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Pictures from my trip to Armenia

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  • #71
    Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

    Originally posted by Armenian
    NO HISTORIC LANDMARKS HAVE BEEN DEMOLISHED.
    More information for cretins like "Crusader" and "Armenian" to ignore.

    ----

    PROTEST ACTION AGAINST DEMOLITION OF HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL MONUMENT

    YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 24.
    ARMINFO.

    "The Civil initiative of Kond safety" public organization organized today a protest action against the demolition of a building in the center of Yerevan.

    The building was built in 1910-1914 and involved in the State list of historical and cultural monuments.

    As far as journalists know, it was bought by our compatriot from Diaspora Nazaret Berberyan. The action participants covered the building with posters "My elitist Erebuni" and "It is demolished by the state" and continued the picket in front of the Armenian government's building.

    ----

    AZG Armenian Daily (www.azg.am)

    April 9th, 2005

    The buildings 9 and 11 in Byuzand Street are included in the list of the historical-cultural monuments. These days, the deconstruction works are at full swing in there. By the order of the owner of the building, the workers are ruining the old–fashioned balconies of the building from the yard’s side. Daily Azg informed Artiom Grigorian, head of RA Agency for Historical-Cultural Monuments’ Preservation, about this. He promised to let know a relevant department of the Yerevan Municipality.

    The dwellers of the yard that found themselves in dust and rubbish were extremely irritated and angry at the ignoring attitude displayed to them. The workers were transferring the logs of the ruined balconies in front of our eyes. A representative of GlendaleHills ltd. introduced himself as the owner and rather cynically said: "Many people just like you came, watched and went away but they didn’t managed anything. If you come the day after tomorrow you will find this building totally ruined. Nothing will be left here, we are going to destroy everything." I told him to show the permission to destroy, he answered that it isn’t with him. The ignorant "boss" who was destroying a historical-cultural monument and was fancying himself "an owner" had no idea of the building’s value.

    "Many films have been shot here. Famous Armenian and foreign directors and actors worked here. "Sweet Mother," "Serob’s Tree" and "My Dear Yerevan" as well as many other films were shot here. I can’t remember all of them," Mrs. Emma, a dweller of one of the apartments of 9 Byuzand Str said.

    By Ruzan Poghosian

    ----

    HEAD OF GARNI COMMUNITY DESTROYS "SYMPHONY OF STONES"
    YEREVAN, MAY 2 2005. ARMINFO.
    Armenia loses an unique and picturesque
    monument of its nature - "The symphony of stones" located close to the
    1th century pagan temple of Garni in the gorge of Azat river. Some
    local residents, with approval of rural administration were engaged
    in truly vandalism, "felling" magnificent basalt broadstones created
    by nature itself as building materials.

    "Head of rural administration is responsible for any actions", Chief
    of territorial administration department of the Kotayk region Stepan
    Ghazaryan stated ARMINFO. The same response was also received from
    Armenian Ministry of nature protection. Ministry's press-secretary
    Artsrun Pepanyan informed that territory does not a nature-conservative
    so "Ministry does not have a legal right to punish anybody". It is
    not known if government interferes in this deal, however, it is a
    fact that vandals had already not left "a stone standing".

    As ARMINFO leaks out, basalt broadstones finished by nature within
    hundreds of years became necessary for rural "businessmen" for
    sale. These broadstones as perfect by their form that they will be
    used in construction without any additional processing. According to
    unspecified information, "legal" permission of cut off the stones
    was given by the head of Garni's rural community Ashot Vardanyan
    himself. He refuses to answer on journalists' phone calls.

    ----

    18 Jul 2005
    YEREVAN'S ARCHITECTURAL MONUMENTS TO BE RESETTLED INTO ONE AREA
    YEREVAN, JULY 13. ARMINFO

    Within a year the Architectural Council of Yerevan will make a list of the capital's architectural monuments, says Yerevan's chief architect Samvel Daniyelyan.

    There are two categories of monuments: to be preserved on their historical location and to be relocated. Daniyelyan says that the scattered historical monuments do not reflect the whole color of Yerevan and discord with the architectural style of the "new center."

    He says that new the construction of business centers and hotels in the center of Yerevan requires new stylistic approaches. It would be absurd to build in XXI in the style of XIX, says Daniyelyan.

    And so the municipality has decided to bring together part of Yerevan's architectural monuments into a small area covering Aram, Buzand and Koghbatsi streets.

