Film: Young Filmmakers in Vanadzor Ask, ‘Where Are We Going?’

The Armenian Weekly
Nov 17 2017

A still from the film “Where Are We Going?” by Grigor Poghosyan, where the main character, Aren Voskanyan, discusses hardships young artists face in Vanadzor with filmmaker and musician, Erik Khanoyan.

Special to the Armenian Weekly

Grigor Poghosyan, a 21-year-old filmmaker from Vanadzor, compares his hometown to Detroit, and even plays me a song by Eminem to illustrate his point. He’s never been there, but he has seen its frequent cameos in popular film and music.

Vanadzor, the third-largest city in Armenia and the subject of Poghosyan’s recent film, “Where Are We Going?” was once—like Detroit—a thriving industrial town. Its factories have since closed and its residents have not yet recovered from the traumas of economic collapse.

In 1979, Vanadzor, then known by its Soviet-era name, Kirovakan, had a population of nearly 150,000. By 2011, that number had been halved. As in the rest of Armenia, many of those who could, left to work abroad, usually to Russia.

A still from a montage in film “Where Are We Going?” by Grigor Poghosyan, which documents some of the consequences of economic collapse in Vanadzor

Unemployment is high in Armenia’s remote towns, and times are especially tough for those in the 18-35 age demographic, but prospects are nearly impossible for artists like Poghosyan and his band of close-knit friends from film school.

“Where Are We Going,” a collaborative project which was filmed on a $40 budget, had its premiere earlier this year at the Golden Apricot Film Festival, in Yerevan. Poghosyan initially submitted it as his thesis project in film school. It features current and former students at the Vanadzor campus of the Yerevan State Institute of Theater and Cinematography—young people who see themselves as artists with a calling, for whom the creation of art is not a choice but an inevitability.

A still from Grigor Poghosyan’s film “Where Are We Going?”

Blending melancholy montages of the city viscerally depicting the economic depression and disrepair that has characterized Vanadzor since Armenia’s independence, “Where Are We Going?” cuts intermittently between philosophical conversations with Poghosyan’s friends and fellow filmmakers about themes ranging from young people’s personal aspirations to the meaninglessness of war and endemic government corruption. But Poghosyan most directly expresses his own feelings in a tableau vivant—the first scene he ever envisioned for the film.

A still of the tableau vivant from the film “Where Are We Going?”

That take, which was inspired by a scene from a Jean-Luc Godard film, shows his friends scattered over an abandoned lot, reading newspapers and shouting the words that so frequently appear in them: “freedom,” “war,” “patriarchy.”

The filmmaker has only ever lived in a post-industrial Vanadzor, and “Where Are We Going?” is a testament to his conflicted relationship with the city. His grandmother worked in one of the fabric factories that closed its doors after the USSR’s collapse. His mother, a divorcée, was forced to leave Armenia in 2009 to find work to support the family, leaving Poghosyan to be raised by his grandmother, who filled his head with stories of a past life in a lively society that rewarded industriousness and where work was abundant.

A still from the film “Where Are We Going,” depicting the city’s dilapidated aesthetic

Aesthetically, the film paints a picture of Vanadzor very different from the one Poghosyan’s grandmother knew. Shots of the city’s beautiful architecture and scenic mountains are frequently interrupted with images of overflowing garbage bins or the dirty interior of an ancient bus.

Children in Vanadzor play in an abandoned Soviet-era Niva. A still from the film “Where Are We Going?”

At the same time, Vanadzor’s youth hold a deep reverence for the hardships they have endured and, ultimately, don’t wish to leave. At one point, the film’s main narrator, Aren Voskanyan, a former student of the same cinematography institute and a close remarks, “No one wants to do anything in this city. Neither do I. That’s why nothing changes.” It’s then that you hear Poghosyan speak from behind the camera for the first time, though we never see him, “That’s what’s cool about it.”

In our interview, Poghosyan points out that the very lack of infrastructure in Vanadzor is also the reason it provides a climate in which art can thrive: “There is nothing to do here. After 6 [p.m.], there is no more transportation. This is probably why so many people work in art… The abandoned atmosphere, with the ruined buildings and beautiful mountains in the background, forces you to think and to feel.”

“I’m thankful for how I see life and how I feel the world.”

