Kolkhozashen goes to school

May 20 2022
 20 May 2022

Ashot Gabrielyan teaches in a class in Kolkhozashen, a remote village in Nagorno-Karabakh. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

The village of Kolkhozashen, one of the most remote settlements in Nagorno-Karabakh has found new life with the arrival of Ashot Gabrielyan, a teacher from Yerevan with a vision to transform the village.

The village of Kolkhozashen (Arpaduzu), population 180, lies in the forested mountains of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Martuni (Khojavand) region, just over 60 kilometres sout-east of Stepanakert (Khankandi). 

Calling the village isolated would be an understatement.

Housesin Kolkhozashen are scattered between rocky hills with no proper footpaths, turning a basic neighbourly visit into a hike. For several years now, there has also been no means of public transit, as the village’s lone bus driver enlisted in the army after the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. 

Mobile phone coverage is also spotty, and it’s likelier to catch a signal from an Azerbaijani mobile company than from an Armenian one. Though, to be fair, it’s not guaranteed that one’s phone will even have a charge, due to the constant power outages.

Kolkhozashen is a remote village in the mountains of Nagrono-Karabakh. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

Such living conditions, especially under the threat of further conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, have meant that no one ever moved to Kolkhozashen, that is until  Ashot Gabrielyan arrived in the village in August 2021.

The 22-year-old teacher was born in the Nagorno-Karabakh city of Askeran (Asgaran) and had lived in Yerevan for over five years before joining the Teach for Armenia programme. The programme offers secluded communities better education and provides qualified teachers with employment opportunities.

Through the programme, teachers willing to move to the villages of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh are offered housing and compensation after being prepared as educators and community leaders.

A house in Kolkhozashen, Nagorno-Karabakh. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

The Second Nagorno-Karabakh war drove Gabrielyan to quit both his job at the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and at a creative agency he founded with his brother, where he had worked as a manager.

‘After the war, I felt that I wanted to return to Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh]’, Gabrielyan told OC Media.

‘I truly believe that change comes with education’, he says, adding that education plays a crucial role in forming strong nations and states. ‘This was my motivation for returning.’

As a Teach for Armenia educator, Gabrielyan was expected to spend at least two years in the village he was assigned to — in his case, Kolkhozashen. The time commitment, he says, was not a problem. He saw the assignment as a ticket back home and a chance to help those who need it most. 

Gabrielyan’s hometown is a two-hour drive from Kolkhozashen, but the lack of public transport to and from the small village makes visits to Askeran or Stepanakert virtually impossible unless residents with cars are headed in either direction.

‘My family wasn’t very supportive and instead asked me to consider my promising job or stay in Yerevan and continue my education’, he says. ‘My friends, on the other hand, believed that I could apply for this project but couldn’t believe that there’s a village called Kolkhozashen’.

‘Some thought I was joking when I said I was moving there’, Gabrielyan says with a smile.

Gabrielyan plays volleyball with some of his students. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

Recalling the village’s first reactions to his relocation, Gabrielyan says he was ‘asked what had happened to me — if my personal problems were so huge that I decided to escape’.

‘These kinds of comments are among the most common we [participants of Teach for Armenia] hear’, he says, adding that this perception usually passes as soon as the residents get to know them.

Though the project was launched in 2013 in Armenia and in 2017 in Nagorno-Karabakh, many participants find it difficult to sacrifice their old lives and adapt to new rural environments.

A flock of chickens walks in the village. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

‘Some of the houses we are sent to are in a pretty bad state, or there might not be enough houses to host the teachers at all’, he explains.

‘The house I’m staying in, for instance, had no windows or furniture’, he added, saying that he only truly felt at home after decisively defeating an infestation of rodents.

Kolkozashen has a single school, which has not been renovated since 1984, responsible for providing education to the village’s 35 children.

Gabrielyan teaches English and social studies. His students are so few that two or three grades usually sit together in the same lessons. There are no first-grade students, and only two children each are enrolled in the second and third grades.

The school relies on wood-burning stoves for heat, as Kolkhozashen is one of the few villages in Nagorno-Karabakh not connected to a natural gas pipeline. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media. The school gymnasium is undergoing renovations. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

Gabrielyan believes that Kolkhozashen’s isolation from the rest of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia has a deleterious impact on students’ views of the world and their hopes for the future. This isolation, in turn, has driven Gabrielyan, together with the village youth, to establish the ‘Janeh’ community centre. The centre, when completed, will host training sessions for residents in topics ranging from media literacy to social media marketing and small business education. In this way, Ashot says, he hopes to give young people more of a reason to stay and help develop Kolkhozasehn.