    ----

    REQUIEM IN THE BUZAND STREET

    A1+
    02-09-2005

    "1830-2005": under the mourning poster with this title the residents of
    the Buzand street organized a requiem this evening. Every passer-by
    could approach the table in the middle of the street and raise a
    glass in memory of the historical street which is being destroyed
    before our eyes today. Approaching the table many people mentioned
    that they are drinking not to the memory of the Buzand street but to
    that of the RA Government.

    In the evening the Buzand street represented another scene. There were
    already posters near the barricades: "Deport", "Fight, fight...". As
    for the equipment destroying the houses of the street, the residents
    have drawn the fascist swastika which is a symbol of barbarism.

    The residents of the streets are discussing their future steps as
    to what they must do to meet the policemen. By the way, today no
    one has made any attempt to enter the street and to free it from
    the barricades.

    The residents of the street do not exclude the possibility of the
    policemen to visit them at night. "All the same we have nothing to
    lose. We will lie on the ground", they said.

    ----

    THEY DRIVE OUT PEOPLE FROM OWN HOUSES IN CENTER OF YEREVAN "FOR STATE NEEDS"

    YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2. ARMINFO.

    More than 10 families living in the
    center of Yerevan (Byuzand street) will find themselves without houses
    within the nearest days. Some families living there were driven out
    from their houses by an officer of justice. It should be noted that
    the officer in justice acted without an appropriate order not waiting
    the end of legal processes. As regards the rest families, they intend
    to organize a sitting protest demonstration. The officer of justice
    is going to clean this street on Sept 5 leaving the outcasts without
    houses and adequate compensations

    ----

    IN 3-5 YEARS YEREVAN CENTER WILL LOSE ITS FACE

    A1+
    26-09-2005

    While "victims of state needs" gathered opposite the Yerevan
    municipality and demanded a meeting with the Yerevan mayor, the
    chief architect of the capital Samvel Danielyan told the journalists
    inside the building how they will reconstruct the areas "bought"
    for state needs.

    Today during the usual briefing Mr. Danielyan spoke about the monuments
    of historical-cultural importance. Their list has finally been verified
    by the Government. The monuments have been divided to two groups -
    of local and state importance. Those in the first group will not be
    transported, and the 14 buildings in the second group are subject
    to transportation.

    So, according to the chief architect, in 3-5 years Yerevan will
    have its center finished. As for how much money will be needed to
    realize the project, Mr. Danielyan was not sure, but he informed
    that a competition will be organized. The winners will make
    corresponding investments and will realize the projects ratified by
    the Government. Samvel Danielyan announced that there will also be
    local rich people among the investors.

    ----

    MOSQUE - EVIDENCE OF YEREVAN HISTORY

    A1+
    16:20:43
    The oldest historical building in the center of Yerevan is the mosque
    located in Mashots avenue. All the Armenian cultural and historical
    "evidence" were destroyed within the program of the city center
    development.

    Today the building of the 19th century is still preserved in
    Amiryan 4/16 street though the staircase is ruined. A well known
    Armenian painter used to live in the building. According to the
    project elaborated by architects and supported by oligarchs a new
    7-storey building should be erected in the place. The only cultural
    and historical building in the territory was de-energized. In this
    very building intellectuals gathered to find out a way to protect the
    building which contained a plate with inscription "protected by state".

    To note, the building 4/16 belonged to Dignity party chairman Lyudmila
    Harutyunyan, who stated that it will serve as a staff of a social
    movement.

    According to her, only the unity of the society can improve the
    situation.

    ----

    PRESS RELEASE
    The Greens Union of Armenia

    ABOUT THE NEWLY PROPOSED PLAN FOR THE CITY OF YEREVAN

    November 17, 2005

    The area covered by the City of Yerevan was 16,000 hectares during the
    Soviet period. In the 90's, during President L.D. Petrossian,
    territories from the villages adjacent to the city, such as the orchards
    and the arable lands of Shahumian, were placed under the city's
    administration, thus making these territories part of Yerevan and
    increasing the city's area to 22,660 hectares.

