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Three Different Fates, One Commons Past: Armenian Orphan Asylums

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  • Three Different Fates, One Commons Past: Armenian Orphan Asylums

    HULIQ.com, SC
    Oct 8 2011


    Three Different Fates, One Commons Past: Armenian Orphan Asylums


    Submitted by Michael Santo on 2011-10-08

    Psychologists argue that humans are capable of forgetting happy
    episodes of their life, but memories of hardships remain with them
    through their lifetime. When you talk with the graduates of Armenian
    orphan asylums, you slightly shift from this argument, as their memory
    keeps both: their fate has taught them to preserve everything they
    have, especially because they do not have too much of this, and they
    acquire everything they have through sufferings and struggle.

    Story 1. Gavar orphan asylum, a standard Soviet childhood

    Karine, 34, found herself in Gavar orphan asylum when she was 3,
    despite she the fact that she had parents. This fact, though, was the
    same as not having parents, as her biological parents never had any
    willingness to set up relations with their daughter, either through
    the times in asylum or after leaving it. She left the institution when
    she became 18, in 1991. Then, Armenia was just starting to follow the
    path of independence, so her early recollections do not differ
    essentially from those of any other Soviet child: standardized food
    with compote and the daily regime according to the agenda attached to
    the corridor wall. In summer: vacation in a pioneer camp.

    In short, this woman's recollections of her time in the asylum can be
    deemed somewhat positive, and since the state sees the key function of
    the asylum in providing food, dress and bed, then in the particular
    case of Karine it has been pretty successful. We all understand,
    however, that this is not all a child needs to become a citizen, as
    where is the right to education? And most importantly, how can a child
    from an asylum receive compensation for the family love, which even
    the best and most successful orphanage institution cannot provide?

    But the further flow of life brought about serious problems, when she,
    along with other graduates of Gavar asylum, was moved to different
    areas across Armenia, where they were to start a new life completely
    on their own. Karine found herself in Yerevan, attending a
    typewriter's training courses. She used to live in various hostels,
    and at flats of more successful asylum friends on temporary basis,
    until 16 years later the state provided her with a one bedroom flat
    close to Yerevan, as she was from an asylum. The first floor of the
    residential building used to serve as a warehouse for some time, which
    means it was not adapted for housing purposes. And it was there that
    ten apartments were made and handed over to Karine and other asylum
    graduates.

    It is damp there, cold in winter; the electric wires need to be
    changed. The flats are even devoid of sunlight, as there is just one
    window in each of them. Those are though important, but household
    issues, while there is a more powerful one, which has a psychological
    impact: one can only enter the flats provided to asylum graduates from
    the street, as this is how the building has been constructed, whereas
    the other residents of the building use the regular entrance. In other
    words, it seems someone again pinpoints that we are not from `them',
    we are different. We are children of an orphanage asylum, this is it'.
    But, Karine continues, `at least this is my own corner'.

    Story 2. Sovetashen, Gavar, Meghri ... broken and crippled fates

    Sasha, 35, is Karine's husband. They made a family; now they are
    raising two kids. He does not like to talk of the asylum or, moreover,
    of the parents. `I do not have such notions," he says furiously about
    something which is an absolute value for most people. But you cannot
    blame him for this, when you hear stories of his childhood and adult
    life.

    He appeared in Sovetashem orphan asylum at the age of 6. Then he was
    moved to Gavar, and further on to Meghri. The memories of the latter
    are the brightest. He remembers, for instance, when they were reaching
    Meghri by bus, the kids would bite pomegranates fallen on the ground
    to eat them, before they had ever heard of such fruit. `Well, yeah, we
    were not hungry, nor naked, but it's not just about that. Only when
    you walk out from those walls you realize that there is no difference
    between a prison and an orphanage asylum. In both places you are cared
    for just as much as not to die of hunger, but nobody treats you like a
    human...and then you get freedom and you do not know what to do with
    it." As a proof he points at a black and white picture from a family
    album - it shows himself and friends from the asylum.

    `We spent a few winters in the basement of the Chess House together
    with Armen and Hayk, until one of the boys died of cold and it was
    impossible to continue staying there. Armen was tried, as he stole
    copper from the state and sold it," he counts and continues. Someone
    else died, someone managed to flee to Russia for work and used to
    write at first, but then connection was lost, the other girl also got
    lost after the divorce... In a nutshell, there is hardly even one normal
    fate among those pictured on the photo. `Sometimes I am being
    reproached - you have to be satisfied about the state taking care of
    you, supporting and bringing you up, now you are given a flat (though
    he left the asylum in 1990 and received his flat in 2008). But what
    should I be content with? We went out of a dirt just to move into a
    new one'. He also mentions that no one ever helped any of the asylum
    graduates. On the contrary, they were persecuted and all the doors
    were closed for them, as a child from an orphanage asylum in the eyes
    of the society is equal to a former prisoner.

    Story 3. Zatik. New times, old problems

    Armine, 26, is an independent Armenian time graduate of one of the
    most exemplary orphan asylums: Zatik. In her words, it was very good
    in Zatik, she was secured with good food and a clean bed, and after
    leaving it she was literally taken aback. However, it was only after
    she left the asylum that the bitter life experienced proved that it
    was not everything she needed what she got from the institution. She
    needed at least primitive knowledge to somehow compensate for little
    life experience. But realization of this only came when Armine, who
    had no place to live, found herself out in the street after she left
    the asylum. At first, she lived in Zatik, with permission of the
    director. However, that could not last for long.

    She ultimately found herself in a house named Tsiatsan, where people
    like her lived. She spent some three years there. Then she got
    married, by the way not with an asylum graduate, and gave birth to two
    kids, but then she got divorced. She says her husband who at first
    enjoyed everyone's sympathy just for marrying a girl from asylum, in
    the end did not resist the pressure from the society and became a
    victim of stereotypes, leaving the family. As a result, today Armine
    with her two children lives on the assistance of neighbors - graduates
    of various asylums, as she does not work and has no one to support
    her. `If it was not for them, my kids would die of hunger...I am not
    even speaking of myself.' As to getting assistance of that kind from
    other neighbors, or to even regular communication with them, Armine
    said her apartment is isolated from them and the entrance is from a
    different side. In other words, if she uses a different entrance just
    to enter the apartment, then how is she going to overcome barriers of
    communicating with other neighbors? Most importantly, however, no
    matter how difficult it is for her and how many half-hungry days she
    has had, still Armine totally excludes possibility of sending her
    children to an asylum. Even to the praised Zatik...

    ...Three different fates, which have a common past in orphan asylums.
    Independently of all, even from few good recollections there is one
    conclusion - asylum graduates are a separate caste, who are unable of
    fighting against hardships of life, which attack them like predators
    right after they become 18 and leave the walls of the asylum. They are
    not accepted by society. At times being unaccepted brings about
    aggressions either from their side or from the society. And even
    though this is an old stereotype, it is so deeply rooted in their
    psychology, that it leaves little or no options for struggle. As a
    result, already outside the asylum, being full members of the society,
    they continue to live supporting each other and standing by. Just one
    thing is for sure: the fate of any of them can only compete in its
    bitterness to a fate of someone with the past in the asylum.

    Written by Lia Khojoyan

    http://www.huliq.com/3257/three-different-fates-one-commons-past-armenian-orphan-asylums

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