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Some Syrian Armenians hope learning Russian will help them

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  • Some Syrian Armenians hope learning Russian will help them

    Some Syrian Armenians hope learning Russian will help them to better
    integrate into Armenian society

    Education | 18.01.13 | 12:43


    Garabedian's family- Diranouhi and Hovig with their son Setraq attend
    Russian language courses

    By Julia Hakobyan
    ArmeniaNow Deputy Editor

    Diranouhi Garabedian diligently pronounces: "Ya lyublyu russkii yazik"
    (I love Russian language). The teacher corrects her, praises, asks a
    new question.

    Enlarge Photo
    Victor Krivopuskov

    Garabedian is 42, but this is not the surprising part of her
    attendance to the Russian language courses. Garabedian is an Armenian
    refugee from Syria who says she wants to learn Russian because she
    realizes it comes in handy for better adaptation in Yerevan. She also
    hopes that some day she will be able to read some classic Russian
    literature in the original language. Her husband and son also attend
    the same classes.

    The family moved to Armenia a year and a half ago, because of the
    ongoing conflict in Syria, which has been going on for 2 years. They
    say that in the beginning it was hard to adjust to the life in
    Yerevan, but by now, when they get used to life in a new country, they
    are thinking of staying in Yerevan forever.

    "The Russian language is the second language in Armenia, and we
    thought, since we stay here, we have to learn it, because it is being
    widely practiced in Yerevan. Russian words are heard in everyday
    speech and can be seen in markets, in streets, in restaurants. I think
    if we acquire basic knowledge it will be very helpful to us,' says
    Garabedian, who herself is a teacher of Armenian language at Yerevan's
    Cilician school. (The school was opened last year for the Syrian
    Armenian students, who study a Syrian curriculum in Arabic.)

    Garabedian is one of nine Syrian Armenian students who attend the
    newly opened Russian courses organized specially for them at the
    Russian Training Center of the Rossotrudnichestvo agency in Armenia
    (The Federal Agency for the Commonwealth of Independent States).
    Russian classes for Syrian Armenians started two weeks ago and are
    held three times a week, the length of each - 80 minutes, the courses
    will last for two months with a monthly fee of $25.

    Victor Krivopuskov, the head of the Culture and Science center of the
    agency says they were ready to organize the classes for free, but
    Syrian Armenians said they prefer to pay for it.

    `Learning language requires consistency and it was their desire to pay
    in order to treat to it seriously. I am not surprised that a group of
    Syrian Armenians, even a small one, wants to learn Russian, because
    the language is in high demand in Armenia. Though they are some
    opponents of the Russian language use in Armenia, it is obvious that
    Russian language is very important to Armenia, since it has its
    biggest Diaspora in Russia (about 2 million) and therefore, many ties.
    Russian remain the major investor in Armenia, and Russia currently
    fully or partially owns many enterprises in fuel and energy,
    metallurgical and construction sectors. In Armenia, there are about
    1,500 Russian companies, and of course, people who work there have to
    know Russian very well. "

    (The use of Russian language from time to time becomes a matter of
    controversy in Armenia, being determined not by philological aspects,
    but rather political. In 2010 the Ministry of Education drafted a bill
    on the opening of foreign schools in Yerevan which provoked hot
    debates and was sharply criticized by those who believed that leaning
    in a foreign language would affect an Armenian child's identity.
    However the parliament adopted the bill in the first reading which
    caused an opinion that the bill was imposed on Armenia by Russia.)

    Meanhile Krivopuskov says the agency will soon organize classes for
    another group of Syrian Armenians, and now the agency is considering
    the possibility of employment of Syrian Armenians, since many of them
    are well educated and can be engaged in Russian-Armenian companies.

    Thousands of ethnic Armenians fled the bloody conflict in Syria and
    about 5000 of them came to Armenia through 2011-2012. While about 2000
    lately left Armenia for another country others try to adjust to the
    life in Armenia, waiting to the conflict's end, while others, like
    Garabedian's family who learn Russian, regards the possibility of
    staying in Armenia on a permanent basis even after the conflict ends.

    The family of Garen Balkhian, another student in the Russian classes
    also intends to stay in Armenia. The 17 year old Balkhian is a student
    of the Cilician school.

    `For the first time I heard Russian speech in movies and decided to
    learn it, because many of my Yerevan friends speaks Russian,' says
    Balkhian, who indents to study business and economy.

    As for Garabedian, moving to Yerevan pushed her to think on acquiring
    another profession, and now she is a first grade student of the
    Romano-German philology at Yerevan State University.

    `I know Armenian, Arabic, Turkish and I know a little French. As many
    languages a person knows, the more advantages she has,' she says.

    Armenians of Syria, like representatives of other Armenian Diaspora in
    Middle East, the U.S. and Western Europe, speak Western Armenian. It
    differs from Eastern Armenian spoken in Armenia; however the speakers
    easily understand each other.

    Whether the Russian language will be of help to Syrian Armenians
    depends on what kind of job they will manage to find, since
    unemployment is the most serious problems the Syrian Armenian faces.
    Only a small group of Syrian Armenians managed to launch business in
    Yerevan and only 150 of them have found jobs through the assistance of
    the Ministry of Diaspora in Armenia. In 2012, 494 citizens of Syria
    out of 565 applied for asylum in Armenia according to the State
    Migration Service.

    http://armenianow.com/society/education/42635/syrian_armenians_yerevan_russian_language_learning

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