    The new plan of Yerevan is proposing to convert these lands, which
    include orchards, vineyards, fields, wooded areas, to development -
    residential and/or commercial, under the false claim that these lands are
    contaminated, without collecting samples and performing any analysis.
    This decision has NOT been approved by The Ministry of Agriculture or by
    The Ministry of Nature Protection. There is a false claim that the new
    plan will increase the green, vegetated area and improve the air quality
    of the city. However, upon close examination of the plan, the following
    facts emerge:

    Status of Lands

    Current Land Use - Proposed Land Use Under the New Plan
    2915.5 hectares of arable field - development
    282.5 hectares of orchard - development
    395.9 hectares of vineyards - development
    922.2 hectares of other agricultural lands - development
    1234.1 hectares of wooded, forested land - preserve 660 hectares develop the remaining

    In addition, there is a severe lack of unbiased inventories of green
    areas of the city. For example, Yerevan's Orchards of Dalma, covering
    about 780 hectares and containing many wooded areas, vineyards, fields,
    etc., is presented in the new plan as a barren site. Out of the 780
    hectares, only 256 hectares are going to be preserved, and these 256
    hectares of the Orchards of Dalma, in the new plan, are arbitrarily
    classified as forested land and are presented as an increase in wooded,
    green area for the city. (The Orchards of Dalma have a central location
    in the city.)

    Again, arbitrarily, the new plan has decided to preserve only 660
    hectares of forested land out of the 1,234. Thus, the destruction of
    the wooded, green areas of the city continues in full force. Forested
    land and wooded parks, tended for decades, are falling prey to
    development. For example, the forested land adjacent to "Victory" park,
    is being sacrificed to a residential development called "The Canadian
    District".

    The Greens' Union of Armenia is proposing the following changes to the
    city's new plan:

    a) Return all agricultural lands and wooded, forested areas to the
    villages - all the lands "grabbed" in the 1990's.
    b) Provide incentives to farmers to better utilize those lands -
    intensify the agriculture, the silviculture, etc. This will generate
    more income both for the growers and for the government as tax revenues,
    and, at the same time, save fertile, arable lands from development.
    Also, preserving wooded, green areas will help in preserving the air
    quality and improve the overall environmental health.

    ----
    Plenipotentiary meow!

    Comment


    • #72
      Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

      And more....

      YEREVAN LOST ITS FEATURES AS CAPITAL, CULTURE FIGURES THINK

      YEREVAN, JANUARY 13 2006, NOYAN TAPAN.

      The January 13 discussion with
      participation of cultural figures organized at the "Hayeli" club was
      dedicated to discussion of new architectural solutions of
      Yerevan. According to estimation of participants, Yerevan, as a city
      and especially as a capital, has already lost its features becoming a
      mixture of European and other incomprehensible
      architectures. According to them, corresponding departments have no
      clear strategy and legislative field in this sense. "The new
      appearance of Yerevan isn't a good one, it's faceless with strange
      muddle-headed or absurd and vulgar solutions," Armen Mazmanian, the
      Artistic Head of the "Goy" theater said. According to him, a very
      extended "construction of buildings" which doesn't correspond to any
      norms of city building and doesn't side with any direction of classic
      architecture is implemented in Yerevan today. And film director Tigran
      Khzmalian finds that today men occupied themselves with city building
      have no enouth love and tenderness. "It isn't accidental that any work
      of art is perfect when it's created with love and delicacy. Now the
      city has passed to hand of small bourgeoises, and nothing has remained
      of Yerevan once built with knightly love," he stated. According to
      artist Artur Martirosian, all strata of society are responsible for
      the created situation. According to him, "we agree with any type of
      assaults silently, as a result of what, we have what we have."

      ----

      FORMER KNIGHTLY YEREVAN TURNS INTO PETTY –BOURGEOIS CITY

      Each building of old Yerevan designed by Aleksander Tamanian bears his love for his wife. This love reaches the hearts of those who really love their city, the city of sun, Yerevan.

      Yet, the new "owners" of the city are allowed to do everything and destroy the old buildings of XVIII century, the historical-cultural heritage of our capital.

      Few representatives of intelligentsia or public figures dare to touch upon this painful issue. Most of them prefer to remain silent, otherwise they can lose their prizes, status, posts.

      Director Armen Mazmanian stated that the city is full of ugly and vulgar buildings. "The city has lost its face. There is no urban construction strategy," he said during the discussion at "Hayeli" club.

      Two other representatives of intelligentsia film director Tigran Khzmalian and artist Arthur Martirosian also expressed concern about the current architectural state of Yerevan.

      Tigran Khzmalian said that Yerevan became a petty-bourgeois city during the last 15 years.

