I’ve come to feel very at home lately in this country. It’s
a feeling that stems from things like being able to walk into various
neighbors’ houses in the village without asking in advance, and wind up having
coffee or a meal with them. It’s a feeling that stems from things like knowing
how to split a piece of knotted would cleanly without getting the axe stuck (or
if I still do have trouble, being able to call a neighbor or one of my students
over to fix the problem right away). It’s a feeling that comes from not really
worrying about my reputation in this small, tight-knit community anymore, but
instead being at ease knowing that the people here know who I am and what I do here
and that that’s just fine with the majority of them.
A big part of what makes it easier to live here as a
foreigner is how open hearted many Armenians are. Armenians have over and over
again amazed with their hospitable nature and genuine desire to treat even the
most distant stranger as an honorable guest. What follows is a few accounts of
times where I think this point is really exemplified. Instances of random
hospitality have happened to me many, many times in this country, but here are
a few of the more memorable ones to me.
#1 – The Marshutni
Driver – Մարշուտնի Վարորդը
#2 – Qnarik and
Robert – Քնարիկ եվ Ռոբերտ
This last summer, on a hot June afternoon, I was on my way
back to Lehvaz after doing a test hike for Border 2 Border. I had camped out in
Lichk the night before, the mountain village which was to be one of the first
stopping points on the journey. I had made it up there with my heavy pack on,
discovered a nice, open, mostly flat clearing by a stream and decided to call
it camp for the night. In the gathering dark I made a fire as fast as could
with some dead branches, put my tent up, and then relaxed, just me and the
fire, for how long I’m not sure. I don’t know at what point exactly I realized
it, but it suddenly dawned on me that I had never camped out—in the wilderness
of America or Armenia— completely by myself. I got tired, started to neglect my
friend the fire, and decided to call it a night. I fell asleep as soon as a
brief paranoia about bears or wolves or some other beast native only to Armenia
passed over me, and slept soundly until waking up suddenly and having to go to
the bathroom sometime around midnight. As I unzipped my tent, I was stunned to
find the clearing I was camping in fully lit up as if by a massive street
light. The clearing I was camping in was drenched in bright white light from a
full moon that had risen while I was asleep. I could see the clearing around me
and its surrounding trees with amazing clarity. I stood and admired, and
eventually remembered why I had gotten up in the first place. The next time I
woke up, it was early morning and the sun was just starting to rise. I ate
cheese and sausage and bread and maybe an apple for breakfast and got on my
way. I’ve never been a fan of hiking downward in general, always preferring to
go upward when you can see your goal and you have adrenaline going than
downward when there’s not really much of a goal except getting back home. Plus
your legs are already tired from having gone up. The hike back from my campsite
to my village was tiresome, and somewhere near the village of Vartanidzor, just
as the day’s peak sunlight was starting to blaze down on me, I decided to sleep
under a giant walnut tree not far from the road, but far enough away that I
wouldn’t be bothered by passing cars. There wasn’t much thought that went into
the decision. I was simply exhausted and it was hot and the tree provided
superb shade, so down I plopped and was out in minutes. I woke up in the middle
of the afternoon heat, knew that I had to get moving, and started back on my
way. Not long after I was back on the road though, I ran into a big-haired
Armenian woman with a husky voice who asked if I was the “American boy who
teaches English in Lehvaz.” I said “Yeah!” very enthusiastically I’m sure, and
she seemed delighted and told me that I had to come over to her house” right
now.” Knowing Armenians well, I knew that it would be hard to refuse her even
if I decided to put up a fight, so I gave in easily and followed her down to a
secluded, fenced in home just of the road.
Turns out she was Qnarik, the school director in the village of
Vartanidzor. Her husband Robert, a veterinarian who loved to drink and loved to
talk about the greatness of soviet times in Armenia, was seated on the couch
when I came in and was also excited to meet me. I was treated to potatoes,
meat, matsun (Armenian yogurt), tons of fruit, tea, coffee, homemade vodka, and
cucumbers with honey spread on them, which I had never tried before but which
Robert was very, very adamant about me trying. They were delicious. I ended up
finishing my trek home hours later completely re-energized. I’ve since been
invited to their home multiple times for meals, and have visited the school in
Vartanidzor and helped Qnarik fill out an application to have a TEFL Peace
Corps Volunteer at her school next year. I consider both Qnarik and Robert to
be some of my best friends here. It’s
not often that people invite a sweaty backpacker who just took a nap under a
walnut tree off the highway and into their home, and then wind up becoming
friends with that backpacker and inviting him over again and again, but that
type of thing is starting to not seem so strange here anymore. S
#3—Chris’s Neighbors
– Քրիսի Հարէվաննէրը
At night, in the dead of winter, just after New Year’s, in Yerevan. My girlfriend and I
were on our way to a friend’s apartment who was not in town but had given us a
spare key and was letting use the place for the night. It must have been well
below freezing outside. On the cold walk to our destination, we were feeling
grateful to have the warm apartment to stay in for the night. However, as we
finally reached the place and my girlfriend fumbled for the key to the
apartment in her purse, she couldn't find it. This, compounded with the frigid
cold outside, was sort of a numbing blow to our moods. We wandered for an hour
or so in the streets near the apartment, backtracking our steps along the
sidewalks and re-entering the shops we had just been in to ask if they had seen
the key. They hadn’t, and it didn’t pop up shining under a streetlight on any
of the sidewalks either. The realization that the key was gone for good sank in
deeper, and eventually we headed back to the apartment just to double check if
it hadn’t fallen out somewhere near the door, before calling it quits and
finding other accommodations for the night. We didn’t find the key, of course,
but as we searched around, the neighbors who lived next door and rented the
place to our friend came out and asked what the trouble was. After hearing the
story, they invited us in with persistence (we did at least try to say no a
couple of times) and soon we caved in and got warm in their house. Before we
could fully thaw out, Nor Tari (Armenian New Year) food started coming at
faster than our appetites could keep up with. We were treated to blinchik,
fruit, cake, layered vegetable and bean bars, lamb, sausages, and cheese along
with tea and coffee. I ate pretty shamelessly, because it was delicious and I
was hungry, thanking them profusely. They then offered to let us stay at their
place for the night, and once again persisted aggressively, but we felt that
we’d be overstepping a little too much if we obliged, and eventually headed
back out into the cold an hour or so later to go stay at a hostel. The two
ladies had warmed us up and put a bright spot on a night that would have
otherwise been quite a bleak one.
What a nice blog!
ReplyDeleteI came across your blog accidently and read most of your your posts. I was an Intern at PC, I actually finished my internship at IRC a month ago or so. I met some volunteers there during the 9 months I worked there and you guys are so friendly and enthusiastic about your work here in Armenia. I will definitely miss Peace Corps and all the volunteers.