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Off the Map in the Black Garden

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  • Off the Map in the Black Garden

    The New York Times
    September 23, 2012 Sunday
    Late Edition - Final

    Off the Map in the Black Garden

    By RUSS JUSKALIAN


    STANDING on a limestone ridge in the foothills of the Lesser Caucasus
    Mountains, I surveyed the landscape that lay before me. To the west,
    illuminated by a late-day sun and with ever more craggy peaks as a
    backdrop, was Vankasar Mountain, capped by a solitary, ancient church.
    To the east, yellow grassland and scrub stretched to the horizon. And
    then there was the ghost city of Agdam, its thousands of ruined
    buildings representing the last exchanges of a late 20th-century
    conflict that many people have never heard of.

    I had come to the breakaway Southern Caucasus region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh expecting a land of extremes. Nagorno-Karabakh, an
    ethnically Armenian enclave whose name means ''mountainous black
    garden,'' appears on few maps. Its tumultuous recent history would
    affect any traveler, no doubt, but for me, the experience of visiting
    this place had a personal dimension. My grandmother had fled Anatolia
    as a girl, escaping an Armenian genocide at the hands of the crumbling
    Ottoman Empire. To come to Nagorno-Karabakh, a place where Armenians
    have asserted their right to live freely -- but at the cost of having
    forcibly removed their Azeri neighbors -- generated mixed emotions, to
    say the least.

    Once part of an ancient Armenian kingdom, Nagorno-Karabakh was made a
    special autonomous oblast, or administrative zone, under the authority
    of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, by Stalin in the 1920s.
    This designation temporarily calmed fighting between the predominately
    Muslim Azeris and mostly Christian Armenians who lived in the region.
    But as the Soviet Union disintegrated in the late 1980s, old ethnic
    feuds turned bloody, and both ethnicities were subjected to pogroms
    and persecution at the hands of the other. Armenians, representing
    around 75 percent of the Nagorno-Karabakh population at the time,
    sought independence from Azerbaijan. Skirmishes led to full-on war by
    the early 1990s, resulting in upward of 30,000 casualties and hundreds
    of thousands of displaced people on both sides.

    In 1994, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh effectively won that war
    and claimed independence with the signing of a cease-fire order. In
    the process, nearly the entire Azeri population was forced to flee.
    Today, the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (N.K.R.) is not
    recognized by any other country in the world. With no official
    borders, Armenian and Azeri soldiers are still dug into trenches on
    the front lines.

    Though I had become interested in the region because of my ethnic
    heritage, once I started digging into the history of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    I wanted to experience what was said to be a breathtaking landscape
    filled with ancient monasteries, mountainous tableaus and hard-working
    people trying to rebuild.

    So last spring I went there, accompanied by my girlfriend. I didn't
    expect luxury hotels, haute cuisine or air-conditioned buses, and I
    didn't find them. Instead, we stayed at local homes where running
    water might not be guaranteed, ate simple meals with our hosts and
    traveled in Soviet-era knockoffs of Fiats and antiquated minibuses
    with bald tires. In exchange for the lack of amenities, I was hoping
    not just to understand more about this little-known area, but also to
    understand more about my own background.

    EARLY on a humid May morning, we headed to a dusty square in Yerevan,
    the capital of Armenia, where we boarded a crowded minibus, called a
    marshrutka, bound for Nagorno-Karabakh's capital, Stepanakert -- a
    trip that would take eight hours. Aside from two Asian tourists, the
    bus was filled with local women carrying toddlers, and old men, a few
    of whom played cards on an upturned cardboard box. The final part of
    the route twisted almost 10 miles through the Lachin Corridor, a
    mountain pass that had previously been (or still is, depending on whom
    you ask) a part of Azerbaijan.