      "Yerevan is a knightly city build on love. Now it has become a petty bourgeois city. The knightly Yerevan is being destroyed, killed. It is kept beneath a shop window. Several old buildings preserved from the knightly Yerevan will be gathered in one place and called Old Yerevan. The city, the cars, the clothes depict the portrait of a nation, an individual, a family. Today’s Yerevan is our self-portrait," Mr. Khzmalian said.

      Arthur Martirosian is sure that we all are to be blamed for the current state of the city. "The elite buildings that are built at present, do not differ much from the pseudo-urbanistic buildings of 1960-70. The situation grows worse in the suburbs," he said.

      What is the way out? "There used to be public figures and publicist. But they have disappeared now. They are silent," Armen Mazmanian said. "We live in a country of lie, where 1 million votes can be falsified. If they dare to do such things during the constitutional referendum, they may do everything with the city. We have lost the civil society that was shaped in 1988. We can’t settle a single issue, if we do not restore it, he said.

      By Ruzan Poghosian

      ----

      Hetq online - 01/23/2006 - www.hetq.am

      The Last Bastion

      By Christian Garbis


      This neighborhood in central Yerevan, hidden away from adjoining Abovyan
      Street as it enters Republic Square, is undergoing demolition, its
      residents to be scattered to destinations unknown. The deconstruction
      represents the beginning of yet another downtown construction project,
      the nature of which has not been divulged. As in areas throughout the
      city's center in response to the ongoing Northern Boulevard construction
      project, dozens of historical buildings are being raised, some dating as
      far back as the first Armenian republic - or over 80 years ago, when
      present-day Yerevan was just beginning to take form.

      The reason why this hamlet stayed protected from the public eye is its
      location, situated directly behind the National History Museum and Art
      Gallery, and on the right side flanked by a five-floor Stalin-era
      apartment building sitting at the foot of Nalbandyan Street. Countless
      families were once living here, not all with modern comforts as some
      houses erected as temporary shelters decades ago lacked indoor plumbing,
      with their inhabitants resorting to sharing a public water tap that is
      never turned off during the winter to prevent the pipes from freezing.

      The remaining residents have until February 16 to vacate their homes,
      after which another piece of modern Yerevan's brief history will be
      permanently destroyed.

      ----

      Hetq Online - 13/02/2006
      Լուրեր, հոդվածներ, հետաքննություններ. Հայաստան, Արցախ, Ջավախք


      Another Historic District of Yerevan Is Being Destroyed
      By Christian Garbis

      In the heart of Yerevan, just a stone's throw away from Republic Square,
      lies a hamlet that is completely hidden from the view of foot traffic on
      adjacent Abovyan and Nalbandyan Streets, between which it is wedged.
      The hamlet, once an active, thriving community, has already fell victim
      to the haphazard construction boom taking place throughout the city's
      center, as about 80 percent of it has been demolished. As is anticipated,
      by mid-March the entire historic neighborhood will be utterly destroyed.

      To date about 50 homes have been completely ripped out.
      Approximately 1,000 residents relocated to parts unknown. They were
      given sums of money from a private developer, the sums of which
      they did not reveal to others. Although the price per square meter of land
      in central Yerevan is averaging $1,500, residents living in neighborhoods
      slated for demolition are paid a fraction of their property's actual worth.


      Albert and Ophelia Vartanian

      Ophelia Vartanian has been living in the neighborhood since 1953, when she
      moved from Tbilisi at the age of 22 to marry her husband, Albert. She worked
      for over 30 years in the food market that had occupied the first floor of
      the apartment building at 3 Nalbandyan Street since its completion until
      it finally closed in 2002. Now she lives on an insignificant pension of a few
      thousand drams.

      "We're expected to leave here, but as soon as a contract is given to us
      to sign, once we have agreed on a price. But we haven't heard anything
      because the guy's taken off."

      A Syrian-born businessman known as Avedis, last name unknown, who lives
      in the United States but conducts business in Armenia is responsible
      for developing the land, with the aim to build at least three high-rise
      apartment buildings on the property.

      "If he is not an Armenian citizen, then he's got to have connections with
      people at the top to do what he wants here. What other excuse is there?"
      Albert stated.

      However, the developer Avedis recently left the country on suspicion of
      mishandling funds related to the construction. But bulldozers were still
      at work clearing land as seen on February 4.

