L’anthologie de la poésie arménienne en langue arabe, de Julie Moura

L’Orient-Le Jour, Liban
29 nov 2013

L’anthologie de la poésie arménienne en langue arabe, de Julie Mourad –

Édition

Une lacune vient d’être comblée. Nombreux sont les ouvrages
parcellaires consacrés à la poésie arménienne en langues étrangères.
Aujourd’hui, avec « Shou3araaouna, sani3ou majd Arminia » (Nos poètes,
faiseurs de la gloire de l’Arménie), en langue arabe, de Julie Mourad
(Dar al-Mourad, 443 pages), une invitation au voyage est lancée dans
l’univers du Parnasse du pays de Sayat Nova.

Edgar DAVIDIAN | OLJ
29/11/2013

Un livre-coffret (plus de 2 kg), lourd comme une paire de briques et,
par conséquent, difficilement manipulable, luxueusement édité. Aux
confins des ouvrages d’art avec couverture cartonnée et papiers glacés
pour des pages ornées de fragments de dessins tirés des enluminures
les plus anciennes au monde, cette édition reliée de la poétique
arménienne (de surcroît dans une bonne traduction en langue arabe) est
d’une nouveauté spectaculaire et éclairante.

Dans sa richesse de fragments de toiles illustrant et accompagnant les
poèmes et l’élégance d’un graphisme aéré et aérien pour des lettres
imprimées dans une calligraphie digne des plus talentueux calligraphes
arabes, elle ouvre une fenêtre de culture et de connaissance, aussi
bien historique que littéraire et picturale – un travail remarquable
pour la partie illustrative – surtout pour des lecteurs non versés ou
initiés à la langue de Grégoire l’Illuminateur.

Compilation sélective qui dépasse par sa qualité d’impression, surtout
d’illustration, l’anthologie de Rouben Melik, en langue française,
fourmillante d’informations lors de sa parution en 1973.
Avec Nos poètes faiseurs de la gloire de l’Arménie de Julie Mourad,
romancière et traductrice, le lecteur est devant un ouvrage donnant
sur un riche panorama, non seulement de l’art poétique du pays du mont
Ararat, mais aussi de la spécificité et la variété de l’inspiration de
ses maîtres du pinceau et de la palette. Car au souffle des mots
correspondent ici le chant et le lyrisme des couleurs, comme une
marche à deux au tempo et aux ondulations indissociables.

Des temps les plus reculés au rythme speedé du monde contemporain, de
l’invention lumineuse de l’alphabet en trente-huit lettres par Mesrob
Machots jusqu’à nos jours, des moments de la foi des premiers
chrétiens, (les Arméniens étant les enfants aînés de l’Église), aux
années de plomb et de sang du génocide, en passant par les remous de
l’histoire, de la libération du joug soviétique et de la diaspora,
tous les vocables, les évocations, les invocations et les images sont
là.

En préambule, appendice, préface ou postface, des mots d’introduction,
de présentation et des commentaires de plusieurs intellectuels et
hommes politiques et religieux influents. On retient surtout
l’intervention de Serge Sarkissian, président de la République
d’Arménie, et de celle de Michel Eddé au texte respirant non seulement
une analyse subtile mais une amitié chaleureuse.
Et s’égrène le chapelet d’historiens, de virtuoses des images et des
mots, des chroniqueurs au verbe d’or ou d’acide, des inspirés de tous
crins touchés par la grce de Dieu, de l’amour, de la patrie, de la
sensualité, de la nuit, de la beauté de la nature, de la nostalgie, de
la solitude, de la solidarité, de la liberté, de la libération, des
émotions, du rêve, de l’action, du combat.

De Movses Khorenatsi à Henrig Etoyan (c’est-à-dire de l’ère 440 à la
frénésie contemporaine), les voyants et les mages, acteurs
amplificateurs de la vie, témoignent. Et tissent, avec leurs vocables
aux sonorités tendres ou sifflantes, les tableaux changeants du temps
qui passe et d’une histoire mouvementée. Histoire d’un pays qui a
toujours fait face avec dignité et tempérament à l’adversité. Avec un
inaliénable credo pour les grandes valeurs morales, patriotiques et
religieuses.

