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Fashion Statement: From war at home in Aleppo to compromise and `cal

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  • Fashion Statement: From war at home in Aleppo to compromise and `cal

    Fashion Statement: From war at home in Aleppo to compromise and `calm'
    in Yerevan

    Features | 25.01.13 | 13:22



    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
    ArmeniaNow

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Women's hair slide, curl and dance in his hands. With artistic
    movements of a skillful craftsman he styles another customer's hair.
    Watching him work you realize that hairstyling is an art, and a real
    master has to know all the secret techniques to make his creation
    perfect.


    `Indeed it takes a lot of creativity and then you get your jewel,'
    says 57-year-old hairdresser Alex (short from Alexan) Habeshian, who
    moved to Yerevan from Aleppo last December when life in his war-torn
    country became intolerable. `A hairdresser must have a big heart and
    patience to be able to deal with women's whims. For as long as I
    remember myself I have been surrounded by women, I love my
    profession...'

    Alex works at one of Yerevan's numerous beauty parlors. His
    Yerevan-based friends had helped to find the job before he actually
    arrived. In Aleppo he used to live in New Syria district.

    `I never could have predicted things would take such a turn in Syria,
    especially in Aleppo. We resisted for months, but then saw that things
    were getting really bad, my daughters couldn't go to school, I had
    closed my beauty salon, the fear was just too big...we were witnessing
    how the city was being destroyed. And Aleppo was a very nice city,
    Arabs and Christians co-existed quite nicely in that city. But
    politics messed it all up,' says Alex.

    In Aleppo he had his own hairdressing salon with a staff of 14. He was
    well known for his skills and talent and enjoyed great demand, also
    among Arabs.

    `And that's an important thing: Arabs trusted Armenians, meaning that
    an Armenian man hairdresser could give a haircut to an Arab woman or
    style her hair. In Yerevan, too, many of my Aleppo-Armenian customers
    have found me. Just like me, they too have been driven away by the war
    and have found refuge here,' says Alex. `Back in Aleppo [after the
    conflict started] I would open the salon once in a while if I had a
    customer, but our services had gotten more expensive. There was no
    electricity and we were using petrol [for power generator], hence just
    a haircut cost $20'.

    The Aleppo-Armenian master doesn't feel inferior because of becoming
    an employee when he used to run his own business. Outwards he seems
    very calm and peaceful, but confesses that inside he feels anxiety and
    is trying hard to be strong.

    He stands out among his local colleagues with his movements and
    speaking manner. The salon's other employees say Alex has different
    training, he is a representative of a different school [of
    hairdressing], so his work differs from theirs'.

    `He has skillful hands, a magic touch,' they say.

    Alex explains that there certainly is a distinction between beauty
    parlors of Aleppo and Yerevan.

    `Here every chair [each hairdresser has his/her designated chair] has
    its own customers. There, if someone came to `Alex' salon it didn't
    matter which master would work with them. A master is a master and
    knows all the newest fashionable haircuts. Here local customers'
    desires are prioritized. I have one issue - sometimes they speak
    Armenian and use some Russian words, which I do not understand. But my
    friends here help me out, explain what this or that word means,' he
    says.

    With 42 years of professional experience, Alex says twice a year he
    attends fashion clubs of European countries for training to get to
    know all the newest trends. Last time he went was before the war. In
    Aleppo conditions were good, he was well-off, but the war has ruined
    all the plans.

    `I wanted to lead a quiet, prosperous life...my sister, brother, mother
    are there now. My house door is shut, my salon is closed, my cars
    stand abandoned. Here we live off of the savings we have brought with
    us. I am happy to have this job, some don't have even this, but my
    earnings hardly cover some of the most basic expenses,' he says.

    Alex has three daughters Meghry, Rachel, and Alexandria. His wife's
    name is Talin. Meghry is a student at the American University of
    Armenia (AUA), Rachel is in high school, and Alexandria attends
    kindergarten. The family has started a new challenging period in their
    life, this time in their motherland.

    Alex says he had never thought about leaving Syria.

    `My business was good there, so I never thought about coming here. We
    had everything we wanted. What cares would someone who traveled twice
    a year have? But we should have thought deeper, looked farther, should
    have left the country earlier. If Assad's administration is defeated,
    Lebanon, Iraq, Iran will come tumbling down right after it,' says Alex
    with frustration. `I am thinking of going there, but not staying, no.
    It's a matter of time, things will eventually get settled in Syria,
    but we still have to think about the future. After Assad's defeat we'd
    have a lot to fear, because many among the opposition are hostile to
    Christian nations...'

    Alex is renting an apartment in downtown Yerevan for $400 per month.
    He doesn't complain and says, as opposed to many others, he has come
    and immediately started working.

    `I know many have returned to Syria unhappy with the conditions here.
    It all depends on a person, though. Of course, if I didn't work I
    would eventually run out of my savings. I, too, could be going to
    cafes and restaurants every week, fritter away my money at casinos and
    party, and then what? It doesn't work for me. I have heard that some
    came, spent $20,000, and left. But, what did they do? It's not a joke
    to spend $20,000,' he says.

    He shows the photos he has in his cell phone of his apartment in
    Aleppo and the one in Yerevan.

    `My mother, brother and his wife, my sister - they are all in Aleppo.
    And these photos are taken here, in our current apartment. It's the
    first New Year that we celebrated outside our home. We have to endure,
    wait and see what happens, go back, sell it all and come back here,
    what else can we do? At this moment selling anything would be very
    hard,' he says.

    Alex's heart is stormed; thoughts collide like waves in troubled
    waters, the future is fuzzy, veiled by dark clouds of indefiniteness.
    But just like many other Syrian-Armenian families, the Habeshians,
    too, live with what seems endless anticipation and try to be
    optimistic.

    `Maybe I will open my own beauty salon here, I just might, who knows?
    Everything is possible, I just don't know for sure yet. We might move
    to Yerevan for good, why not? It's a calm, clean country, we are among
    Armenians, Yerevan is a sweet city, and, most importantly, we can feel
    at peace and safe here,' he concludes.

    http://armenianow.com/society/features/42859/aleppo_war_syria_assad_syrian_armenians

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