    By the time we got to Stepanakert, it was raining. We headed to the
    Foreign Ministry to pick up our travel papers, checked into a simple
    hotel and fell asleep. Early the next morning, the sun still burning
    off the night's fog, we explored the covered market in central
    Stepanakert. The air was filled with the scent of ripe cherries and
    local herbs. In one corner, two women with faded aprons and
    orange-tinted hair worked over a griddle. The first rolled balls of
    dough into discs. To each disc, the second added a small mountain of
    chopped herbs and then folded the dough over the filling. The grilled
    stuffed bread, called jingalov hats, tasted of pungent mustard greens
    and watercress.

    A 20-minute drive away, in the town of Shoushi, we met Saro Saryan,
    who, with his wife, runs a homestay, which would become our base.
    Dressed in a blue Ministry of Civil Defense uniform and cap, Mr.
    Saryan greeted us in his booming voice. ''Russ? Come,'' he said.

    Mr. Saryan walked with us around town, first showing us the old
    fortress walls, and then the Tolkienesque Ghazanchetsots Cathedral,
    built of white limestone. As we approached a massive stone building
    that stood gutted, Mr. Saryan said, ''This used to be a university. My
    hope is that one day you can come back and see students here.'' Past
    bombings had transformed the broad hallways. In one room, the ceiling
    had been replaced by sky, the floor was covered in kudzu-like shrubs,
    and tufts of wildflowers clung to empty niches.

    Shoushi clearly has seen hardship upon hardship. One of the only
    Azeri-majority strongholds in the 1980s, then called Shusha, it was
    the staging site for rocket attacks on Stepanakert, which was mainly
    populated by Armenians. Much of the town, including the university,
    was damaged first by Armenian bombardment, and then by the Azeris
    after the Armenians took control in 1992. The capture of the town by
    the Armenians was a turning point in the war.

    That evening, for 5,000 dram each (around $12), we slept in a room
    around the corner from the Saryans' kitchen. On most days we sat down
    with the Saryan family to a dinner of lavash bread, fresh cheese,
    honey and grilled meat or stuffed grape leaves.

    Over the next few days we hired a taxi, so we could see more of the
    region's Armenian ruins. There was the white-stone Amaras monastery,
    swathed in knee-high grasses and the occasional wild poppy plant; the
    13th-century Gandzasar monastery, whose walls and floor, some believe,
    contain the head of John the Baptist, the jaw of Gregory the
    Illuminator and the right hand of St. Zachariah; and Dadivank, where
    immense Armenian steles known as khachkars, some over 1,000 years old,
    stood in repose.

    At one point, while traveling on the Stepanakert-Martakert Highway in
    a battered taxi, I saw the ruins of stone buildings. ''Agdam?'' I
    asked the driver.

    ''Agdam,'' he answered, quietly. ''No photo.'' Agdam had been an Azeri
    village that the Armenians had razed during the war. Some 40,000
    people fled, and many were killed. As hundreds of abandoned homes,
    many reduced to foundations, came into view, the driver stepped hard
    on the gas.

    While the Nagorno-Karabakh war was one of independence -- fought
    within the context of a century-old genocide against the Armenians by
    the Turks, the fall of the Soviet Union and anti-Armenian pogroms --
    it was difficult for me, with my background, not to feel dismay that
    the same persecution the Armenians had suffered was perpetrated upon
    their Azeri neighbors. What about the former Azeri girls and boys, now
    refugees about my age, whose memory of home is fading like a
    photograph left too long in the sun? Most, I learned, have settled in
    other parts of Azerbaijan. And while I may never be able to see
    Azerbaijan because of my ethnicity, they may never get to see the
    place where they were born.

    When I mentioned this to Mr. Saryan -- an Armenian who fled Baku, the
    capital of Azerbaijan, around the time of the anti-Armenian Sumgait
    pogrom in 1988 -- he said he still had nostalgia for Baku, where he
    had spent most of his life. ''I was part of a group of refugees who
    met our Azeri counterparts in Vienna,'' he said. ''I was just in touch
    with one of them on Facebook yesterday.''