He says it was a regular conversation that inspired the bulk of the film. “We were just walking, and I took out the camera and started filming him,” he explains. “Then I decided to film him a second day, then a third, and then I understood that all of this was about us and the town.”

Behind-the-scenes of the film “Where Are We Going?” (Photo courtesy of Grigor Poghosyan)

The film was shot as Poghosyan was about to graduate, and was facing the prospect of serving in the military. The anxiety and uncertainly about that specific unknowable future is palpable throughout the film. One of the characters repeatedly exclaims throughout the film, “2,200 died in the army,” referencing the official statistic regarding Armenian military deaths since 1994.

Armenia has a conscript army, and most Armenian men must serve once they reach the age of 18. However, those who receive a university scholarship may defer their army service to after they complete their degree (a law that will be changing soon). As of now, Poghosyan, who has vision problems, still does not know whether he will be deemed fit to serve.

Quite a few obstacles in Armenia prevent young filmmakers from successfully pursuing their passions—ranging from complex regulations for receiving funding to limited support from more established filmmakers, and even just the prospect of leaving Vanadzor. In a conversation, Voskanyan and a fellow film student discuss fears about moving to Yerevan with no money or prospects. It’s a task that seems insurmountable, as there is no guarantee of success. Even so, there are no other options. As Voskanyan says in the film, “It’s hard, but it’s possible. And if it’s possible, it has to be done.”

Though the response to the film from festivals has been positive, Poghosyan still is not completely satisfied with his work. “I don’t think it’s a great film. It’s not the film of my dreams,” he laments, “It has a lot of issues in it…. Sound is horrible, the frames are not focused, and much of the film is without stabilization. It was an experiment. This experiment became bigger than I imagined.” Yet what he considers “middling professionalism” might actually be responsible for some of the film’s most compelling elements.

The shaky camera movements, the planned mishmash of audio, the combination of extreme closeups and wide shots all reinforce the feeling of authenticity in the film and actually lend it a sense of restlessness. Poghosyan is not just an objective observer documenting his subjects. He is one of them, and he is just as restless and uncertain as they are.

Though the film portrays a somewhat despondent picture of modern Vanadzor, Poghosyan contends that his desire to make art is, in fact, radically patriotic. “It’s not about leaving, it’s about going toward an unknowable future.” Ultimately, he hopes it will give those in the Diaspora a more complete and complex view of Armenia, beyond Yerevan’s downtown or the country’s ubiquitous monasteries.

“It’s important for me to make them see something different: young, underground people trying to create something, and thinking about big things, despite the difficult social conditions.”

“Where Are We Going?” will have its North American premiere at the Toronto Hamazkayin Pomegranate Film Festival. It will also be screened at the Asian Film Center’s Global Fest in Kolkata.

View the “Where Are We Going?” trailer, below.

Chess: Armenian grandmasters win individual medals at European Championship

Pan Armenian, Armenia
Nov 7 2017
November 7, 2017 – 18:31 AMT
Armenian grandmasters win individual medals at European Championship

Armenian grandmaster Levon Aronian was named the best player at Board 1 of the European Team Chess Championship, based on individual results.

Aronian managed to collect 4.5 points out of possible seven, leaving behind Azerbaijan's Shakhriyar Mammadyarov and the Czech Republic's David Navara.

Another of Armenia's representatives, Gabriel Sargissian came in second at Board 3, gathering 6.5 points out of the total of 9.0.

Both Armenian teams failed to take prizes at the European Team Chess Champioship that was held in the Greek town of Hersonissos, Crete.

A snake in Tumo’s building

On November 2, at 11:38, an alert was received that a snake was found at the Tumo Center for Creative Technologies at Halabyan 16Street, Yerevan, where the rescuers caught the Macrovipera lebetina snake and moved it to a safe place.

On November 2, at 14:48 an alert was received that a snake was found in the basement of one of the apartment building at Nansen 21/3, Yerevan, where the rescuers caught the coluber snake and transported a safe area.

Turkish Press: Turkish president to visit Azerbaijan next week

Anadolu Agency (AA) Turkey
 Friday


Turkish president to visit Azerbaijan next week


By Diyar Guldogan

ANKARA

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will visit Azerbaijan on Oct. 30 and
31, the Turkish presidency said in a statement on Friday.

Erdogan, together with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Georgian
Prime Minister Giorgi Kvirikashvili, will attend on Monday the first
official train service of the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars (BTK) railway project.