Dans le rang de ces «battants», plus de trente-cinq noms,
soigneusement sélectionnés, avec notice biographique et extraits
traduits de leur `uvre respective. Sont répertoriés dans ce peloton,
sans que cette nomenclature soit exhaustive, Hovannes Shiraz, Vahé
Vahian, Kegham Sarian, Missak Medzarents, Gostan Zarian, Daniel
Varoujan, Vahan Tékéian, Avedik Isajakian, Arhag Tchobanian, Bedros
Tourian, le trouvère Nahabet Kouchag et bien d’autres…

À cela s’ajoute la partie réservée aux artistes-peintres. Sans
mentionner ces reproductions ou fragments de toiles maîtresses du
panthéon pictural du pays de l’Araxe. À l’intérieur des frontières et
au c`ur de la diaspora aux quatre points cardinaux. Ainsi que les
Khatch Kar (ces célèbres pierres tombales sculptées), les tapis (ces
merveilleux kali et gorg) aux motifs ramagés et aux couleurs
éclatantes, les dentelles finement tissées, les détails délicats de
superbes enluminures où croix et symboles de la foi chrétienne
s’imbriquent. Accessoires visuels panachés ornant fastueusement, telle
une chevauchée fantastique, les poèmes déployés ici à tout vent…

Plus de soixante pages, pour plus d’une cinquantaine de peintres
d’envergure internationale, avec planches colorées illustratives, sont
dédiées aux parcours, à la musicalité et aux résonances des mots. On
retrouve avec plaisir et émerveillement le monde, entre autres, de
Toros Roslin, Ivan Aivazovski, Martiros Sarian, Yervant Kochar, Robert
Elibekian, Minas Avetisian, Galentz, Arshille Gorky, Carzou, Jansem,
Serguey Parajanoff…

Un livre riche d’images, jetant avec efficacité, en langue arabe, la
lumière sur les sources et le dédale de la poésie arménienne. Document
agréable et utile pour l’échange des cultures, à garder dans toute
bibliothèque. Ou tout simplement à offrir en cadeau à l’approche des
fêtes, car découvrir et mieux connaître les autres, c’est déjà s’en
rapprocher…

http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/844784/lanthologie-de-la-poesie-armenienne-en-langue-arabe-de-julie-mourad.html

The Ukraine tug of war

The Japan Times
November 29, 2013, Friday

The Ukraine tug of war

Russian President Vladimir Putin has won an important foreign policy
victory with the decision by Ukraine to suspend talks on an
association agreement with the European Union. Putin countered the EU
offer with threats and blandishments of his own. While Ukrainian
officials insist that the door remains open, there is no mistaking
Kiev’s decision to cast its lot with Russia.

Association status is the EU’s way of building ties with countries
short of membership.

The EU negotiates a framework agreement with a third country that
typically focuses on economic, trade, political, social or security
ties. Free trade agreements with nonmember states are association
agreements.

Ukraine first voiced a desire to conclude some sort of association
agreement with the EU in 1994, and various negotiations have been held
since then. Talks on a free trade agreement began in 2008, and the
next year, Ukraine was identified as one of the six post-Soviet states
that would join “the Eastern Partnership” with the EU. This concept
was intended to provide a framework for discussion of contentious
issues without having to join the EU. In addition to facilitating the
resolution of these problems, the Eastern Partnership would extend EU
influence to the east, and help reorient those former Soviet states to
the West, lessening Russian sway over those governments. The Ukraine
association agreement was to have been signed at an EU summit this
week in Lithuania.

Well aware of European intentions, Moscow has done its best to
frustrate those plans. It has proposed a rival trade bloc, imposed
trade restrictions on Ukraine and threatened even worse if the deal
goes through. The EU has helped Ukraine secure future gas supplies,
promised 300 million in annual aid and ensured that $822 million is
available via the International Monetary Fund. Ukraine President
Viktor Yanukovich has said that that is not enough money to make the
deal a winner for his country, however.

