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Stewart Brewster Of Los Gatos Is Living In Armenia As A Peace Corps

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  • Stewart Brewster Of Los Gatos Is Living In Armenia As A Peace Corps

    STEWART BREWSTER OF LOS GATOS IS LIVING IN ARMENIA AS A PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER

    San Jose Mercury Times
    http://www.mercurynews.com/los-gatos/ci_20464268/stewart-brewster-los-gatos-is-living-armenia-peace
    April 23 2012

    I'm freezing, adjust the thermostat; I'm bored, drive to the mall;
    I'm hungry, I order some take-out; my roof leaks, so I call the
    building manager.

    These are simple problems to remedy in Los Gatos, but I guarantee my
    self-reliant neighbors in Armenia take little for granted. In rural
    Armenia, there is no central heating, no mall and no ordering out.

    Water through frozen pipes does not flow, and if your roof leaks,
    grab a ladder and call a limber relative.

    Ten months ago, at age 63 old after 41 years in the insurance
    business, I retired, said good-bye to my family, friends and Los Gatos
    neighbors and flew off to start an adventure serving as a community
    development Peace Corps volunteer in a remote Armenian mountain town
    at a 6,800-foot elevation.

    Landlocked Armenia sits in the South Caucus region between the Black
    Sea and the Caspian Sea. Armenia is the size of Maryland, and has less
    than 3 million people. Armenia takes pride in being the first sovereign
    country to adopt Christianity (in 301 AD). Armenia's 2,600-year-old
    culture is rich in art, literature and dance. For centuries, goods
    heading west from Asia traveled the famous Silk Road not far from
    my town.

    Skill at "shakmat" (chess) has long been a source of national pride,
    with Armenia winning the 2011 World Team Chess Championship, edging
    out China and Ukraine. Its star player, Levon Aronian, is now ranked
    second in the world. Chess is a mandatory class in the Armenian
    schools, and in village squares men pass the time huddled over boards.

    Armenia today is about 10 percent the size it was at its zenith in the
    first century, when it controlled land from the Mediterranean Sea to
    the Caspian Sea. From Yerevan, the Armenian capital, volcanic Mount
    Ararat is clearly visible as it rises to its snow-peaked majestic
    16,854 foot height. Mount Ararat, sacred to Armenians, is considered
    the landing place of Noah's Ark. Scores of businesses use its name,
    including the famous "Ararat Cognac" favored by Winston Churchill.

    However, Mount Ararat is also a source of great frustration for
    Armenians as it is now within the borders of Turkey.

    With a modern capital and 98 percent literacy, Armenia is considered a
    developed country. However, the per capital income is only 10 percent
    of the U.S., with 36 percent living below the poverty level. After
    the breakup of the USSR in 1991, Armenia gained independence and
    is gradually shifting its ideology from Soviet-style autocracy to a
    "democratic-like" parliamentary republic. The 70-year Soviet reign,
    with its welfare system, became an institutional crutch and change to
    a market-based economy has been painful. Older Armenians wistfully
    reflect on fond Soviet memories when jobs were guaranteed, even if
    freedom of expression was not. While older Americans might muse about
    simpler days of old, our steady 235 years of democratic self-government
    is reassuring.

    My town of 4,600 residents is relatively vibrant because of its
    mountain water bottling companies and its reputation as a beautiful
    holiday destination drawing visitors to its hot mineral springs.

    During Soviet times, the community was a popular vacation spot for
    Russian elite. In 1985, the population was double its current size,
    with 25,000 tourists each year. After 1991, tourism dramatically fell
    off, the town shrank by half and the local airport closed.

    Sadly, political clouds hang over Armenia. My community closely follows
    the long-standing dispute with Azerbaijan, only 14 miles away, and
    sniper shootings are common here. A heavily fought three-year war over
    the break-away ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, situated
    within Azerbaijan, ended in 1994 with a tenuous cease fire--36,000
    died in the hot war, including 26 men from my town. I often walk
    by the town's Karabakh War Memorial, where the young heroes' faces,
    etched into granite, stare out with a solemn countenance. To the west,
    the Armenian-Turkish border has been closed for 20 years as Turkey is
    politically aligned with Azerbaijan. This leaves landlocked Armenia
    with two open borders, Georgia to the north and Iran to the south,
    resulting in higher costs and limited goods.

    In modern times, Armenia has had two periods of independence, from
    1919, when the Ottoman Empire of which it was a part, broke up, until
    1921 when it joined the USSR. Then, with the breakup of the USSR in
    1991, Armenia was suddenly an independent republic, but with little
    experience with democratic institutions. In the void, groups rushed
    in to dominate key commodities, resulting today in monopolies that
    control much of the commercial trade.

    All Armenian males must serve a mandatory two-year stint in the army
    when they turn 18, leading most male students, by the time they're in
    high school, to focus more on their service, not their studies. Not
    surprisingly, Armenian universities are 70 percent female. Families
    hold extravagant parties as army recruits depart their hometowns;
    army life is not only dangerous, but living conditions are notoriously
    harsh.

    Much of Armenia's energy focuses on formal recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide as the 100-year anniversary approaches in 2015. The
    genocide is well documented with firsthand accounts of the systematic
    removal and killing of millions of Armenians, Greeks and Kurds from
    eastern Turkey, as well as Ottoman Turkey's organized confiscation of
    personal and Armenian Church property. Besides demanding world-wide
    condemnation of Ottoman Turkey, Armenia's ruling party, supported by
    the diaspora, is resolute in seeking reparations and return of all
    Armenian territorial land unilaterally confiscated by Turkey just
    after WWI. Importantly, Armenia seeks return of sacred Mount Ararat.

