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Armenia's Vanishing Udis

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  • Armenia's Vanishing Udis

    ARMENIA'S VANISHING UDIS
    By Tatul Hakopian in Dedebavan

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR, UK
    June 28 2007

    Small community is slowly losing its ancient language.

    Seda Kumsieva, a teacher for 36 years, lives in Armenia although
    she used to teach Russian language and literature in the village of
    Vardashen in Azerbaijan.

    The crisis of the late Eighties that led to the Armenian-Azerbaijani
    war over Nagorny Karabakh forced her to flee her home and resettle
    in Armenia.

    Seda is an ethnic Udi - a Christian group with its own unique language
    - but her husband is Armenian, a fact which sealed her fate.

    Her family is now scattered across the Caucasus.

    "Some of my relatives stayed in Vardashen, others settled in Tbilisi.

    I am completely Udi by blood, but my husband is Armenian and we and
    other families who had mixed marriages left Azerbaijan," she said.

    Eleven Udis from Azerbaijan resettled in Dedebavan and many more have
    found homes in other villages. In conversations with IWPR, the Udis
    made it clear they feel quite secure in Armenia, but are worried that
    their unique culture is dying out.

    The head of the village community in Dedebavan Georgy Babayan told
    IWPR, "We don't make any distinction between Armenians and Udis.

    During the emigration from Vardashen in 1988, several Udi families
    came with the Armenians. Later on, many of them emigrated to Russia.

    We are the same as the Udis - we share our joy and grief with them."

    Hranush Kharatian, an ethnographer who has written extensively about
    the Udis, says that there are only around 200 of them in Armenia.

    "The community does not have the status of a national minority,"
    he said. "Today there isn't a single regulatory document on this issue.

    Only those groups which systematically try to preserve their ethnic
    identity are recognised as minorities."

    Kharatian said that the Udis had fled Azerbaijan not just because of
    mixed marriages with Armenians, but because they were a persecuted
    minority.

    "Udis who were persecuted in Nij have resettled in the Georgian village
    of Oktomberi. Until the recent deportations from Azerbaijan there
    were not just two but five whole Udi villages. We don't know much
    about three of the villages, because although the Udis living there
    were Christians, they spoke Azeri. These villages were called Jourlu,
    Mirzabeilu and Sultan Nukhi. Several people from there emigrated
    to Armenia."

    Seda Kumsieva uses her cousins in Tbilisi - who now go by the surname
    Kumsiashvili - to get information about relatives who stayed behind in
    her home village. She still badly misses Vardashen - now renamed Oduz.

    "Although our way of life and traditions are Armenian, Udis have
    their own specific festivals," she said. "As a child, I remember how
    in May they used to tie multi-coloured threads round the hands of
    little children and then hang these little bundles on the branches
    of trees. Everyone used to make a wish to have their dream come true.

    The festival was called Dimbaz."

    Forty-five-year-old Zanna Lalayan is married to an Armenian and her
    family is also scattered. "My brother Oleg and other relatives live
    in Nij. My other brother and other relatives live in Ukraine - his
    children don't know the Udi language. Our generation of Udis based
    in Russia and other countries doesn't know our language.

    "Our nation is gradually dwindling."

    Seventy-year-old Arshaluis Movsisian, an Udi whose late husband was
    Armenian, lives in the village of Bagratashen and left behind a large
    part of her family, a whole troop of nieces and nephews. "My heart is
    breaking, I want to see their faces," she said, holding back the tears.

    "Like the Armenians, we recognise the cross and the church," she
    said. "We didn't marry our girls off to Azerbaijanis and we didn't
    marry theirs, because we are people of the cross. Like the Armenians,
    our brides come out in white clothes, with uncovered faces , we dance
    Armenian dances and bury our dead according to Armenian customs.

    Apart from the language, we are no different to them."

    Armenian historians, like their Azerbaijani counterparts, say that the
    Udis are the descendants of the Caucasian Albanians. But Armenians
    say the process of assimilation happened much earlier - that the
    Albanians converted to the Armenian church in the 5th century and at
    the same time began to adopt the Armenian language, customs and names.

    The Udis alone, the historians say, survived as a tiny remnant of a
    once much bigger culture. They point out that the Udis' language has
    nothing in common with either Indo-European Armenian or Turkic Azeri.

    Some unique Udi customs also seem to date back to pre-Christian times.

    Arzu Dargiyan recalls how in Azerbaijan they used to pay homage
    to sacred trees. "We would choose a fruit tree in the garden and
    performed an act of worship in front of it," she said. "We lit candles
    and sacrificed animals. It was forbidden to climb the sacred tree or
    pick its fruit. You could only eat them if they fell from the tree."

    Oleg Dulgarian is an Udi also from Vardashen, although he left as a
    small child. He runs a non-governmental organisation for refugees,
    and is passionate about trying to preserve the culture of this ancient
    but tiny community.

    Dulgarian says that he wants to create an organization called "Aghvank"
    (the ancient name for Caucasian Albania) that will aim to preserve
    traditions and engage in academic study of the Udis.

    "It's not a problem to be an Udi in Armenia; no one forces us
    to renounce our ethnicity. The main problems that Udis who have
    emigrated from Azerbaijan face are the same as those facing the
    Armenian refugees."

    Dulgarian wants to get government help for his project but the
    main element of Udi culture - their language - is now in apparently
    terminal decline.

    "My sons don't speak Udi at all," lamented Alexei Kazarov, who also
    fled from Vardashen. "Our nation is gradually disappearing. There
    are only eight or ten thousand Udis left in the whole world."

    Tatul Hakopian is a political observer for Public Radio in Armenia.
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