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A Fable about Armenia's `Young Lords'


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#1 Yervant1

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Posted 09 April 2011 - 02:40 PM

A Fable about Armenia's `Young Lords'

hetq
[ 2011/04/04 | 13:56 ]
society Feature Stories
Edik Baghdasaryan


Jivan Gasparyan Calls First Row Attendees `Young Lords'

I can't say if it was mere coincidence that my trip to the dormitory
at #1 Shirak Street in Yeghvard, where nine families are barely
surviving, dovetailed with the `Tashir' annual awards ceremony of the
other day.

The courts have given these families until April 23 to leave the
building. Some of the families moved in to the dorm at the suggestion
of the Yeghvard mayor. The rest just started to illegally squat
because they had nowhere else to go. Their fate remains unclear. Where
will they go now?

These are needy families. Most survive by collecting glass bottles and
other bits and pieces from the trash. Aluminium is a prized find. The
women go out to the fields to gather various green edibles. They sell
half at the market and feed themselves and their families with the
rest.

What I witnessed at Yeghvard sent chills up my spine. My thoughts have
been confused and disconcerting ever since. My fellow Armenians are
starving while living in such filthy conditions.

On the same evening as my visit to Yeghvard, in a luxurious concert
hall in central Moscow, the Tashir awards ceremony was taking place.
It was an assemblage of the cream of the crop - the `king's boys'. The
glitzy program was broadcast live on the Armenia TV station.

They were giving out cars and homes to the winners. Maybe next year,
the organizers will think even bigger, and hand out restaurants,
planes and hotels. The sky's the limit when you got money.

And what better way to stick it to the hungry masses then by such
manifestations of conspicuous consumption. These `young lords' have
the country in the palm of their hand and they can squeeze it dry,
voraciously suck out its innards, till there is nothing left. Who can
stop them?

32 children live in the Yeghvard building seen here. Some have left
the dorm for army service, to defend the nation's borders. Others from
the dorm will soon join them. They go off and serve in the army so
that the `young lords' back home can comfortably conduct their
business deals and grow richer.




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