Though the centre, which will be part of the village’s administrative building, is not yet complete, Ashot and his group have already launched a project to entice tourists. ‘Kolkhoz Quest’ is a game that leverages the rugged terrain of Kolkhozashen to give visitors a miniature adventure in which they learn about the history of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Ashot Gabrielyan at the future office of the Janeh youth centre. Photo: Ani Avetisyan/OC Media.

Work on establishing Janeh and Kolkhoz Quest moved into full swing after a successful crowdfunding campaign organised by the young teacher in December 2021. It is expected to start operating soon.

Once Ashot leaves the village, the young people who helped establis it are expected to plan and maintain its activities.

In the meanwhile, he continues his work as a teacher, much to his students’ delight. ‘We don’t want the classes to end’, Knar, a tenth grader, tells OC Media. ‘He conducts the lessons in a way no other teacher has before.’

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.

Armenia’s Growing Foster Families

May 20 2022

Ministry of labour and social affairs promotes alternative to placing vulnerable young people in orphanages or children’s homes.

Anna and Hovhannes (not their real names) always wanted to have a family.

“When we got married, we were planning to have three kids,” said Ann, 48, who lives in a city in the Lori region, in northern Armenia.

After discovering she had fertility problems, the couple explored a number of medical interventions before considering adoption.

“I dreamed of a newborn, but there was no newborn to adopt in Armenia in those years. Then I agreed to bring a one or two-year-old baby home, but no, I did not succeed,” Ann said, adding, “I was young, I had some stupid priorities.

“I realised too late that you do not have to embrace a newborn to become a parent; an older child can make you a parent as well. A child is a child, regardless of age.”

After nearly 20 years of marriage, Anna and Hovhannes finally have their wish. For the last year they have been foster parents to a nine-year-old, who used to live in an Armenian orphanage.

They asked to remain anonymous as they said that a stigma still surrounded foster care, especially the fact that they received money for looking after the child.

Armenia’s ministry of labour and social affairs has been actively promoting foster care as an alternative to placing vulnerable young people in orphanages or children’s homes.

In 2018 there were just 17 children living with foster families. Now, a total of 93 children live with 61 foster families, and officials say that this number is set to grow.

Foster care was first introduced in 2006 in Armenia via a pilot programme supported by the UN children’s fund, and then from 2008 as part of the state system.

The intention is to place children with difficult backgrounds or whose parents cannot look after them in loving, stable homes until they turn 18 or can be reunited with their families.

Funds for child care and support are provided by the state, and the foster parents receive a monthly stipend equivalent to the minimum wage.

“There is also a specialised foster family model system that provides care for children with disabilities or serious health problems, children with parenting difficulties, mental or behavioral problems and mental trauma, as well as for underage mothers or their children,” explained ministry spokeswoman Zara Manucharyan.

“In this case, the monthly payment for the care and upbringing of each child in care is the minimum monthly salary and 30 per cent surcharge.”

She said that the number of these specialised placements had also grown in recent years.

All adult citizens of Armenia can become foster parents, with some exceptions, including an age limit if 55 at the time of registration.

Candidates must take training courses, and learn communication and parenting skills to help them support children from orphanages or difficult backgrounds. 

“I have been arranging my papers for several weeks to apply for the programme, but I am afraid my age will interfere,” said 54-year-old Gayane (not her real name), who only recently got married to a man who just turned 55. Neither she nor her husband have children, and she hopes that the mandatory paperwork will be completed within the next year.

Manucharyan said that many citizens applied to become foster parents but were turned down because of their age. The plan is to raise the age limit to 65.

“If the programme is modified, many citizens will benefit,” said Gayane, adding that she knew others excluded from the scheme because of their age.

“I found out about the programme from my neighbour,” she continued. “Their family was childless like ours. One day I saw a little girl playing in the yard. When I saw the child with them for a few days, I was a little embarrassed, but I found out who she was.”

Gayane continued, “The only problem with this programme is emotions. Look, you take a child, take care of him or her, look after them, but there may come a time when you’ll have to give them back.”

Psychologist Anush Aleksanyan said the foster system was extremely beneficial, as long as the foster family was psychologically prepared for such a significant step.

“I call it a programme of opportunities. This gives the child, who is in a cruel stage of life, an opportunity to live in a family, to feel the warmth of a family. Look, if a child is deprived of parental care for some reason, they need a roof anyway. Take them to an orphanage? In this case, the foster family is the best model.

 

Vilnius supports closer EU-Armenia integration – Lithuanian president


May 20 2022


  •  2022-05-20
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  •  BNS/TBT Staff

VILNIUS – Lithuania supports closer integration between the European Union and Armenia, President Gitanas Nauseda said on Friday. 

As part of his official visit to Yerevan, Nauseda met with his Armenian counterpart, Vahagn Khachaturyan, to discuss bilateral cooperation, the security situation in the Caucasus region, democratic reforms in Armenia, and EU-Armenia relations, the Lithuanian president’s office said in a press release.