      "I don't feel sorry for him. He's doing alright. He can do what he pleases
      because he has the means to do so," Albert added.

      Hundreds of families were either evicted from their homes or paid off
      to leave on Arami and Buzand Streets in the city's center-two of the oldest
      streets in Yerevan that contained buildings from or even before the turn
      of the century.

      The Vartanian home was originally a horse stable when modern Yerevan
      was still in its infancy, then was converted to a residential home.
      But the structure is so old no accurate date of construction can be placed.
      Over the years the house was expanded and now accommodates three
      families-just about 15 people in total.

      When Ophelia and Albert moved to their new home, the wide, five-story
      apartment building situated on 3 Nalbandyan Street, which until now served
      as a protective barrier for their neighborhood, was just being constructed.
      Many of the hamlet's residents then moved into the building's apartments,
      while newcomers replaced them in their old homes.

      Ophelia explained that many of the families were happy to receive payment
      to leave their homes. "Some houses were in bad disrepair. People were using
      cartons to fix up their homes. They weren't living well." But she could not say
      where the families ended up living as she was not informed.


      Once upon a time, a neighborhood


      Not all houses around the Vartanian home have been destroyed. A few still
      remain that are situated only 100 meters to the right. One home still manages
      to stay intact, despite the fact that the tiny houses surrounding it were
      smashed apart. Because of lack of plumbing its residents must frequent
      an outdoor toilet, its door affixed with a lock. Just beside it a public tap runs
      continuously so that the pipes do not freeze. The water is used both
      for drinking and washing, at times the basin serving as a kitchen sink.
      >>From the few walls that stand of the house husks serving as monuments
      to lives past, remaining residents tear out all wooden studs to use as firewood.
      In demolition nothing is spared.

      The hamlet is part of a larger area described as Old Yerevan, stretching from
      the neighborhood known as Kond located on the left side of the city to as far
      east as Hanrapedutyun Street. All of these small districts will eventually be
      destroyed, along with it the city's history from the last 150 years or so.

      The homes in the hamlet are given the common address of 3 Nalbandyan Street,
      although the same address is also given to the apartment building. The quarter
      was then arbitrarily divided into sub-addresses for purposes of distinction.
      However, visitors to the neighborhood would simply ask residents for directions
      to someone's home, since address markings did not exist on any structures there.

      Alongside Arami Street just behind the National Museum and Art Gallery lie a few
      locked sheds once serving as businesses. The owner of one booth still makes
      copies of keys. A few vendors were setting up tables displaying various items
      for sale, including shoelaces, batteries, and power plug adapters. One family
      lives in a shed formerly used by an optician, relying on a small wood-burning
      stove to keep warm, the walls covered in soot as they use anything they
      collect that will burn, including foam packing materials.

      Other old apartment buildings can be found just behind the shops that line
      the left side of Abovyan Street but are totally out of site by pedestrians. Both
      the shops, contained in historic buildings themselves, and the houses behind
      them will also be demolished to accommodate the new buildings to be
      constructed, but whether they will in fact be built anytime soon still
      remains unknown.

      Four years ago the Vartanians were informed that they would soon
      have to leave and would be paid about $5,000. Then recently they were told
      that each person in the family would receive an individual payment. However,
      Albert and Ophelia's oldest son's wife and children are not officially registered
      as residents of their home, thus they are not entitled to receive payment.

      The Vartanians find it useless to seek legal action since recent lawsuits filed
      against the authorities by residents to protect their rights have resulted
      in suppression by intimidation, beatings, or arrest. Last October public
      defender Vahe Grigoryan, who was defending residents of Buzand Street,
      was arrested on allegedly trumped up charges of extortion and forgery
      of documents by the National Security Service (aka KGB) and was reportedly
      beaten. He may receive a conviction of up to 10 years in prison.

      Ophelia does not want to leave, nor does anyone else in her family, including
      her ninth-grade grandson. But they realize that eventually they will have
      to clear out.

      "If I'm not offered an amount that's high enough to buy a new home
      somewhere else, then I'm not going to sign a contract, if that even happens,"
      Ophelia explained. "Why should I give up my home if there is nowhere else
      for me to go?"
      Plenipotentiary meow!

      Comment


      • #73
        Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

        And a few more....