The 826-kilometer (513-mile) long railway is being built in accordance
with an intergovernmental agreement between Ankara, Baku and Tbilisi.

Erdogan on Tuesday will attend the 6th Turkey-Azerbaijan High-Level
Strategic Council meeting.

The Turkish leader and Aliyev are expected to discuss "in detail"
bilateral relations, regional and international developments,
particularly the occupied Karabakh dispute.

Azerbaijan and Armenia remain in dispute over the occupied Karabakh
region. Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan in 1991 with Armenian
military support, and a peace process has yet to be implemented.

Turkey reiterates that the dispute needs to be resolved within the
framework of international law and Azerbaijan's sovereignty and
territorial integrity.

According to Friday's statement, a number agreements on cooperation
between Ankara and Baku are also expected to be signed.

Fresno Doctors Meet with Artsakh President

Fresno doctors meeting with Artsakh President Bako Sahakian (Photo: Office of the NKR President)

STEPANAKERT, Artsakh Republic – On October 10, Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakian received a group of doctors who had arrived from Fresno, Calif. to provide charity medical treatment to Artsakh citizens.

A series of topics addressing possibilities of cooperation in the healthcare field was discussed during the meeting.

The President emphasized with satisfaction that the visits of physicians from Fresno to Artsakh had become a good tradition, noting that cooperation with American doctors had positive impact on the quality of medicare in the country.

Artsakh Republic Healthcare Minister Karine Atayan, Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia to Fresno Perch Abgaryan and other officials also participated in the meeting.

ՀՀ-ից ՌԴ 42.000 մարդ է տեղափոխվել «Հայրենակիցներ» ծրագրով

  • 21.09.2017
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2007-2017 թթ. Հայաստանից ավելի քան 42.000 քաղաքացի է տեղափոխվել Ռուսաստան հայրենակիցների վերաբնակեցման ծրագրով: Այս մասին ասված է ՌԴ ՆԳՆ մամուլի հաղորդագրությունում:

Ըստ նախարարության տվյալների՝ վերջին 10 տարվա ընթացքում Ռուսաստան է տեղափոխվել 584,9 հազար մարդ, որից 7,2%-ը Հայաստանի քաղաքացիներ են: ՀՀ քաղաքացիները ծրագրի ամենաակտիվ մասնակիցներն են Ուկրաինայի (38,8%), Ղազախստանի (20,6%), Ուզբեկստանի (12,1%), Մոլդովայի (8,5%) հետ մեկտեղ:

Կամավոր վերաբնակեցումն իրականացվում է 2007-ից գործող պետական ծրագրի շրջանակում, որով վերաբնակներին աջակցություն է ցուցաբերվում:

ՌԴ Հայրենակիցների վերաբնակեցման մասին պետական ծրագրով միայն 2017-ի առաջին կիսամյակում Ռուսաստանի Դաշնություն է տեղափոխվել 41.000 մարդ, մինչդեռ 2016-ի նույն ժամանակահատվածում վերադարձել էր 88.000 մարդ: 

Azerbaijani Press: Azerbaijan says US congressmen’s illegal visit to Nagorno-Karabakh is being investigated

APA, Azerbaijan
Sept 20 2017

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The visit of members of the US House of Representatives – Frank Pallone and Tulsi Gabbard – to the occupied Azerbaijani territories is being investigated, Hikmat Hajiyev, spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, told APA on Wednesday.

 After the investigation is over, appropriate steps will be taken in relation of these persons, Hajiyev noted.

 “These persons have long been funded by Armenia and the Armenian lobby in the US. They are completely depended on the US-based Armenian lobby,” he added.   

Traditional wine festival to be held in Artsakh

Panorama, Armenia

Aug 23 2017

The 4rd Artsakh Wine Festival will be held in Togh village, in the area of Melik Avan’s Palace of the Hadrout region to host dozens of winemakers from Armenia and the Artsakh Republic.

As the Artsakh ministry of economy reported, wine and agricultural product fair as well as an art exhibition will be opened in the sidelines of the festival, accompanied by jazz, blues, national and modern music performances. The festival will also feature group tours and other recreational activities.

The guests of the festival will have the opportunity to taste the dishes of Artsakh cuisine. This year the festival is slated for September 16 with free of charge entrance.