“Especially now, when Ukraine is fighting not only for its sovereignty but also for European values and democracy, keeping the EU’s Eastern Partnership policy active is essential,” it quoted Nauseda as saying.

“Closer cooperation between the EU and Armenia and the implementation of democratic reforms will contribute to the country’s resilience, security, social and economic prosperity,” he said. 

Nauseda noted that bilateral relations between Lithuania and Armenia have “untapped potential” and “expressed his hope that both the direct flight between Vilnius and Yerevan and the political will at the top level will boost bilateral cooperation”.

The president expressed his support for Armenia’s efforts to carry out democratic reforms and noted that the country has already made progress, but it is important to continue the reforms.

He said that “Lithuania is ready to share its experience and help Armenia on the path towards democratic reforms”.

The Lithuanian and Armenian leaders also discussed the security situation in the Caucasus region.

In the fall of 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a six-week war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh that killed more than 6,500 people.

Hostilities ended with a Russia-brokered ceasefire deal under which Armenia ceded several areas it had controlled for decades and Moscow deployed a peacekeeping contingent in the region.

Nauseda “stressed that Lithuania stood for a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and welcomed the direct dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan with efforts to normalize bilateral relations”, according to the press release. 

Azerbaijani saboteur admits was on special mission in Karabakh

PanArmenian
Armenia – May 20 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Azerbaijani saboteur Shahbaz Guliyev has admitted that back in 2014 he was sent to Nagorno-Karabakh by the Azerbaijani authorities on a special assignment.

Guliyev, Dilgam Asgarov and Hasan Hasanov illegally infiltrated into Kalbajar district of Karabakh and murdered 17-year-old local resident Smbat Tsakanyan and Major Sargis Abrahamyan, injuring the latter’s companion Karine Davtyan on the road from Vardenis to Kalbajar.

Hasanov was killed in firefight with Artsakh Defence Army servicemen, while the other two were detained. The Stepanakert Residence of the General Jurisdiction Court of First Instance of Nagorno Karabakh Republic sentenced Asgarov to life in prison and Guliyev to 22 years in prison (only Asgarov was convicted of Tsakanyan’s murder. The two, however, were released when Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to exchange prisoners and hostages after the Second Karabakh war in fall 2020.

Speaking in a fresh interview with Xural TV, Guliyev expressed frustration with the state’s inattention after returning to Azerbaijan․ Complaining about poor social conditions, he said that he would speak even “at the cost of his life”, Regionmonitor reports.

The Azerbaijani saboteur noted that they infiltrated into Kalbajar on many occasions with the knowledge of Deputy Prime Minister Ali Shamil oglu Hasanov․ According to him, they were given firearms and grenades right in Hasanov’s office in 2014 and sent to gather intelligence.

Guliyev said the group provided 10 videos from their former incursion into the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh to the Azerbaijani army.

https://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/300401/Azerbaijani_saboteur_admits_was_on_special_mission_in_Karabakh

Armenpress: PM Pashinyan arrives in Brussels on a working visit

PM Pashinyan arrives in Brussels on a working visit

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 14:05,

YEREVAN, MAY 22, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan arrived in Brussels on a working visit, ARMENPRESS was infomred from the Office of the Prime Minister. 

The Prime Minister will have a private conversation with the President of the European Council Charles Michel. The trilateral meeting of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, the President of the European Council Charles Michel and the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev is scheduled in Brussels today.

Armenpress: Nikol Pashinyan, Charles Michel hold private conversation, express hope for effective trilateral talks

Nikol Pashinyan, Charles Michel hold private conversation, express hope for effective trilateral talks

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 20:49,

YEREVAN, MAY 20, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who is in Brussels on a working visit, had a private conversation with the President of the European Council Charles Michel, ARMENPRESS was infomred from the Office of the Prime Minister. 

The interlocutors referred to the trilateral meeting of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, the President of the European Council Charles Michel and the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev scheduled for today, attaching importance to the continuation of the dialogue.

Nikol Pashinyan presented the situation around Nagorno Karabakh, humanitarian issues and stressed the need to solve them.

The Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and Charles Michel exchanged views on the implementation of the agreements reached at the trilateral meetings in Bruseels on December 14 last year, as well as on April 6 this year.

The sides expressed hope that today’s trilateral talks will be fruitful, which will contribute to stability and a comprehensive settlement of the issues.

Nikol Pashinyan and Charles Michel also discussed issues related to the Armenia-EU bilateral agenda, in particular, the implementation of the € 2.6 billion economic-investment package announced by the EU for Armenia.

Lithuania’s President visits Armenian Genocide memorial

PanArmenian
Armenia – May 20 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – President of Lithuania Gitanas Nausėda with his spouse Diana Nausėdienė on Friday, May 20 visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial, the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute reports.

