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06 05 09 - Soci's Armenian Diaspora Weeps
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By Carl Schreck - Staff Writer
Carl Schreck / MT
Pavel Yeremyan, left, Vram Cholokyan, center, and an unidentified man lamenting
the crash Thursday near Sochi.
SOCHI -- Pavel Yeremyan had been drinking and smoking cheap Yava cigarettes for
hours.
"This is a terrible tragedy for us," Yeremyan, a subsistence farmer, said
Thursday of the Armenian airliner that went down a day earlier off the coast of
this Black Sea town.
The crash killed all 113 people on board and has left the local Armenian
community stunned. With 125,000 ethnic Armenians in Sochi, out of a total of
400,000 people, the community is one of the largest in the country.
In Yeremyan's village of Baranovka, like many of the 20 mostly Armenian
villages in the hills above Sochi, you don't have to look far to find people
who knew someone, or knew someone who knew someone, on the late-night flight
from Yerevan.
"The young woman who lived in that house was on the plane," said Yeremyan's
friend, 69-year-old Vram Cholokyan, who wheezed as he pointed to a two-story,
white concrete house. "She was about 22 and had a young child. I saw them
walking around here just before Easter."
Both Yeremyan and Cholokyan have lived in the village their entire lives. Their
families came here in the early part of the last century to flee the Turks.
Today, they live off the fruits and vegetables they grow on small plots of
land. Whatever they don't eat is sold at market, Cholokyan explained in a
raspy, almost inaudible voice.
Grach Makeyan, deputy head of the Sochi branch of the Union of Armenians in
Russia, said only 26 of those who died in the plane crash were permanent Sochi
Armenians. Most of the victims, he said, were among the seasonal workers who
come to Sochi from Armenia for the vacation season, which lasts until November.
"But we're all Armenians, even if we're not relatives," Makeyan said in his
office at the Kamelia Hotel. "There aren't that many of us, so almost everybody
knows somebody who died, even if indirectly through friends or neighbors. We
are all in mourning. This will be a very, very difficult time."
A priest from Sochi's Holy Cross Armenian Church, known to all simply as Father
Komitas, said all the Armenians in the community felt personally affected by
the crash.
"Around 70 of the victims were citizens of Armenia and didn't have relatives
here," Father Komitas, 38, said Thursday in his cramped office decorated with
his own sculptures and drawings. "But this terrible tragedy is all of ours."
Makeyan noted that a close friend of his had invited several of the people on
Wednesday's flight for a birthday celebration.
"Genocide, the war in Karabakh, the earthquake, and now this," Makeyan said.
"Every time we get our heads just above the water, something like this happens.
But we will stick together. Armenians are the people most capable of enduring
tragedy after tragedy."
Because of their heavy smoking and poor diet, Armenian men tend to age rapidly.
Many in their thirties look twenty years older.
Lev Dashchyan, 28, a cab driver from Sochi's Adler district, home to about
80,000 ethnic Armenians, said war, natural disaster -- and now the plane crash
-- had exacerbated local Armenians' plight.
"My father-in-law's friend lost his wife and children in the earthquake,"
Dashchyan said, referring to the 1998 Spitak disaster. "They never even found
the bodies. Then he remarried, and his new wife and child died in the plane
crash. He has suffered a lot. He's 55, but looks like he's 70."
Dashchyan belongs to the Hamshen Armenian community. His ancestors, Makeyan
said, fled across the Black Sea from Turkey to settle in the Krasnodar region
and Abkhazia in the early 19th century. Hamshen Armenians comprise most of
Sochi's Armenian population; while they speak an old dialect featuring many
Turkish words, they are close to other Armenians.
Carl Schreck / MT
Komitas looking at a photo album.
"Sometimes we have a difficult time understanding each other because of our
different dialects," Karina Mardvitskaya, 37, a Hamshen Armenian and a florist,
said of her friend, non-Hamshen Armenian Violeta Muratyan, who tends the bar at
an outdoor cafe on Kurortny Prospekt, Sochi's main drag.
Mardvitskaya, a Sochi native, and Muratyan, who came to Sochi from Stavropol
three years ago to find work, said Wednesday evening that they had been
frantically calling friends to find out if anyone they knew had been killed in
the plane crash.
"I was on the phone all day," Muratyan said. "Everyone was calling trying to
figure out who had heard what. Luckily, no one close to me was on the plane."
But Muratyan said a young Armenian woman who frequented the cafe had apparently
died in the crash.
"Some customers came in today and told me she was on the plane," Muratyan said.
"I remember her face clearly. She must have been around 21."
Other Armenians spent the better part of Thursday finding out that people who
had been a part of their lives for years were now gone.
Flipping through a photo album, Father Komitas turned to a group picture of
several of his congregants, pointing to a middle-aged blonde woman.
"She came to church regularly," he said of the woman, who had been on the
flight. "It's important now that we find the bodies so they can be put to rest,
hopefully in Armenia, in their homeland."
V.V
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