        ----

        IN YEREVAN THEY DEMOLISH WITHOUT ANY PLAN

        Lragir.am
        11 May 06

        Samvel Danielyan, the architect of Yerevan, reports cases when a
        building in the center of Yerevan is pulled down without envisioning
        what to build in its place. Such as, for instance, the Sevan Hotel and
        the House of Cinematography. There are no fixed projects yet, but there
        are proposals, assures Samvel Danielyan. An investor proposes to build
        a multifunction high-rise in the place of the House of Cinematography
        which will be located on the 3rd and 4th floors of the building. "The
        present facilities of the House of Cinematography no longer satisfy
        modern requirements. Studios and the administration will be based
        on these two floors," informed the architect of Yerevan. The rest
        will be rent as office space. "Although this project was approved by
        Yerevan City Planning Board last year, there is an important question,
        which makes us delay a final decision on this project. This problem
        allows the City Hall not to accept the project with regard to the
        height of the building and parking facilities. I have no doubt that
        it has a city planning accent. The central avenue of Yerevan starts
        from the high-rise of the Central Post Office on Saryan Street and
        does not have an accentuated ending.

        Debates on building a high-rise to mark the end of the avenue somewhere
        near the House of Cinematography were going on."

        It has been foreseen to build another multifunction building in the
        place of the Sevan Hotel. Samvel Danielyan says the project was put
        out to tender. The project of a designer was chosen, which "resembles
        the former Sevan Hotel with its volume and space, floors, tower, but
        in terms of architecture the projects needs further elaboration. They
        were offered to review the project. I think there is not going to be
        a skyscraper there," announced Samvel Danielyan.

        ----

        IS IT TIME TO HAVE A NEW ARCHITECT?

        A1+
        [04:36 pm] 11 May, 2006

        Three architects sat side by side in the club "Mirror" and criticized
        the "bustle" of the capital's construction works. The two former chief
        architects of the capital and the recent one were among them. All
        of them confessed that 6 years ago the capital wasn't ready for the
        constructive works, that's why they couldn't avoid mistakes.

        One of the participants was the chairman of the architects' union
        Mkrtich Minasyan who opposed others.

        The other was the head of the Yerevan project institute Gurgen
        Musheghyan. The latter mainly supported his counterpart, the chief
        of the municipality architecture and urban development department
        and the chief architect of Yerevan Samvel Danielyan. Mkrtich Minasyan
        claimed that the sore point of the capital is not the ugliness resulted
        by the construction works. "The point is that we were to preserve
        certain normative claims which existed earlier," he urged. Asked the
        question whether he liked the view of the capital from the heaven,
        he answered negatively. We tried to find out whether he liked the
        Yerevan of his period. "It wasn't that good either," said the chairman
        of the architects' union.

        He also focused on the fact that constructors break "the red line;"
        they want to use public territories as commercial objects. Architect
        Musheghyan brought the example of Hrazdan gorge where multiple
        entertainment objects were built and according to his words the
        visibility of the gorge became obscure.

        Samvel Danielyan also confessed that the gorge is a serious
        environmental problem for the RA capital as the country doesn't have
        seas and lakes and claimed that all the new objects legalized their
        buildings through the court system. As a proper way to avoid further
        wilderness he suggested making the roofs of the buildings green.

        The most interesting point was the chief architect's contemplation over
        his actions when he claimed that they were immature and unprepared
        during the constructions of Northern Avenue and they will not repeat
        their mistakes later on as they have already become mature and learned
        a lot of new things.

        ----

        We Need to Defend Ourselves from Ourselves

        April 10, 2006

        Stone fragments with Armenian letters inscribed on them were scattered on the ground. Two huge heaps of headstones not far from each other… No, this scene was not in liberated Kelbadjar, nor in Nakhidjevan.

        It was in Yerevan, the capital of the Republic of Armenia, in April 2006. This construction site was on Aygegortsneri Street, on the road between the Nork and Nor Nork districts.

        “I wonder who the owner of this is,” my son said. I had taken him along with me to show him how we Armenians treat our national treasures. “What difference does it make who the owner is?” I said.

        The headstones had been brought here from somewhere else. Apparently they had been in someone's way, and he or she “liberated” the territory and decided to use them as building materials. No one had tried to prevent the dislocation, the carnage of headstones.

        There was a dead dog lying right between the piles of headstones, next to the symbols of eternity, and, a few steps away, a broken piece of a cross.

        The appearance of the headstones, their engravings, suggested that they were centuries-old, cultural treasures.

