| Updated: Jun 18, 2017, 09.34 AM IST
The French word vernissage means a private showing or preview of an art exhibition. The lines of desperation on the woman's face — 500 Armenian Drams for that converts to a measly amount of Rs 70 — hint at the ravages of history, of what went wrong with the country that's the cradle of a rich ancient civilisation. It produces the most exquisite brandy, wines and carpets and is believed to be the resting place of Noah's Ark.
The mountainous country in the south Caucasian region has seen fierce invasions by Arabs, Mongols, Persians, Turks and Russians, forcing local populations to flee with every wave of attack; Armenia's national symbol Mount Ararat, believed to be the resting place of Noah's Ark, became Turkey's territory in the 1920s; earthquakes in 1988 devastated the nation: 25,000 killed, thousands rendered homeless. Yet the most painful chapter remains the genocide by the Ottoman Empire in 1915 that killed 1.5 million Armenians. The violence tears up every Armenian, both resident and the diaspora.
Yet it's not the tragedies but the remarkable grit of Armenians to give back to their motherland and restore its ancient glory that is stunning. "We can never forget the genocide but we have to move on, snap out of the 'victim' mode. Showcase the beauties of Armenia, its rich civilisation and ancient history," says Armenuhi Magarditchian, a PhD scholar of classical archaeology at the University of Geneva. A Swiss national, Armenuhi is in her country of origin to study rock inscription in Greek in the ancient pagan temple of Garni, a symbol of Hellenistic culture built over two centuries before Armenia became the world's first country to adopt Christianity as a state religion in 301 AD.
Named after her country, like many others, Aremenuhi's family tree exemplifies the massive global village that Armenians have turned the world into. Born in Switzerland, her father is in Bulgaria, mother in Lebanon and maternal grandparents in Egypt where her maternal great grandparents had fled to escape the 1915 genocide. On her father's side, the family moved out of Armenian city Ani when it was attacked by the Seljuk Turks in circa 1064. Canada, Brazil, Romania and Cyprus are other places where her family moved out.
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