The ministry details that the Artsakh Wine Festival is a major event aiming to promote adventure tourism in the country, popularize the southern tourism routes of the republic, establishing a unique platform for Armenian and Artsakh winemakers.

The festival, which is attended by around 2,000 guests annually, will bring together the best Armenian wines along with featuring the specifics of the local culture.

Entertainment: World famous actor John Malkovich to visit Armenia

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Friday


World famous actor John Malkovich to visit Armenia



YEREVAN, AUGUST 18, ARMENPRESS. World famous Hollywood actor John
Malkovich will attend the solemn evening of the opening of the 5th
international festival after Aram Khachaturian, "Armenpress" was
informed from the press service of theState Youth Orchestra of
Armenia.

The opening of the festival will take place on October 11 at 19:00 at
Aram Kachaturian Concert Hall.

Malkovic will perform with the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia.

The organizer of the event is theState Youth Orchestra of Armenia.

No friendship in Armenia’s ‘village of friendship’

OC Media

Aug 18 2017

by David Stepanyan

You can fetch as much as $1,000 for the materials from a dismantled home (David Stepanyan/OC Media)

Barekamavan, a village on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, regularly comes under fire. Unfortunately for Barekamavan’s besieged residents, this is not their only problem, and with people moving away, the village faces extinction.

Barekamavan means ‘the village of friendship’ in Armenian. This is the name of a village in Tavush Province, north-eastern Armenia, which lies on the border with Azerbaijan. Sometimes people in Tavush call the village by its former name, Dostlu, which means friendship in Azerbaijani. But there is no longer any friendship between Armenians and Azerbaijanis in Barekamavan, and the village itself is on the brink of disappearing. The main reasons are the periodic shelling from Azerbaijan and a bleak economic situation.

Barekamavan is pinned to the side of the mountains; on the other side, lies the Azerbaijani village of Kamarli. The nearest Armenian villages of Koti and Dovegh are about 10 kilometres from Barekamavan. Surrounded by hills and forests to the west, to the east lies a mountain dotted with landmines, military posts, and barbed wire fences. From there, the village lies directly in sight of the Azerbaijani soldiers.

In the centre of the village stands a brand new church, the legacy of one of Barekamavan’s residents who moved to Russia. Nearby stands a memorial to people from the village who died in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. These are the only new structures in Barekamavan.

In the village centre, a few dilapidated buildings house the village administration, post office, and school. On the surrounding hills half-destroyed houses without roofs can be seen — a reminder of the 1992–1994 war. Embedded in some buildings are the traces — either complete or partial — of shells. Some are no more than gaping holes. Residents know practically by heart which damage was caused in ‘that war’ and which in ‘this one’.

Garik lost his position as head of the village council after Armenia’s 328 councils were amalgamated (David Stepanyan/OC Media)

According to former head of the Barekamavan village council, Garik Abazyan, 393 people were registered as living in the village as of 1 January. In reality, no more than 150 people (around 60 families) are permanent residents, mostly elderly people. Only 20 families have children of school or preschool age. Others have moved to Russia, Yerevan, or Ijevan, the administrative centre of Tavush Province. Some also got to Russia seasonally for work.

For a second year in a row the village school has taken in no new children. Only 19 children attend the school, even though there are 17 teachers and staff. Nevertheless, the village administration displays a USAID poster with the rather ambiguous slogan: ‘Youth — the driving force of the community’ which in the local language could also be translated as ‘Youth — the moving force of the community’.

‘I myself also moved my family to Yerevan — away from the bullets. Before, when I was the head of the village council, my wife and children lived in Barekamavan despite everything. Now the situation is different, it makes no sense to leave them here risking their lives. Just a few days ago the village was fired on again from that peak’, Garik says, pointing to the east towards an Azerbaijani military position.

The 35 year old is convinced that in the event of a repeat of last August’s heavy bombardments, nobody will stay in the village. Back then, the villagers rallied their faith and hope for a better future, which helped them to endure the shells falling on their roofs and the bullets whistling through the streets. Today that faith and hope have all but disappeared.

Just a few days ago the village was fired on again from that peak’, Garik says, pointing to the east towards an Azerbaijani military position (David Stepanyan/OC Media)

Faith in a better future had been placed almost exclusively in former Defence Minister Seyran Ohanyan. Through his efforts, the ministry had taken charge of Barekamavan, paying for the residents’ electricity, and providing the village with two high-capacity ZIL 131 lorries, which are necessary for people living in mountainous areas like Barekamavan. The Ministry even obtained a flock of 100 sheep for the villagers, to replace ones that had been taken by Azerbaijan.