    Both the Karabakh war and the genocide issue drain national energy
    from other important quality-of-life needs. Recently, concern has
    heightened about its southern neighbor, Iran, as well as the long-term
    impact of the Arab Spring on the region. While in Los Gatos we are
    concerned about the war in Afghanistan and terrorism in general,
    this pales next to Armenia's collective worries.

    One million Armenians have migrated in the last 10 years, seeking
    jobs and opportunity elsewhere--Russia, former Eastern Bloc countries
    and the U.S. California has 450,000 Armenian diaspora, many in the
    Bay Area. Worldwide, 7 million diaspora send money to relatives,
    bolstering the economy. This brain-drain is a serious problem, and
    my Peace Corps mission is, in part, to embed confidence to stay.

    With the stark economic collapse following independence, Armenia's
    middle class contracted. The oligarchs desire to keep the status quo,
    while the patient poor live day-to-day living frugally in typically
    cold, decaying Soviet-style apartment buildings. Rural unemployment
    exceeds 30 percent, with the average rural family living on $190
    per month.

    Part of my mission is to promote civic capacity--a challenge where
    apathy is rampant and to be optimistic is to tempt fate. There is
    wide distrust of all things government. After hearing suggestions for
    more civic involvement, a respected town member advised me twice, "The
    people are not ready for democracy or any type of civic involvement,
    so don't try." However, 17- to 25-year-olds are showing signs of
    energized activism, particularly on environmental issues.

    I lived with a hardworking host family my first 10 weeks in town,
    living in their Soviet-era apartment. Wives clearly run households
    while men are in charge outside, huddled in small groups debating the
    daily issues. One day I noticed my host dad (many years my junior)
    rubbing his jaw because of a toothache. I gave him ibuprofen from
    my Peace Corps medical kit and encouraged a dental visit. The next
    day, when he smiled, his front tooth was gone. Sadly, he could not
    rationalize dental excessive repair costs over other family needs.

    My Armenian neighbors are all jacks-of-all-trades, skilled in making
    do. Little of value is discarded. If repairing an item proves
    difficult, then a relative or a friend will succeed in repairing
    cars, plumbing, electrical, walls, sewing--you name it. Common are
    homemade snow shovels, just a broom handle and a plywood base. Value
    is stretched, whether it is twice soaking tea bags or again using
    soda bottles for raw milk delivery or bottling homemade wine.

    American-style restaurants are few outside of cities; restaurant food
    cannot be as healthy or tasty as Armenian women can cook at home. Why
    waste money?

    Subsistence farm plots surround every village, cultivated with care
    for maximum yield. Armenians are good farmers and take pride in the
    variety of vegetables and fruit they grow. Every male dreams of owning
    a car, and if so lucky, will spend many hours under the hood to keep
    it running.

    In Los Gatos, with Safeway, Whole Foods, Nob Hill, Lunardi's and Trader
    Joe's, we have an abundant choice. In contrast, rural Armenians have
    few shopping choices, and the price of commodities is surprisingly
    uniform in Khanuts, or stores.

    The cost of staples, relative to income, is much higher here. Meat
    is served twice a week, if the family is fortunate. Cheese, often
    homemade, is a main protein staple. Breads or "hats" and the famous
    Armenian clay-oven baked unleavened flat bread "lavash" are offered in
    abundance at meals. Armenians have reverence for bread, their symbol
    of life. It would be culturally shameful to discard stale bread in
    the trash; rather stale bread is fed to birds to continue the cycle
    of life.

    We can learn much from Armenia. Loyalty and familial support is
    paramount; young married couples start off living with the husband's
    parents, grandmothers take care of grandchildren, allowing the mother
    to work or look for work. Sometimes, the greatest threat to misbehaving
    children is to threaten to tell their "tatiks," or grandmothers.

    Serious crime is almost nonexistent in rural Armenia because shame to
    the family is a greater punishment than anything the criminal justice
    system could hand out. I have never felt safer than I do living in
    my mountain town. I now rarely count my change. Politeness abounds
    with particular sensitivity to the old, as seats are automatically
    surrendered to the elderly in a public van, or "marshrutni." Students
    stand up when teachers enter their classroom. Armenians cherish their
    children and make sure their sons and daughters are dressed in freshly
    ironed clothes for school each morning.

    Armenians truly take pride in believing they are the most hospitable
    people on Earth. My experience living in both a rural town and a
    village bears this out. Strangers are treated as honored guests almost
    to a painful level, with precious food heaped on the plate. They
    are proud of their beautiful mountainous country and often ask me to
    agree that Armenia must be prettier than California.

    As I said up front, the Peace Corps is not for everyone. I am the only
    native English speaker in my town. Volunteers must accept hand-washing
    clothes, bucket baths, not driving cars (prohibited by Peace Corps
    rules), no English newspapers, no American coffee, little heat,
    treacherous winter ice, few sidewalks, different food, no sports or
    watchable TV (unless one is fluent in Armenian or Russian), walking
    and more walking, and perhaps the toughest adjustment, being alone
    more than any other time in your life.

    The Peace Corps is highly supportive and methodically prepares each
    volunteer. Volunteers know they will eventually return to their cushy
    American life, their family, friends, communities and most importantly,
    opportunities.

    Armenia needs a helping hand. The modest amount of taxpayer money
    spent on the Peace Corps is vitally important at a time when Armenia
    is walking a political tightrope in this unstable region.

    Sometimes we need to pause to appreciate our supportive infrastructure,
    highly invested civil capacity and developments such as our new Los
    Gatos library and police building.

    But Armenians demonstrate important values as well--faithfulness
    to their ancient culture and history, strong family loyalty,
    trustworthiness, resourceful self-reliance and their magnificent
    love of children. As for material things, Armenians take pride in
    their version of the old saying, "Use it up, wear it out, make do or
    do without."

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