According to Yanukovich, the deal would cost Ukraine $500 billion in
trade with Russia and the adoption of EU standards would add another
$100 billion to the tab.

The EU’s demands for political reform did not help its case. As part
of the association deal, the EU sought the release from prison of
opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko. The former prime minister is
considered the target of political payback, and her release would be
the most tangible sign that Ukraine seeks to reform its political
system. (The Ukraine government denies that it has engaged in
selective prosecution or that Tymoshenko is treated differently from
any other citizen.) It was proposed that Tymoshenko be released on
medical leave for treatment abroad for her back problems. Six
different versions of legislation designed to free Tymoshenko for
medical reasons were defeated by Yanukovich’s party. On Monday, she
declared a hunger strike. While Yanukovich insists that the government
has not turned its back on the EU and that many of the reforms that
would be required are going to occur anyway, the die appears to have
been cast. Ukraine will now focus its efforts on reaching a deal with
Moscow.

The pressure on Ukraine follows Russian efforts to get Armenia to
change course. It too was going to join the free trade agreement with
the EU but it abruptly abandoned those plans in September after
Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian had an emergency meeting with Putin
and days after Russia concluded a multi-billion dollar arms deal with
Azerbaijian, Armenian’srival. There is speculation that Sarkisian
changed his mind to avoid losing Russian support in the conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh.

While Georgia and Moldova are still expected to sign agreements with
the EU this week in Lithuania, the loss of Ukraine, a country of 46
million people, will be a blow to the EU’s plans to extend its reach
eastward. There is speculation that Ukraine is just bargaining.
Yanukovich is said to fear Tymoshenko’s re-emergence as a rival in the
next presidential campaign. His party’s rejection of her release is,
according to this logic, a way to change the terms of the deal.

That is an over-optimistic reading. Putin is strongly opposed to the
agreement. His Russia, a great power that seeks to reclaim its
superpower status and the respect of the rest of the world, will not
abandon its interests in the near abroad, and certainly not in
Ukraine, which is considered by many to be the cradle of Russian
civilization. There is talk of a joint Ukraine, Russia and EU trade
commission that would effectively give Moscow a say over economic
relations in Eastern Europe.

There are some lessons to be drawn from these developments. The first
is the readiness of the Russians to play hardball and inflict real
pain on those nations with which it has serious political disputes.
Moscow sees no distinction between economics and politics. Second, the
EU is not prepared to play hardball of this nature. If it truly seeks
to enlarge its influence, then it must decide which is more important
– the expansion of its political influence or the spread of its
political systems.

It is not clear if a loosening of demands regarding Tymoshenko would
have made a difference, but Brussels did not appear interested in
finding out. That is shortsighted thinking in a serious geopolitical
contest.

In Q3 2013 assets of Armenia’s insurance companies dropped by 7.5%

In Q3 2013 assets of Armenia’s insurance companies dropped by 7.5%

by Elita Babayan

ARMINFO
Tuesday, November 12, 15:22

In Q3 2013 the assets of Armenia’s insurance companies dropped by
7.5% to 46.2bln AMD or $114.1mln.

According to the Ranking of the Insurance Companies of Armenia
prepared by the Agency of Rating Marketing Information (ArmInfo), as
compared with Q3 2012 the assets of the companies grew by 22%.

Rosgosstrakh Armenia, INGO Armenia and RESO had the biggest assets –
11.5bln AMD (28.4% growth as compared with Q3 2012), 10.9bln AMD (14%
growth) and 8.7bln AMD (72.3% growth), respectively. Garant Insurance
had the smallest assets – 2.7bln AMD.