        We Armenians are now building one more restaurant or hotel using our ancestors' headstones. In Kelbadjar, Azerbaijanis used stones from our demolished churches to build houses. There are such houses in dozens of villages there. We are doing the same thing here in Yerevan.

        Armenians everywhere have closed ranks to protest against the barbarous destruction of Armenian khachkars by Azerbaijanis in Nakhidjevan. But who will protest, who will fight against us, here at home? Perhaps we should appeal to various international organizations and ask them to come and protect our treasures from ourselves?

        Do you think that after seeing these pictures the minister of culture or the prosecutor general or some other official will take this matter up? Of course not—they have more important things to do. One is planning an upcoming pan-Armenian cultural event, another is planting trees, a third is building a hotel, or putting up an “elite” apartment building in the center of Yerevan, or staging a show about fighting against corruption in the National Assembly…

        Edik Baghdasaryan
        Plenipotentiary meow!

        Comment


        • #74
          Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

          Ah well, at least the old buildings in Gyumri and Vanadzor are being preserved or still standing (for now).

          Comment


          • #75
            Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

            Catman, your spamming of this board with CIA funded news sources is not proving anything but your obsessive delirium.

            No historic building have been demolished in Yerevan. I guess you have a problem defining what constitutes a historic building: One of significant political/cultural and/or architectural value.

            Incidentally, I also have a problem in the hasty and often haphazard way in which the authorities have been transforming Yerevan. Moreover, although I could afford owning a "Humvee" or "BMW," I prefer driving economical Japanese automobiles. I also despise gold chained, leather clad, fancy car drivers. Therefore, I suggest you refrain from trying to "profile" me, you will only make yourself look stupid.

            With regards to this topic of discussion, I am being objective and trying to put things in a proper historical and a realistic perspective. What's more, although I care for Armenia's poor and I regularly donate money to various benevolent organizations and individuals, I rather not live next door to impoverished families. Simply put, this is cold hard reality. I live in reality - you live in fantasy Catman. Like I said, stop sticking your nose in our internal issues. Know your place amongst us for we are tolerating you. Thus, don't abuse our hospitality.


            Can't you go and champion the plight of the drunken Scotsmen?


            The modernization of Yerevan must continue. Onward bulldozers
            Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

            Նժդեհ


            Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

            Comment


            • #76
              Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

              I don't think I could part ways with my Toyota even if I could afford a BMW. She and I have been through a lot together.

              Oh Armenian, I don't think he's causing any harm, so relax.

              Comment


              • #77
                Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

                Sad to see that Youth Center go though...That's a picture that comes to mind when thinking of "Yerevan" but I guess that's privatization at work you...........

                Comment


                • #78
                  Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

                  Beautiful.

                  And the bitching should be kept in another thread. Keep this thread free of all that.

                  Comment


                  • #79
                    Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

                    Originally posted by skhara
                    Oh Armenian, I don't think he's causing any harm, so relax.
                    Enker Skhara, guests should respect their status.
                    Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

                    Նժդեհ


                    Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

                    Comment


                    • #80
                      Re: Pictures from my trip to Armenia

                      Originally posted by Armenian
                      Catman, your spamming of this board with CIA funded news sources is not proving anything but your obsessive delirium.

                      No historic building have been demolished in Yerevan. I guess you have a problem defining what constitutes a historic building: One of significant political/cultural and/or architectural value.

                      Incidentally, I also have a problem in the hasty and often haphazard way in which the authorities have been transforming Yerevan. Moreover, although I could afford owning a "Humvee" or "BMW," I prefer driving economical Japanese automobiles. I also despise gold chained, leather clad, fancy car drivers. Therefore, I suggest you refrain from trying to "profile" me, you will only make yourself look stupid.

                      With regards to this topic of discussion, I am being objective and trying to put things in a proper historical and a realistic perspective. What's more, although I care for Armenia's poor and I regularly donate money to various benevolent organizations and individuals, I rather not live next door to impoverished families. Simply put, this is cold hard reality. I live in reality - you live in fantasy Catman. Like I said, stop sticking your nose in our internal issues. Know your place amongst us for we are tolerating you. Thus, don't abuse our hospitality.


                      Can't you go and champion the plight of the drunken Scotsmen?


                      The modernization of Yerevan must continue. Onward bulldozers
                      You don't have to explain yourself to the pillow-biting cat. Everyone knows he's a Turk.

                      Comment

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