The guests were greeted by AGMI Director Harutyun Marutyan, who told them the history of the creation of the Memorial.

Nausėda placed a wreath at the memorial and flowers at the Eternal Fire to honor the memory of the innocent martyrs, as well as toured the Armenian Genocide Museum and left a note in the Book of Honorable Guests.

The sides then exchanged books about the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust of the Jews.

Rachael Ray Reflects On ‘Especially Meaningful’ Visit To Armenia

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Rachael Ray Reflects On ‘Especially Meaningful’ Visit To Armenia
BY KAREN HART/MAY 22, 2022 12:39 AM EDT
Armenia and the Mediterranean diet of dishes unique to this region are inseparable. According to travel blog Wander Lust, the smell of marinated beef, lamb, and pork can be found at local street carts, barbecued on skewers. And then are all those baked dumplings known as manti, along with recipes that use eggplant and tomatoes, traditional dolma — vine leaves filled with rice, spices, and other ingredients — a food that’s been around since the Ottoman empire (via Ranelle Kirchner), and, of course, delicious hummus. Armenia offers visitors a rich variety of delicious foods to nosh on, but that wasn’t the focus of celebrity cook Rachael Ray’s recent trip to the country.

Per People, Ray’s first stop was Ukraine to help out the organization Ukraine Friends, which supports displaced families due to Russia’s invasion. Ray shared several photos from her experience and observed, “This is incredible that everyone’s life is reduced to this — putting your whole world into some plastic bags.” But, before making her way back to the good old U.S.A., Ray made her way to the Country of Stones and shared in an Instagram Story her thoughts and reflections from her journey.

Rachael Ray’s trip gave her hope

Rachael Ray shared an emotional Instagram Story, writing, “I’ve always wanted to visit Armenia, but it feels especially meaningful to have come now… encountering so many Russians here who have fled Russia and fear for the safety of family members who remain there. Being here completes a circle in my experience — between Poland, Ukraine and Armenia…these people and places show that the world is still filled with love and compassion, and that more people want peace than war…and it has given me hope.”
People revealed that Ray’s foundation donated 1,000 first aid kits to help support frontline workers in Ukraine. Ray is one of several celebrity chefs who has visited Eastern Europe and provided assistance to people in this war torn region. Other members of America’s culinary elite providing support to refugees from this region include Jose Andrés whose World Central Kitchen recently partnered with Stoli vodka to raise a glass and money for Ukraine, as well as Marc Murphy and Jessica Seinfeld. Per TODAY, other chefs have also joined the efforts, with the likes of chefs Tim Ma and Kevin Tien hosting a fundraiser in Washington, D.C. to help Andrés’ nonprofit.
 

Azerbaijan, Armenia trade barbs on border shooting

CGTN, China
CGTN


However, the Armenian Ministry of Defense immediately rejected the statement of its Azeri counterpart, calling it misinformation and claiming that Azerbaijani forces fired on Armenian troops near the border.
The Defense Ministries of the Republic of Azerbaijan and Armenia traded barbs on a border shooting on Saturday.

The Armenian armed forces units in the direction of Ashagi Shorzha settlement of the Basarkechar region of the state border fired the Azerbaijan Army positions in the direction of the Yellija settlement on the evening of May 20, the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense claimed in a statement, according to local media.

 

Sports: Armenia set to host Azerbaijan-free European Men’s Elite Boxing Championships




  •  

  •  Sunday,

Thirty-nine countries are set to be represented at the European Men’s Elite Boxing Championships in Armenia, with bouts beginning tomorrow.

Competition is due to take place in 13 weight categories in Yerevan.

The host nation has picked a 13-strong team, including current European champions Artur Hovhannisyan and Hovhannes Bachkov.

Tokyo 2020 bronze medallist Bachkov is defending his under-63.5 kilograms title, while Hovhannisyan has stepped up to the 51kg category, having won the light-flyweight gold medal in 2019.

European Men’s Elite Boxing Championships have not been held since 2019, under the umbrella of the European Games in Minsk.

Ukraine’s team includes Oleksandr Khyzhniak, the reigning middleweight champion, while Ireland, Spain and England are all expected to have strong teams.

Azerbaijan will not be one of the 39 nations present in Armenia owing to poor relations between the countries, however.

The Azerbaijan Boxing Federation announced it would not send a team last month.

Armenia and Azerbaijan are on opposing sides of the long-running Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

In excess of 200 civilians and at least 5,000 military personal were killed when a six-week war erupted in the region in 2020.

Azerbaijan remains accused of occupying territory internationally recognised as being Armenian.

Russian and Belarusian boxers are banner over the war in Ukraine.

Finals at the European Men’s Elite Boxing Championships are scheduled for a week tomorrow (May 30).

Elections for the European Boxing Confederation Athletes’ Committee are also on the agenda in Yerevan.