87% of the assets were floating assets (40bln AMD). As compared with
Q2 2013 this index dropped by 7%, but as compared with Q3 2013 it grew
by 22%. 60.7% of the floating assets were current financial
investments (28bln AMD), which grew by 30% as compared with Q3 2012.
The short-term receivables grew by 14% as compared with Q3 2012 and
dropped by 21.6% as compared with Q2 2013 to 10.4bln AMD. The share of
cash in the assets made up 1.8% or 824.1mln AMD (11% more than in Q3
2012 and 12.6% less than in Q2 2013).

During the same period the total capital of the companies dropped by
2% to 14.6bln AMD or $36mln.

The authorized capital made up 90.8% of the total capital or 13.2bln
AMD, the accumulated profit made up 5.7% or 826mln AMD. As compared
with Q2 2013 the accumulated profit dropped by 10.7%, as compared with
Q3 2012 it dropped by 72.5%.

Armenia Insurance, Nairi Insurance and Ingo Armenia registered
accumulated profits of 1.4bln AMD, 792.4bln AMD and 225mln AMD,
respectively, with Rosgosstrakh Armenia, RESO, Garant Insurance and
Sil Insurance recording respective losses of 782.3mln AMD, 535mln AMD,
160.4mln AMD and 103.2mln AMD.

In Q3 2013 as compared with Q2 2013 the current obligations of the
companies dropped by 10% to 31.7bln AMD. As compared with Q3 2012 they
grew by 34%. In their structure current payables made up 8.6% or
2.7bln AMD (18% less than in Q2 2013 and 54% less than in Q3 2013).
During the period the insurance reserves of the companies dropped by
15% to 18.4bln AMD.

Armenia Exceeds Australia With Indicator Of Trade Turnover With Russ

ARMENIA,RUSSIAN FEDERATION : REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA EXCEEDS AUSTRALIA WITH INDICATOR OF TRADE TURNOVER WITH RUSSIA

TendersInfo
November 28, 2013 Thursday

The Republic of Armenia has exceeded Australia with the indicator
of the trade turnover with the Russian Federation and is close to
Argentina.

The total Armenia-Russia trade turnover indicator ($908,1 million)
exceeded the indicators of Portugal ($830,8 million), Australia ($632
million), Chili ($558,9 million), Tajikistan ($552,6 million), Georgia
($427,2 million), Peru ($347,3 million), New Zealand ($341,9 million)
and other countries during the months of January-September 2013.

The export indicator from Armenia to Russia made $239,7 million during
the 9 months of the current year.

Our country exceeded New Zealand, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Hong
Kong, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Cyprus and other countries with its export
indicator to Russia.<

Eve Of The First World War: 1914

EVE OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR: 1914

The Irish Times
November 27, 2013 Wednesday

BY Enda O’Doherty

Europe’s boundaries had changed little since the Congress of Vienna
settlement of 1815. This apparent stability was deceptive, however,
given the growth of national sentiment in central Europe and the
Balkans and the increasing rivalry and mutual distrust of the great
powers. In 1912 Serbia, Bulgaria and Greece combined to grab more
territory from the ailing Ottomans, then fell out over how to split
their winnings. In 1913 Bulgaria attempted to seize what it felt was
its due but ended up losing many of its gains of the previous year.

It was the clash of Russian and Austro-Hungarian ambitions which was
to provide the fatal spark to set Europe alight. Austria-Hungary’s
declaration of war against Serbia after the assassination of Archduke
Ferdinand (right) in Sarajevo brought a Russian mobilisation.

Austria’s ally, Germany, declared war on Russia, then on Russia’s
ally, France. The Germans invaded Belgium. Britain, France’s ally,
declared war on Germany and Austria on Russia. Four years of world
war had begun in which eight to 10 million would die.

In 1915, the Ottoman government decided to deport its Armenian
population, who were suspected of sympathising with the Russians.

Between one and two million Armenians died during deportation or were
massacred in what is taken to be the first modern instance of genocide.

In Ireland…The British election of 1910 had made the governing
Liberals dependent on the support of the Irish Parliamentary Party.

Patrick Pearse spoke from a Dublin Home Rule platform in 1912 and
the Home Rule Bill of that year passed in the Commons. Meanwhile,
in Ulster, a volunteer force was armed by guns from Germany. More
than 200,000 men and women pledged themselves to resist Home Rule by
“any means necessary”. Then the outbreak of war put everything on hold.

