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Problem Solving, Armenian Style - Part 2

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  • Problem Solving, Armenian Style - Part 2

    Problem Solving, Armenian Style - Part 2

    November 22, 2013 | 21:09
    Click here to read part 1


    My phone is still abuzz with the cry to connect. And I don't mean
    `connect' in the Facebook kind of way - that's just too easy. That's
    like taking a stroll down the white sand of some beach near the Great
    Barrier Reef without taking a swim, and saying that you `visited' one
    of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World. Nonsense! Take a swim, even
    if it's a little chilly, get your snorkels out and take a dive. The
    deeper you go, the more you meet the weird and wonderful: corals with
    more colors than Avetisyan's painting palette, and sharks too, along
    with fear, warmth, beauty, and risk. That's what it is like with real
    human connection. It requires a surrender of your pride, shame,
    prejudice, and fear.

    It is said that perfect love casts out all fear and releases us to be
    able to connect with others in a sincere way - and perhaps that's
    true. But having one mobile phone in Armenia is far quicker than deep
    soul change. It treats you like a three year old learning to swim from
    his parents: your pajamas are off and you're thrown in the deep end of
    the pool (at least, that's how many Australians learn). My mobile
    phone reminds me every hour that I don't have a choice: I must connect
    with people. I'm forced into a crowd of Armenian friends solving each
    other's problems. And more often than not that means visiting people's
    home for dinner (I estimate that I could survive several months here
    without any cooking. I just need to book a different friend to visit
    each evening).

    Armenian hospitality is simultaneously heartfelt and embarrassing:
    entering an Armenian home means being welcomed in the warmest way
    possible. Plates of colorful fruit, candy, and of course, coffee,
    incessantly beckons. Image and impression are all-important factors in
    this social construct: what ensues is an artfully done pre-meditated
    social ritual. When you enter the home as a guest, you give the
    impression that says `I won't sit; no coffee or khorovatz for me, but
    thank you very much for your kindness'.And then, like following a
    predetermined script, the host beckons again to sit, drink a little,
    and take some cherries, to which of course you must further decline.
    And for the final scene, in what is an end to the verbal tennis, is a
    concluding summon to sit and eat, and to sink your teeth into the
    fresh peaches the host's relative just brought from Noyemberyan - a
    resolution to which you must, of course, finally accept. I have been
    told that Armenians avoid complimenting one another, but when sitting
    around a table they are somehow released to exchange kind accolades
    unreservedly.

    Then the next wave of invitations - no, demands - to stay for dinner,
    another cognac, and then some, washes over you like a massage that
    starts off a little uncomfortable but then begins soothing your nerves
    into such a relaxed state, that you can't make yourself leave the
    table. Nor does the host allow you to. Although initially arriving
    resolute to leave early and have a single coffee, you have once again
    succumbed to the warm embrace of Armenian hospitality.

    The awkwardness begins when it's your turn to be hospitable - because
    you know you can't do it like them. I, for one, am a terrible host on
    my best days; but on Armenian (and for that matter, Filipino)
    standards, I'm an absolute disgrace. But I'm learning. To borrow from
    the New Testament, my vine branches are being pruned.

    Filipinos are world-renowned for their warm disposition to guests and
    foreigners. Their hospitality is truly the Pearl of the Orient. In the
    provinces outside of the major urban hubs, people are tremendously
    gracious, with the attitude that they would `kill their last cow for
    you' and spill open their very last sachet of American coffee brought
    from overseas by a relative, which has been treasured for months (and
    possibly years). Even if the cow is a little malnourished and the
    coffee a little stale, their attitude in absolute poverty is certainly
    something to learn from.

    But what, really, is hospitality? Broken down, does it just mean a
    collection of little actions to make your guest feel fuller and
    merrier? No, it is far more profound: true hospitality knows no
    boundaries. An a barekam implies a close relationship with friends,
    certain people from the same village, and even business partners, who
    are extended the typical favoritism normally accorded to a close
    relative.

    Unlike in the West (if you permit me to abuse such generalizations), I
    find that in Armenia, nothing is ever too much. It can be from the
    smallest detail to a large favor - true Armenian friendship knows no
    bounds, and once you are `in' the akhperutsyun, there isn't much you
    can ask for or say that will exclude you from the group. Forgiveness
    abounds, but so does responsibility.

    Even with some of my closest of friends, I would think twice about
    asking for certain things or bothering them at particular times - one
    must always have sensitivity to the boundaries of what is private and
    what might be an imposing irritant. Not so in Armenia.

    Perhaps written into the DNA of most Armenians is the ability to
    (reluctantly?) bind together in order to survive. Armenians excel when
    they work together. It is no coincidence that the Armenian chess team
    are the reigning chess world champions - a title they have won several
    times. As a team, they flourish - their sum is certainly greater than
    the individual achievements of their parts. They have a special
    ingredient that other teams don't have: the ability to come together
    in unison in a sport that is essentially an individual battle.

    There is a very strong sense of solidarity here, and it posits a
    strong case for the sociological tradition of mending the individual
    via fixing social relationships (Durkheim would nod approvingly). For
    as much as my phone's high-pitched nagging takes some getting used to,
    its frequent, trusty rhythm is the solution of choice by Armenian
    society, which declares that there is no challenge, however small and
    insignificant, to be met alone. As the great W.B. Yeats once wrote,
    `Think where a man's glory most begins and ends, And say my glory was
    I had such friends'.

    Click here to read part 1

    Arianne Caoili

    http://news.am/eng/news/182156.html

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