    WE had only two days to travel via the northern road from Kalbajar
    province back to Armenia -- amid snow-capped peaks and over the
    infamous Sotk Pass and its open-pit gold mine. Joined by an Austrian
    named Barbara who had also been staying at Mr. Saryan's, we charted
    the route with a stop at a thermal spring. As we approached the Zuar
    spring, Barbara gasped. The natural pool was belching soap bubbles
    from the soap someone had dumped in. Dozens of middle-aged men
    splashed about. Immediately the center of attention, we had no choice
    but to join them. After a quick splash, we were invited for a warm
    beer and a shot of throat-scorching mulberry vodka.

    We continued to the town of Kalbajar, ascending a 6,500-foot plateau
    via a series of steep switchbacks. Like Agdam, this place was mainly
    non-Armenian before the war; it is now controlled by the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

    Kalbajar, too, looked like a ghost town -- except that some of the
    homes were occupied by ethnic Armenians, many from the Armenian
    diaspora, coming from Georgia, Russia and elsewhere. With almost no
    tourism infrastructure, a doctor arranged a place for us in a hospital
    outbuilding where we slept on two wobbly metal beds.

    In the morning, we headed back toward Armenia with two young men we
    had hired to drive us in a 72-horsepower Soviet-built Lada Niva. We
    traveled for hours, over mountains, into valleys and back up again.
    Finally we came to the Sotk Pass atop a rocky hill of debris dumped
    over the edge of the mountain by huge mining trucks. The road went
    from dirt to fist-size stones. Crossing this geo-industrial outpost
    was like passing through a portal. The earth itself seemed to be in
    upheaval, with whorls of dust spinning into the air by heavily laden
    trucks.

    And then it was over. We headed back down the other side, back into
    Armenia without so much as a sign to mark the border.

    But my mind was still running in circles around Nagorno-Karabakh. I
    was thinking mainly about the war, and about Mr. Saryan's son, who,
    the day after graduating from high school, had led us to a gorge near
    Shoushi. I asked him if he could imagine having an Azeri friend. And,
    as if the question itself had puzzled him, he said, ''Why not?''

    IF YOU GO

    Visiting Nagorno-Karabakh is not for the faint of heart. Every year
    soldiers on both sides of the front lines are killed by sniper fire.
    Outside Stepanakert, accommodation is mainly limited to homestays.

    Visas can be arranged in advance in Yerevan, Armenia, or upon arrival
    in Stepanakert at the foreign ministry. If you plan to visit
    Azerbaijan in the future, ask for the visa to be put on a separate
    piece of paper that can be removed from your passport. Azerbaijan will
    not allow entry to anyone with a Nagorno-Karabakh Republic visa in
    their passport.

    HOW TO GET THERE

    Hyur Service ([email protected]; 374-10-54-60-40;
    hyurservice.com/eng). With a few locations in Yerevan, Hyur can
    arrange rental cars, private transportation or all-inclusive trips to
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Prices vary. The staff speaks English.

    Public minibuses leave various bus stations around Yerevan, heading to
    Stepanakert every morning for around 4,500 Armenian dram, or $11.30 at
    400 drams to the dollar. Travel takes eight hours.

    WHERE TO STAY

    Saro Saryan Homestay ([email protected]), in Shoushi. Mr. Saryan
    and his wife are regular features on the independent travel scene in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and speak very good English. For 5,000 dram per
    person per night, you can stay at their home. Mr. Saryan has an almost
    encyclopedic knowledge of Shoushi, and if he has time he may offer a
    walking tour of the town and its ruins. He can also help arrange
    onward travel and accommodation throughout Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Hotel Armenia (armeniahotel.am; (374 47) 94-94-00;
    [email protected], Renaissance Square), in Stepanakert, has 55
    rooms furnished to international standards, and prices include Wi-Fi,
    breakfast and use of a gym. Double rooms range from 30,000 to 41,000
    drams per night.



    URL: http://travel.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/travel/off-the-map-in-nagorno-karabakh-a-region-in-the-southern-caucasus.html




    From: A. Papazian
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