In 1908 a new style of painting that was to be called Cubism emerged
with Picasso and Braque. The first performance of the Russian composer
Igor Stravinksy’s revolutionary Rite of Spring caused a riot in Paris
in 1913.

Armenian Citizens Forced To Emigrate

ARMENIAN CITIZENS FORCED TO EMIGRATE

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Nov 28 2013

28 November 2013 – 10:50am

By David Stepanyan, Yerevan. Exclusively for Vestnik Kavkaza

A large crowd of demonstrators has recently gathered at the Armenian
government again. The familiar banners of mothers of soldiers killed
during peaceful military service, residents of the Dalma Gardens
District driven out of their homes, and Nairit workers demanding
higher wages have been supplemented by banners of activists protesting
against the accumulative pension system. Banners show such slogans as
‘Stop obligatory racketeering!’, ‘Stop robbery!’, ‘Get your hands of
our wages!’ After the announcement of young people to continue the
struggle for scrapping of the pension system that ‘legally’ robs the
population, Deputy Police Chief Valery Osipyan took personal command
of the police officers in the area.

The plans of the government to oblige people to save for their pensions
caused a public outrage. The accumulative pension system has lots
of conflicts with the Constitution. For example, only people with
at least 10 years of work records will get a pension, people with
5-year records will get no social support. Serious risks lie in the
government’s plan to manage 40% of pension assets abroad, considering
that another global financial recession could turn the funds into dust.

It is unclear why years of university studies, maternity leave,
obligatory military service are not included in the work records. It
is unclear why people born after 1974 must not only save for their
pension but also finance pensions for half a million of existing
pensioners. It is hard to explain to a person earning $150-200 a
month and hardly making both ends meet why he or she should give up 7%
of his or her income, especially in the context of constantly rising
prices for basic goods.

The obligatory accumulative pension system is certainly more fair
than the existing system when all pensioners receive about the same
pensions regardless of wages and years spent working. In some Western
states, the system has been a success for years. But the system there
is a result of many years of a voluntary system, improvement of living
standards, independent from relatively low corruption rates. Imagining
such idyll in Armenia today is almost impossible. Thus, depriving a
living and working Armenian of more parts of low income would mean
encouragement of migration. The government is totally destroying
people’s trust in its promises.

According to the Minister for Finances David Sarkisyan, the new
pension assets worth 41-44 billion drams a year will be managed by
France’s AMUNDI (a subsidiary of Societe Generale and Credit Agricole)
and Thalanks Asset Management, an affiliate of Germany’s C-Quadrat.

AMUNDI assets are worth $1.3 trillion, C-Quadrat $500 billion. In
reality, the government is clearly to make profit from circulation
of the ‘pension’ funds and gain extra GDP ‘growth.’

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/society/48070.html

Armenia Ready To Leave Two Districts Of Nagorno-Karabakh

ARMENIA READY TO LEAVE TWO DISTRICTS OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Nov 28 2013

28 November 2013 – 2:27pm

Armenia is ready to leave two occupied districts of Azerbaijan,
Sabah reports today.

Turkey prepared a new road map for the settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for the upcoming visit of Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu to Washington and Moscow. Turkey wants Armenia to
express a readiness to leave the districts officially. Davutoglu
will take part in the BSEC summit in Yerevan if Armenia makes a
corresponding statement.

Armenia in far behind Azerbaijan in terms of economic development,
and will have to make concessions, the paper says. Withdrawal from
two out of seven occupied areas will give way to a normalization of
Armenian-Turkish relations.

Armenia is ready to leave two occupied districts of Azerbaijan,
Sabah reports today.

Turkey prepared a new road map for the settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for the upcoming visit of Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu to Washington and Moscow. Turkey wants Armenia to
express a readiness to leave the districts officially. Davutoglu
will take part in the BSEC summit in Yerevan if Armenia makes a
corresponding statement.

