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Dastakert Family Survives and Dreams Despite the Odds

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  • Dastakert Family Survives and Dreams Despite the Odds

    Dastakert Family Survives and Dreams Despite the Odds

    Lilit Nurijanyan

    HETQ
    13:28, August 20, 2011

    The road to the town of Dastakert, some 23 kilometres south of Sisian
    in Armenia's Syunik Marz, is not for the faint of heart.

    Not only will the ride fray your nerves but the rocky route will eat
    up a normal car's suspension in no time. It's best to park your car
    and call a local taxi to ferry you to Dastakert.

    Invariably, your cabbie will be a loquacious chap who will pass
    himself off as a jack of all trades with a handful of professional
    degrees. Most likely, he will also be a stalwart supporter of this or
    that political party.

    Dastakert, for those who don't already know, possesses the dubious
    distinction of being the smallest urban metropolitan community in
    Armenia with a population of 320.

    It definitely saw better days during the Soviet period. It once
    boasted a busy copper-molybdenum factory.

    The town went downhill after the plant closed. People moved away.
    Today, Dastakert resembles a town that has been evacuated due to air
    strikes.

    Geologists have now returned and are conducting mineralogical studies.
    They say that the mine will reopen in the next few years.

    A year ago 15 year-old Astghik fell in love with a young man from
    Alaverdi who was in one of the research teams. They been keeping in
    touch by phone ever since. Their long-term fate is inextricably tied
    to the fate of the mine.

    Astghik lives in the only residential apartment building in town; a
    four story structure built decades ago.

    Roudik, her father, is a refugee from Baku who resettled in Dastakert
    23 years ago. He met his wife here.

    Today, they have five kids and the family survives on a social
    assistance package of 51,000 AMD in ($140) per month. To get by, the
    family also collects berries in a neighbour's field and harvests grass
    in the higher elevations for animal forage. Neither of the parents
    holds down a steady job.

    Roudik says everyday is different but that they manage to work at this
    or that to put food on the table.

    Astghik and her two sisters, Lilit and Elmira, dream of leaving
    Dastakert for Yerevan. I ask Astghik what she will do in Yerevan.

    "The main thing is that I won't be fighting with them," she answers
    with a smile and points to her sisters.

    The girls stay as busy as they can doing their chores, both in the
    house and in the garden, and taking care of Boris, their baby brother.
    After that, all that's left is to watch TV soap operas. (See:
    Dastakert; A Photo Essay)

    The small apartment is neat and tidy even though the walls and
    ceilings are rough and unfinished.

    A small TV sits atop a cabinet that doubles as a fridge. When I ask
    why they don't own a regular refrigerator, Roudik laughs, "We don't
    have anything to put inside."

    The family eats what they grow in the garden. The milk from their one
    cow isn't even enough for the kids.

    Grishik, a starry-eyed third grader dreams of becoming a doctor and
    helping others.

    Boris, his baby brother who is almost two, underwent major surgery
    when he was just four days old. It was then that Grishik decided to
    become a physician. Boris now walks like any other 2 year-old.

    The four kids will soon start school. Roudik tells me that they don't
    have the money to buy them decent clothes or school supplies.

    "In Baku I had work and lived a normal life. Here, there's nothing. If
    the mine opens hopefully we'll have work. But who can say if it'll be
    permanent. At least I know we get the social assistance every month."

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