Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia diaspora comes home

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

  • Armenia diaspora comes home

    The National, UAE
    July 12 2009


    Armenia diaspora comes home

    Daniel Bardsley, Correspondent

    Last Updated: July 11. 2009 7:17PM UAE / July 11. 2009 3:17PM GMT

    YEREVAN // Charles Masraff does not mince his words when he describes
    what he wants to achieve in Armenia.

    The 59-year-old restaurateur says he was attracted to the country `by
    the possibility of giving Armenia a future'.

    Although he was born and brought up in London, Mr Masraff's paternal
    grandparents came from what used to be Western Armenia, and is now
    eastern Turkey.

    He is one of what is thought to be a growing band of western-raised
    diasporan Armenians moving to their ancestral home country.

    In the decade after it became independent in 1991, Armenia lost as
    much as one-fifth of its population as the economy declined in the
    early 1990s, with most emigrants going to Russia.

    Since the mid-1990s, the economy showed strong annual growth until the
    recent financial crisis, and the parallel modernisation has attracted
    many of Armenia's huge diaspora, which is over twice the size of the
    country's 3.2 million population, to live in the country for the first
    time.

    While Armenia has achieved significant economic growth, Mr Masraff
    believes the country remains stifled by a culture of corruption, which
    he describes as `a way of life here'.

    `Armenia desperately needs people with outside experience,' he
    said. `There's a culture among Armenians living in Armenia that makes
    progress difficult ` corruption, the sense that the present is all
    there is.

    `But if you look at the Armenian diaspora and the success they've
    enjoyed in different societies, compared to the inability of this
    society to achieve very much ` why did we get this huge contrast? The
    post-Soviet hangover has a lot to answer for.'

    Mr Masraff spent most of his career in Scotland in hotel management,
    but for the past three months has been running a restaurant in
    Yerevan.
    `I came here to try to achieve something,' he said. `I'm not just an
    observer. By running a business, I feel I have a greater chance to
    achieve something.'

    Among the analysts who believe a growing number of diasporan Armenians
    are moving to Armenia is Arpi Vartanian, country director for the
    Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh offices of the Armenian Assembly of
    America, a lobbying group.
    Born and raised in Detroit to two diasporan Armenians, including an
    Iranian-Armenian father, Ms Vartanian moved to Yerevan in 1993.
    `I've seen families come and go, I've seen people get frustrated they
    weren't able to succeed but I see more and more people coming or
    expressing the desire to come. They want to live in their homeland,'
    she said of the `repatriates' moving to the country.

    `That's not to say everyone is coming with rose-tinted
    glasses. They're coming with the hope that Armenia will change them,
    but [also] that they can use their experience or knowledge to change
    Armenia.

    `Every encounter impacts people. I've had people say: `You've taught
    me.' They told me later they watched how I worked and my work ethic
    and that taught them. They were able to use that later.'

    For diasporans brought up in the West, Ms Vartanian said Armenia was
    now a much easier place to live than when she arrived, when there were
    few cafes or nightclubs.

    `There are still some things I miss and crave,' she said. `It drives
    me nuts when people don't stand in line. But people have been so open
    and interested in who I am.'

    Rudolf, a 27-year-old born in Bahrain and brought up in France, London
    and Lebanon, and who declined to give his full name, admitted however
    that diasporan Armenians often tended to socialise with their own kind
    rather than locals.

    `My friends are diasporan friends from Syria, Beirut, the United
    States,' said Rudolf, who has a `pagan Armenian metal' rock band and
    has lived in Armenia for the past 18 months.

    Even if his social circle is largely made up of fellow diasporans, he
    hopes he can effect change.

    `We're coming here to do something good,' he said. `We have done stuff
    that there wasn't here five or six years ago ` the first rock band in
    the Caucasus. We come with new ideas. We're trying to relate it more
    to Europe. I'm against the Soviet mentality. I think it's ruined the
    country.'

    His friend, Zak Valladian, born and brought up in Dubai, is a member
    of a group called Tebi Hayrenik or `back to the motherland' that
    encourages diasporans to relocate to Armenia. He believes `absolutely'
    more of them are doing what he did four months ago, and moving to the
    country.

    `Change comes from within,' said the 30-year-old, who runs a special
    effects business. `I do believe for Armenia's sake, the only thing
    they can do is to encourage the diaspora to come and invest. It's home
    from home for us.'

    http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090712/F OREIGN/707119958/1013/NEWS
Working...
X