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Postcard From Armenia: Yerevan, A First Impression

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  • Postcard From Armenia: Yerevan, A First Impression

    POSTCARD FROM ARMENIA: YEREVAN, A FIRST IMPRESSION

    ArmeniaNow
    14.06.12

    In a far-flung corner of London Heathrow Airport-beyond the reassuring
    glow of McDonalds and the aseptic comfort of Starbucks-I waited for my
    connecting flight among veiled women tugging at their children's hands
    and swarthy men clutching passports. A sign-ominous to an American
    journalist with no intention of going there-read "destination: Tehran."

    Onboard the plane, the woman sitting next to me, a black veil covering
    her head and shoulders, smiled. "Are you visiting Tehran?" she asked.

    "No," I shook my head emphatically. "Yerevan." I checked my boarding
    pass for the third time. Yerevan, the capital of Armenia and the first
    stop of the flight, was printed clearly in black ink. I wondered again
    whose idea it had been to set off for a two-month Caucasus adventure
    as an Italian-American journalist. The idea was mine, of course. What
    better way to dispel the post-graduate Great Recession doldrums than
    work as a correspondent for ArmeniaNow?

    "So you're going to Romania?" my friends in Chicago had asked in
    the weeks leading up to my departure. "Armenia," I would invariably
    answer, as my baffled well-wishers sniffed goodbye with the stoic
    acceptance one reserves for soldiers heading to the front or for the
    terminally ill. To this day, I suspect many of my friends believe I
    am lost somewhere in the Transylvanian wilderness. The rest envision
    me dodging bullets on my way to work, in a geographical hybrid between
    Kabul and a post-apocalyptic wasteland.

    At Yerevan's Zvartnots International Airport, I handed my Italian
    passport to a bored-looking customs official. A flicker of a smile
    spread across his face. "Ciao," he said, waving me on. I stood amidst
    a throng of unfamiliar faces until met by my new colleagues.

    The taxi headed toward the city center, speeding past the imposing
    concrete U.S. embassy, darkened Soviet-era buildings, and a long strip
    of casinos, whose gaudy neon lights glowed in the darkness like a
    miniature Las Vegas. In downtown Yerevan, the nightlife continued as
    people ambled about in the balmy night air or spilled out of cafes
    into the lighted roads and squares. The taxi came to a stop along a
    busy street.

    I groped my way up a flight of dank, pitch black stairs. After a
    series of failed attempts to rent an apartment via the Internet, I
    had finally stumbled upon what appeared to be a reliable real estate
    agent in Yerevan. The man spoke good English, replied promptly to my
    e-mails, and assured me I couldn't possibly get a better deal. Though
    the high price made me pause-this wasn't New York after all-I accepted
    the online contract and clicked away a good part of my savings.

    At the top of the dilapidated stairs, the agent swung open a battered,
    metal door. We squeezed through a narrow hallway before spilling into
    the living room of my new home.

    A small, wiry middle-aged man sat sunk in an armchair, absorbed in
    the unintelligible sound bites emitted by a clunky TV, a cigarette
    dangling from his fingers. His eyes flickered in my direction. A plump
    woman perched on the sofa and puffed smoke across the room. She pulled
    an ashtray closer. Her cigarette balanced precariously on the edge,
    next to the stumps of its predecessors. "Sit down," she said giving
    the threadbare sofa a businesslike pat. The room smelled like mold and,
    in my mind, the first stages of lung cancer.

    The husband and wife continued smoking as if they had slowly petrified
    into obsolete fixtures in the room. For a panicky moment I went over
    what I could remember of the terms of my contract. It didn't mention
    sharing the apartment with the owners, did it?

    A tour of my home failed to dispel my sense of foreboding. The
    landlady led the way into the kitchenette, complete with an old
    fashioned sink, yellowed with age, and a series of rickety shelves. I
    hesitated in front of the prehistoric single gas burner. Lacking
    Girl Scouts training I wondered whether I would ever figure out how
    to use it. Bread and cheese appeared to be the safest option for the
    foreseeable future.

    The bathroom was next. The landlady proudly displayed a complicated
    series of handles and cranks along the cracked and peeling walls. She
    turned a lever and steaming water trickled out of the shower head.

    "Hot," she explained. She turned the level further. "More hot,"
    she said. Apparently anything below scalding was not an option.

    By the time we turned into the bedroom, I was pondering the wisdom
    of buying a one-way ticket to Armenia. My editor, who had met me at
    the airport, looked aghast. "This is a rip-off," he said, mumbling
    something about finding me a nicer apartment-and cheaper too. "We'll
    sort it all out tomorrow," he said. I nodded numbly as the owners
    handed me the keys.

    The decrepit air conditioner gasped and wheezed as I sat alone in
    the living room surveying the eclectic assortment of furniture and
    carpeting, whose common denominator appeared to be a Soviet-era color
    palette of tired grays and browns. As the drowsiness of a 20-hour trip
    set in, I wondered what I would come to think of the small country
    that was to become my home for the next few months. In my mind, a
    confused jumble of sights and sounds rushed together, like the broad,
    colorful strokes of an impressionist painting. I was ready for the
    adventure to begin.

    Chicago-based journalist Sigrid Lupieri is spending her summer in
    Armenia and will periodically be sharing her impressions.

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