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Armenians Are Crying All The Time

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  • Armenians Are Crying All The Time

    ARMENIANS ARE CRYING ALL THE TIME

    Lragir, Armenia
    10-09-2007 14:08:50

    "In fact, in 2004 poverty was 40-41 percent, in 2006 it dropped
    to 26-27 percent, and extreme poverty declined as well," says
    Aaron Adibekyan, sociologist, who has studied recently the state
    of poverty in Armenia for the UN Millennium program. On September
    10 Aaron Adibekyan and the head of the Commission for Religion and
    Ethnic Minorities Hranush Kharatyan, ethnographer, were hosted at
    the Hayeli Club for a debate.

    Kharatyan said she has at hand the results of her survey which is
    qualitative rather than quantitative. Hranush Kharatyan says she has
    studied poverty since 2000, and observed the dynamics of the quality
    of life of the same families. She says the results are not reassuring
    because the survey conducted in different regions of Armenia show
    the families which were poor in 2000 not only did not improve their
    quality of life but on the contrary.

    "I am sorry to say that only one family had improvement. It is a
    family of refugees in Charentsavan who have finally got an apartment.

    We did not observe any positive change in the lives of those families,
    on the contrary, we observed regress, a poor state," Hranush Kharatyan
    says.

    Aaron Adibekyan speaks about a reality which he explains by the
    Armenian mentality. According to him, the pollsters wanted to find
    out how they evaluate the state of their family. Over 60 percent of
    respondents said satisfactory, they can solve their problems. And
    in evaluating the state of the community in general, the respondents
    said over 60 percent are poor.

    "If 60 percent of the members of the same community say the state
    of their family is satisfactory, how does it happen that 60 percent
    of the community are poor? An Armenian starts complaining whenever
    he meets another Armenian. An American says on meeting his friend he
    does well, he has some problem but he will solve it. But an Armenian
    starts weeping," Aaron Adibekyan says, describing the Armenian habit of
    "weeping".

    Adibekyan says the gap between the rich and the poor has shrunk as
    well. His statement amazed Hranush Kharatyan who thinks in reality
    the gap between 10-20 percent who have the highest income and 10-20
    percent who have the lowest income has become larger.
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