of Gagry and Pitsunda are national treasures,
    like Stonehenge or Windsor Castle for visitors to Britain.

    Abkhazia has a much stronger economic potential than South
    Ossetia. Ashoba, who has helped set up his sons in business, is
    confident that, if peace could be brought to the republic, its
    economy would soon prosper. One of his sons rents TV sets out to
    Russian tourists living in the local hotels.

    For the last few months he has been afraid of outright military
    confrontation, on the scale of the war of the early nineties. Bringing
    Abkhazia back under Georgia's power appeared to be a much higher
    priority for Mikheil Saakashvili than regaining control over South
    Ossetia. "If the Georgians attack us, we will retaliate", declared the
    Speaker of the Abkhazian Parliament. He seemed fairly confident that
    Abkhazia's independence could be defended. "In 1992 the Confederation
    of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus mobilized volunteers representing
    ethnic groups like the Cossacks, Adygees, Abasins, Kabardians,
    Circassians, Ossets, Chechens and many others. They will do it again -
    the whole of the northern Caucasus will rally to our side."

    - And Russia?

    - Yes, Russia would help Abkhazia too.

    But for all that, on the following day, August 1, one week before
    war broke out in South Ossetia, he was preparing to go on vacation,
    in Sochi.

    Abkhazia's president Sergei Bagapsh was also planning his summer
    break with never a thought of war. The Bejing Olympics were only a
    few days away and he saw no reason to cancel his holiday. After all,
    Abkhazia didn't exist officially, and there would be no Abkhazian
    athletes in Beijing for him to cheer.

    Zygmunt Dzieciolowski's last year travel to Georgia and Abkhazia was
    supoprted by the grant from Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting
Working...
X