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Perhaps Somebody Will Help Me Or Even Visit Me

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  • Perhaps Somebody Will Help Me Or Even Visit Me

    PERHAPS SOMEBODY WILL HELP ME OR EVEN VISIT ME

    A1+
    [10:24 am] 17 October, 2008

    For the past seven years, Arman, 31, has been sitting near the
    window of his house drawing a picture of the same yard, looking at
    the changes in the weather and what's going on outside. He spends his
    days engraving small items, although he confesses that he doesn't have
    the appropriate equipment and works with a knife and a screwdriver.

    "I feel alienated. In my diary, I write about the lack of human
    relations and attention," says Arman and adds that his friends don't
    visit him after he moved into his new apartment. But he doesn't blame
    them because, after all, they have things to do.

    Arman is a first-degree handicapped. He hasn't been able to walk for
    the past seven years and moves in a wheelchair. He got married when he
    was 20, but his two daughters are with their mother in Karabakh. Arman
    lives with his pensioner parents, who also lack treatment.

    "When I was healthy, I used to take him outside for a walk. I can't
    do that anymore; I've gotten old," says Arman's father, 67-year old
    Ruben Harutyunian. He moved to Yerevan with his wife and two children
    from Sumgait and Arman was born in Yerevan.

    "His feet got weak since he was nine years old. He started to walk
    on tiptoes; he couldn't walk up the stairs and after 23, he didn't
    walk at all and the doctors couldn't explain why. He has not been
    injured and it doesn't run in the family," says Mrs. Piruza, Arman's
    mother. She says that they have gone to every hospital to cure their
    son, but in vain and Arman's situation is getting worse.

    "I really need help. I can do many things, I just need the help so
    I can get treatment and get back on my feet," says Arman and asks
    if many people are going to read the article. "Perhaps one of those
    readers will decide to help me, or simply understand a thing or two
    about my disease or simply visit me...It would be so nice," he says
    smiling as he flips the paper in his hands.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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