According to many of the villagers, Ohanyan didn’t only focus on the welfare of Barekamavan, but other borderline villages in Tavush Province as well.

‘Of course in a country like Armenia, it was not possible for such an honest person [like Ohanyan] to hold onto his position for long. That was why he was removed from his position, and now our benefactor has gone over to the opposition, and nobody has any use for us — especially the government’, says Abazyan.

The villagers own 340 hectares of private land, but since 1991 not a single hectare has been cultivated, because the area regularly comes under fire and parts of it are mined. The villagers can only cultivate 55 hectares of land which lies in their household plots. However, this land is not sufficient to provide them with their livelihoods.

The only other jobs in Barekamavan are the aforementioned school, with a staff of 17, the village council, with its three employees, and the post-master. Three villagers also serve on a contractual basis in the nearby military base.

Several of the men go to Russia for seasonal work. Others survive on state pensions or social welfare payments from the California-based Paros social fund.

Residents know practically by heart which damage was caused in ‘that war’ and which in ‘this one’ (David Stepanyan/OC Media)

By Barekamavan standards, Abazyan’s family is quite well off — his parents keep a herd of 45 cattle in the mountains. And now Garik is preparing cattle feed for the winter. However, having prepared the hay, Garik will return to Yerevan again.

When asked what he does there, the young man shrugs his shoulders, ‘what is there to hide — my parents help us out, my wife’s parents help too. That is how we live. At least in Yerevan they are not shooting at us. There at least I don’t have to fear for the lives of my family. There is some kind of future. It’s better than living here under fire…’

Garik lost his position as head of the village council after Armenia’s 328 councils were amalgamated into 34 territorial units, with eight villages in Tavush incorporated into one administrative unit centred around the town of Noyemberyan.

Under this programme, Berekamavan no longer has a village head, only a municipal representative, who occasionally appears on the village council. However, Garik is convinced that the programme failed in its main objective of saving money, as according to him, the three workers on the village council receive the same salary as before. Only their name and status has changed, but not the cost of maintaining the institution.

In fact, the new system has only added to the problems of this remote borderline village in the Tavush mountains. The municipal representative can only issue certificates of residency to the villagers. For everything else, the people of Barekamavan have to travel to the town of Noyemberyan, 20 kilometres away. That is where they go to receive medical assistance. And as there is no public transport running to and from Barekamavan, the villagers have to find other ways of getting there.

‘Youth — the driving force of the community’ is there only on a poster (David Stepanyan/OC Media)

The next biggest problem after the Azerbaijani bullets and unemployment, is the almost complete lack of irrigation or even drinking water. There are several springs in the vicinity of Barekamavan, but water comes irregularly, particularly in years of drought. This year the villagers have been lucky — there is water in the springs, they just need to carry it to their homes in buckets and canisters.

In terms of the gas supply to the village, a wholly interesting, paradoxical situation has occurred. Under the government-approved programme to bring gas supplies to Barekamavan, the International Fund for Agricultural Development spent ֏10 million ($21,000) extending a pipeline to the village from nearby Koti. However, there is no money for gas meters or pipes to bring the gas from the mains in Barekamavan into people’s homes, and Gazprom-Armenia, which has a monopoly, will not install them at their own expense.

As a result, there is gas in Barekamevan, but none of the villagers can access it in their homes. And this despite the state programme for supplying the borderline villages of Voskepar, Baganis, Voskevan, Koti, and Barekamevan with gas saying that the state itself should be paying for residents’ gas.

Some residents of Barekamavan have begun dismantling their homes with a view to selling the parts as building materials. To find a buyer for a home in a borderline village under fire is impossible. But according to the villagers, you can fetch as much as $1,000 for the materials from a dismantled home…

[Read OC Media’s report from Azerbaijan: Living on the the Armenian–Azerbaijani border: alone and under fire]

[Read OC Media’s report from Nagorno-Karabakh: A year after the war in Nagorno-Karabakh’s frontline village of Talish]

[See Saferworld’s photo report from Azerbaijan: A snapshot of life along the Azerbaijan–Armenia border]