Armenia in far behind Azerbaijan in terms of economic development,
and will have to make concessions, the paper says. Withdrawal from
two out of seven occupied areas will give way to a normalization of
Armenian-Turkish relations.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/news/politics/48088.html

With Obama In Glendale, Armenians Press Genocide-Related Issue

WITH OBAMA IN GLENDALE, ARMENIANS PRESS GENOCIDE-RELATED ISSUE

Los Angeles Times, CA
Nov 26 2013

By Nicole Charky

November 26, 2013, 1:58 p.m.

Local Armenian leaders on Tuesday used an appearance by President
Obama at the DreamWorks Animation studio to request that the White
House allow a Smithsonian display of a rug handmade by refugee orphans
of the mass genocide about a century ago.

It took about 10 months for Armenian genocide survivors living at an
American-sponsored orphanage to weave and knot the 12-foot-by-18-foot
rug, which was scheduled to be displayed at the Smithsonian Castle
in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 16. However, organizers canceled the
exhibit on Sept. 12, saying the White House had declined to loan it.

At a news conference Tuesday, students from the Chamlian Armenian
School, representatives from the Armenian National Committee of America
and area clergy signed a letter extolling the historical importance
of the rug, the Glendale News-Press reported.

A bipartisan group of lawmakers who also support releasing the rug
have called it a “pivotal icon related to the Armenian Genocide,”
in which an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman
Turks as the empire was dissolving during World War I.

Historians have concluded the episode was a genocide, but Turkey —
a key U.S. ally in the Middle East — has contended that Turks and
Armenians were casualties of war, famine and disease.

“All we’re seeking is that a piece of American history be exhibited at
the Smithsonian. I certainly hope that President Obama will take the
right step in this direction and allow for the rug to be exhibited,”
Glendale Councilman Zareh Sinanyan said.

The rug, presented in 1925 to President Calvin Coolidge, is in storage
as part of the White House collection.

“The rug was a gracious gesture symbolizing the friendship between
the American and Armenian peoples. It is part of American history,”
said Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, prelate of the Western Prelacy
of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) said he intends to host an event in the
Capitol featuring the rug and the history of American diplomats and
charitable organizations that provided relief for the genocide victims.

“I will be urging the administration to make the rug available for
display at that time and hope for a favorable response,” he said in
a statement. “The Armenian Orphan Rug should once again be seen by
the American people and the world – as a testament to what happened
nearly a century ago, and as part of our commitment to the survivors
that we will never forget.”

,0,3072954.story#ixzz2lse7SEll

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-president-obama-glendale-armenians-genocide-20131126

EP President Disappointed By Ukraine’s, Armenia’s Refusal To Sign As

EP PRESIDENT DISAPPOINTED BY UKRAINE’S, ARMENIA’S REFUSAL TO SIGN ASSOCIATION AGREEMENTS WITH EU

Kyiv Post, Ukraine
Nov 27 2013

Brussels – President of the European Parliament Martin Schulz has
expressed his deep disappointment by the fact that Ukraine and
Armenia have given up their plans to sign Association Agreements at
the Eastern Partnership Summit in Vilnius.

“I congratulate Moldova and Georgia on the planned initialing of
the Association Agreements with the EU. I am deeply disappointed,
however, that Ukraine and Armenia have abandoned plans to sign the
Association Agreements at the summit. It is especially regrettable
that the countries’ decisions to reconsider their choices have been
made under external pressure. We should say clearly and loudly that the
economic and political pressure exerted by Russia against our eastern
partners is simply unacceptable,” Schulz said in a statement ahead
of the Eastern Partnership Summit due in Vilnius on November 28-29.

The EP president will also participate in the event.

He said that “the door of association with the EU remains open.”

“We will never abandon the European hopes and aspirations of the
peoples of the region,” he said.

