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Book: Affectionate Look At Armenia By A Soviet Man Of Letters

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  • Book: Affectionate Look At Armenia By A Soviet Man Of Letters

    AFFECTIONATE LOOK AT ARMENIA BY A SOVIET MAN OF LETTERS

    Sunday Business Post
    July 28, 2013

    BOOK
    An Armenian Sketchbook
    **By Vasily Grossman**
    **MacLehose Press, EUR 15.10**
    **Reviewed by Jonathan O'Brien**

    .....

    The last time that Armenia got into the news with any regularity was
    about 25 years ago, when it and Azerbaijan waged a nasty little
    conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave on Azeri
    territory. The war is long over, but while Azerbaijan has since
    elbowed its way into western consciousness with its hosting of the
    Eurovision Song Contest, its sponsorship of Atletico Madrid and its
    open-door welcoming of Big Oil, its smaller neighbour has languished
    in the shadows.

    Armenia has no oil and few other resources, leaving it somewhat out in
    the cold. A friend who went there for an Ireland game in 2010 reported
    back that while the place itself was perfectly safe and fine, if a
    little drab, it held a sense of feeling cut off from the world --
    unsurprisingly, given its rugged geography.

    There's a lengthy tradition in Russian literature of writers
    travelling to the Caucasus -- a region which, even after two decades
    of strife, still looks like a Timotei-ad Alpine paradise -- for
    inspiration. Lermontov, Pushkin, Mandelstam and Tolstoy all did it.

    Vasily Grossman, the venerated chronicler of the horrors of the
    Holocaust and Stalingrad, was thus in good company when he journeyed
    to Armenia in the early 1960s.

    Grossman went there because, after his book Life And Fate was
    "arrested" by Khrushchev's ministry of literary correctness, he
    received a surprising offer to translate an old novel (about, wait
    for it, the construction of a copper-smelting plant) from Armenian
    into Russan. Relieved at the chance of some respite from the KGB,
    he headed south for two months and wrote down everything he saw.

    But while those men of letters generally went to the Caucasus to bask
    in gorgeous surroundings and take the waters, Armenia was and is the
    exception to the region's jaw-dropping mixture of lush pastures and
    tropical vistas. "There is no greenery," writes Grossman. "The houses
    are surrounded by dense scatterings of grey stone. Sometimes a grey
    stone comes to life and begins to move. A sheep."

    Everywhere he walks, he sees granite instead of growth, sterility
    instead of fertility. "Sometimes this seems to be a strange and
    terrible kingdom where the earth engenders not life, but death."

    Reaching Yerevan, the bustling capital, he marvels at the huge Stalin
    statue that towers over the city. The Armenians -- who will soon tear
    it down -- react to this praise by dismissing Stalin as a maniac and,
    worse, a puppet figurehead. Grossman feels a mad urge to stick up for
    the dictator -- a bizarre position for a Soviet intellectual to find
    themselves in.

    Grossman finds Armenia's inhabitants a puzzle. He recoils from the
    stereotype of Armenians as "primitive[s], pederasts and swindlers",
    but keeps running into individuals whose trumpeting of Armenian
    superiority in the arts, culture and architecture drives him slowly
    insane. He knows it stems from an inner defensiveness caused by the
    bloodstained history of the place, but finds it no more palatable for
    that: "What matters is the global, even cosmic, superiority of the
    Armenian people. Sometimes this passion is touching and wonderful;
    sometimes it is sweet and funny; sometimes it is so insane as to
    be shocking."

    Grossman died of cancer in 1964 and never saw An Armenian Sketchbook
    published. It's obvious he loved the place, for all its oddness --
    the book pulses with life and affection on every page, even though
    he apologises on the final page for "clumsy and wrong" things he'd
    written. He needn't have worried. This is a moving, beautiful little
    encomium to what is still, even today, one of the obscurest corners
    of Europe.

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