Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia and Cambodia (part 1): through the lens of Lawrence of Arabi

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia and Cambodia (part 1): through the lens of Lawrence of Arabi

    Armenia and Cambodia (part 1): through the lens of Lawrence of Arabia

    April 19, 2014 | 09:10


    Armenian News-NEWS. amcontinues Arianne & Armenia project within the
    framework of which Arianne Caoili tells about numerous trips across
    Armenia and shares her impressions and experience of living in
    Armenia.

    Armenia and Cambodia (part 1): through the lens of Lawrence of Arabia

    "Us Khmers are very lazy - that's the problem" was the most common
    maxim expressed in my recent trip to Cambodia. When inquiring with
    taxi drivers, restaurant owners, locals, and university professors
    about Cambodia's recent past and current economic climate, somehow the
    answer always came down to the sentiment that 'Cambodians just don't
    like to work'. For foreigners who have just landed in Yerevan, a
    similar complaint is often heard or expressed (and not just within
    expat circles). In fact, I can't go to any gathering where the
    sentiment that `Armenia is a country where 3 million kings wake up'
    has not come up in some form or another, either in jest or
    thinly-veiled contempt.

    In 1919, during the Paris Peace Conference, Thomas Edward Lawrence
    (better known as Lawrence of Arabia), speculated in one very strange
    but candid interview on a theory of small, ancient nations, saying
    that

    "Armenians won't work...that is the trouble, really, with all these
    old races that have been civilized, learned the game and, having once
    dominated the world and worked it, have lost control, gone back, as
    you say; or, as I say, carried on. They have gone forward logically,
    psychologically, physiologically. They do not care for hard labor. The
    ex-civilized nations' they are not lazy. They are too intelligent to
    work for others."

    His point was that some people are far too evolved for hard labor -
    they would rather sit back and collect, seeing no value in `work for
    wages'. Lawrence might be right on the money with the Greeks, who,
    being one of the cradles of civilization, are a little averse to hard
    work; one might say that government spending has nourished a sense of
    entitlement which Ms. Merkel is paying for.

    Photo from Arianne Caoili Personal Archives

    The Khmers, the predecessors of modern day Cambodia, were a dominant
    force in South East Asia, covering much of Indochina. The Khmer kings
    were addicted to wonder-building: their zeal for construction explains
    the scattering of temples, monuments, and extensive architectural
    marvels seen today in Cambodia and neighboring countries. Angkor - its
    historical capital- was the largest city in the world, covering an
    area comparable to modern day Los Angeles. Smidgens of human
    settlements in Cambodia date back several thousand years, and the
    archeological excavations at Areni 1 trace similar historical
    fingerprints of the Old World.

    These two civilizations certainly do have something to be proud of.
    Cambodian locals boast about the rich cultural heritage of the Khmers
    and how their descendants have left their footprints and cultural
    fragments throughout the Indochinese block. Armenians (especially the
    Diaspora) left distinct artistic, religious and cultural stamps. Take
    the Crimea, for example ` cluttered with marks of over 600 years of
    Armenian settlement (they left in 1778), and the Armenians of
    Transylvania who were strong figures in trade and commerce. By the
    middle of the 19th century, the Armenians dominated the cities of
    Tiflis and Baku (the first successful oil well was built in 1871 by an
    Armenian, Mirzoev; and as for Tiflis, Armenians towered over economic
    and political life and remained the largest ethnic group there until
    the 1917 revolution. Armenians essentially provided the capital for
    critical infrastructure and the administrative aspects of government,
    including the printing press, all to be inherited by the Georgians).

    At least, the Khmers have the remains of their temples at Angkor.
    Armenian churches and towns were destroyed; I have seen with my own
    eyes the crude altering of official maps and schoolbooks to deny that
    there had ever been an Armenia in the first place; and a large
    majority of other Armenian-originating creations lay in the lap of
    others. But unlike Cambodia, Armenia has kept its human capital (the
    Khmer Rouge wiped out the entire Cambodian intellectual class,
    persecuting those who didn't have a wrinkle on their hands).

    Although, excessive emigration is doing a good job of purging Armenia
    of its future brain and economic base. And unfortunately, benefits
    from the Armenian Diaspora in Russia and the US have diminishing
    returns. Remittances are considered a form of rent because they are
    earned overseas and then sent back to the home country. Beblawi and
    Luciani distinguish between a rentier state and rentier economy: the
    former is a typical Arab petrol state, in which the government is the
    main recipient of external rents. Armenia is the latter ` as the
    massive volume of remittances from relatives overseas go directly to
    households. The problem is that remittances fuel a rentier mentality
    that embodies a break in the work-reward causation (in other words,
    motivation is killed at its source and replaced by a preoccupation
    with achieving the externally-generated rent rather than focusing on
    domestic production. Over time this cements a dependent relationship
    on the externally-generated income, and a festering desire to be
    expectant more so than productive).

    Lawrence put it this way: `The Armenians¦would not work them
    themselves, not even for themselves. They would not even do the work
    of organizing the work or development. They would let them out as
    concessions to others to manage. They want to live on the coast, in
    cities, on rent, interest, dividends and the profits of trading in the
    shares and the actual money earned by capital and labor.'

    Photo from Arianne Caoili Personal Archives

    The issue of `laziness' itself is rather contentious in Armenia:
    nobody likes to talk about it openly, but when they do, it's a
    kitchen-table discussion where the default position is to blame
    leadership or anyone else other than themselves. A foreign
    director-level friend of mine working in the construction sector
    appears to be infuriated by all lines of service, from the
    construction workers to the top dogs: they simply do not like being
    told what to do; or, they will happily nod their heads in agreement
    and do the very opposite. Most work-ethics center on how to do one's
    job well; whereas in Armenia the prevalent mentality appears to be
    focused on how one might do the master's job better.

    Perhaps there is something to be said though on the vigor with which
    Armenians work and flourish overseas. For the purposes of economic
    sustainability however, it might be high time for a shift in
    mentality: to focus on engagement from within rather than expectations
    on handouts from outside. But Armenians are intrinsically gypsy, in
    the sense that they seem more at ease thriving in another land rather
    than improving the conditions of their current environment.

    It might be fitting to end with a musing of one wise Greek ` Seneca,
    if I recall correctly ` who humbly suggested that no man loves his
    city because it is great, but because it is his. Otherwise, it would
    be like loving your wife only up until the point that she loses her
    looks.


    Arianne Caoili
    (Part 2 to be continued next week).
    http://news.am/eng/news/205222.html




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X