“The Eastern Partnership is a valuable project that brings closer
the European Union and its eastern neighbors for the benefit of their
citizens by fostering stronger economic, political and cultural ties,”
Schulz said.

http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/ep-president-deeply-disappointed-by-ukraines-armenias-refusal-to-sign-association-agreements-with-eu-332538.html

German’s Wanderlust Brings Him To Armenia; A Country He Never Knew A

YOUNG GERMAN’S WANDERLUST BRINGS HIM TO ARMENIA; A COUNTRY HE NEVER KNEW ABOUT

Mаry Mamyan

;-a-country-he-never-knew-about.html
14:03, November 27, 2013

“Chris is a 23 year-old world traveler who has now reached Armenia.

He’s looking for a place to crash this Saturday and Sunday”. This is
what one of his friends wrote in Facebook.

Chris travels the world without money

I decided to met Chris and ask him about his travel plans. The 23
year-old looked like 33 to me, what with his long beard and tired
expression.

It turns out that Chris is an electrician. When his boss gave a
year off from work, Chris decided to fulfill his life’s dream of
travelling the globe. He didn’t have a specific itinerary when he
started out. He just grabbed a large bag for necessities and headed
off. The most important item is his cell phone, which he uses to
speak to friends and connect to the internet. The young man says
‘I go where my feet take me.’

On this trip, Chris has already been to eleven countries, and he says
his favorites are Moldova, Romania and Georgia. Regarding Armenia,
he says he likes the people and the natural landscape.

In Georgia, they told him that Armenians have no emotions

After visiting the Ukraine, Chris wanted to head to Russia, but he
didn’t have a visa. So he went to Georgia, and afterwards, Armenia.

The young German confesses that he only found out about Armenia
while in Georgia. They told him that Armenia was a mountainous and
bleak country where the people have no emotions. Chris told me that
he really likes Armenia and that it’s a beautiful place. He notes,
however, that people here are sad and walk with sullen faces.

“If I ask somebody something, they’re more than happy to help. But
before asking, they have these morose faces,” Chris says and knits
his brows for effect.

Chris jokingly tells me that the first time he stepped into a Yerevan
pub, everyone looked at him with amazement, saying ‘can it be that
Curt Cobain from Nirvana is still alive?’

Chris wants to get a visa to travel to Iran. After going to the
embassy here, they told him he’d have to pay for a visa. Since he
doesn’t have the cash, Chris has changes his plans.

When he’s on the road, Chris decides how long he’ll stay in a country
based on how many days he finds a place to sleep. Thus, he could only
stay in Moldova for two days. In Georgia, where he was put up by a
family, Chris stayed for three weeks.

Chris reminded me of the hero in the Avicii “Wake me up” song. He
sings about not knowing where his travels will end, who hopes to see
the world, but makes no plans. Chris let me in on a secret – that’s
his song on the road.

“I detest capitalism”

“I can make a lot of money working as an electrician, but I don’t
like money,” Chris says. “I can’t understand why people give it
such importance.”

He admits that he can’t hold on to money. If he has it, he spends it.

But he’s decided to start saving after his travels are done in order
to fulfill his next dream – buying a travel bus.

“I detest capitalism,” repeats Chris.

He also wants to start a family to see how a “little Chris” will grow
before his eyes. But all that is a few years down the road.

Chris is pleased that he has been able to travel so far practically
without money, to see different cultures, and get to meet loads of
people. But it’s turned into an obsession, driving him to visit more
countries, to see more.

“To be honest, I been quite discombobulated throughout it all. I
haven’t had time to look back,” he says.

When one of my friends notes that the Germans are known for their
punctuality, Kris gets serious.

“Yeah, the Germans are like that. They need order. Not me. I don’t
know where I’ll be from one day to the next,” he laughs.

Chris really wants to celebrate the New Year holiday in India. From
there, he’s thinking of going to Sri Lanka. The next stop would
be Africa.

The young man with unquenched wanderlust is now in Turkey.

But who knows where he’ll be tomorrow? Your guess is as good as mine.

Photos: From Chris’s Facebook page and archives.

http://hetq.am/eng/articles/30991/young-german%E2%80%99s-wanderlust-brings-him-to-armenia