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"Dialogue For Action" - Armenian And Azerbaijani Youth Hope To Bring

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  • "Dialogue For Action" - Armenian And Azerbaijani Youth Hope To Bring

    "DIALOGUE FOR ACTION" - ARMENIAN AND AZERBAIJANI YOUTH HOPE TO BRING CHANGE
    Anahit Shirinyan

    http://hetq.am/en/politics/dialog/
    2009 /08/24 | 17:20

    Feature Stories politics

    A group of Armenian and Azerbaijani youth has met in neighboring
    Georgia at the beginning of August to participate in the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani workshop "Dialogue for Action":

    The workshop was organized by the Imagine Centre for Conflict
    Transformation, founded by conflict resolution practitioners
    from Armenia, Azerbaijan and the US. The Centre aims to fill
    the communication gap between Armenian and Azerbaijani societies,
    positively transforming attitudes of both societies toward each other
    and creating networks of professionals across conflict lines actively
    committed to improving the peace building process.

    5 workshops with Armenian and Azerbaijani participants have been
    organized by the centre since its foundation in 2007. Phil Gamaghelyan,
    the Armenian co-director of the Imagine Centre, believes they have
    developed a comprehensive methodology. "First we focus on developing
    relationships, then on communication and conflict resolution skill
    building and as the next step we have a deep dialogue where the
    participants confront the conflict and their differences, including
    such hard topics as history".

    Phil says they work on both intellectual and emotional levels. "After
    sorting out the differences and achieving a degree of mutual
    understanding, we focus on the development of joint projects and
    development of an action plan for follow up".

    One of the most important things about the program is that it gives
    an opportunity for the participants to sincerely speak about their
    concerns, needs and hopes; representing their own position and
    understanding the position of the other side. During the workshop,
    the participants usually have enough time to simply communicate with
    each other.

    The participants of the workshop have commented on their impressions in
    an interview with "Hetq". Karo, 17, is the youngest participant of this
    year's workshop. This is his first contact with Azerbaijanis. Although
    his perceptions about the conflict and Azerbaijani people haven't
    changed, he has understood that the Azerbaijani society has the
    same concerns and fears that we have. "I have learnt to put aside
    the conflict for a while and simply communicate on a human level. I
    could never imagine such change would be possible. Now I am open to
    hear points of views that are different from that of mine and I am
    ready to understand the concerns of the other side", he says.

    Another participant of the workshop, Arpi, confesses she was very
    concerned the Armenian and Azerbaijani participants would fail to
    understand each other and that no dialogue would take place. However,
    she says, "Here I have found people who can listen to you and
    understand. I have learnt to be more tolerant without changing my
    position. I have also learnt to look at the issue from the other side,
    comparing positions and making more correct conclusions"

    Delia, an Azerbaijani participant, believes Armenian and Azerbaijani
    youth don't know each other at all and that people don't want to
    communicate. During the workshop, though, "people were feeling and
    respecting each other's pain". "Those who wish to change things will
    manage. You can do it by changing yourself and people around you",
    she says.

    "New generations in Azerbaijan have never seen Armenians and only
    view them through the Karabakh conflict", claims Nigar, who is a
    famous blogger in Azerbaijan and has many Armenian friends. "Our
    governments are busy blaming each other and bringing up zombified
    generations. But Armenian and Azerbaijani youth are the future of
    the region and they have to start talking".

    Nigar says it will be extremely difficult for the youth to bring
    changes to their societies, but she believes everything is possible
    "once you start educating people, showing the perspectives of friendly
    neighborhood, sharing your experience and telling about your friends."

    "The young generation is full of innovative ideas, we have skills and
    education that our parents didn't have", notes Imagine co-director
    Phil Gamaghelyan. "We can teach the older generation not to see the
    world in zero sum terms. We can cooperate and achieve everything we
    need while giving the other side everything they need. We can think
    of a conflict as an opportunity to jointly progress; not a curse
    imposed on us by dark forces. We can help our governments with ideas,
    guidance and networks, or we can take ownership and do it ourselves
    if the governments are incapable or unwilling to listen. The region
    belongs to us and our future is in our hands", he says.

    The participants of the Dialogue program are not going to stop
    here. They plan to implement joint projects aimed at bringing change
    to their societies. Their experience can really be useful. During
    the workshop there have been difficulties, moments of tension and
    misunderstanding, but they did manage to overcome them. Above all,
    they have gained good friends, something that - as many confess -
    they could never have imagined.

    When speaking about future joint projects, the participants cite lines
    from John Lennon's song "Imagine", which has become the informal anthem
    of the program - "You may say I'm a dreamer, But I'm not the only one".
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