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  • Pastures for Angora flocks

    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso, Italy
    Aug 13 2012

    Pastures for Angora flocks

    Paolo Martino
    13 August 2012


    Desolate lands, where the mountains of the Caucasus descend towards
    the Anatolian plateau in big steps, and names come from politics
    rather than history. The sixth episode of our report `From the
    Caucasus to Beirut'


    The customs officer unwillingly opens a cleft in the window of the
    sentry box. On the floor, a carpet of fresh snow swallows my
    footsteps, while daylight falls shines through the flakes. `Your car?'
    Where the Iron Curtain was standing up to twenty years ago, now what
    is left is only a cold customs officer. `No car'. With his fingertip
    on the glass, the soldier traces the distance from the border post to
    the first village: POSOF, 14 KM. A fourteen-kilometre march. He
    inidicates to sleep there, his hands joined under his cheek. `No,
    thank you'. The stamp is bangs down deafly onto page 34 of my
    passport. VALE BORDER POINT, 6/11/2011. `Welcome to Turkey, Mister'. I
    shake his hand before he withdraws it back into the warmth of his box
    and, until the dead of night, I am left alone with the crackling of
    virgin snow under my boots. It is the belated cry of the Iron Curtain.

    North-Eastern Turkey. The mountains of the Caucasus descend with big
    steps towards the Anatolian plateau, the immeasurable pasture of
    angora flocks, kingdom of the Kurdish dynasties, a corridor and valve
    between confronting continents. The road from Yerevan to Beirut winds
    through snowy lands to which politics, more than history, is busy
    giving names. Eastern Turkey, as shown on the atlas; Kurdistan, as the
    men and women living there call it; Western Armenia, according to the
    word of the Armenian diaspora. The scrupulous toponymy reveals
    aspirations to dominating a land that only belongs to the wind.

    Kars appears at the end of a straight stretch of tarmac, the only
    pattern in the plateau's monotonous morphology. Under Russian control
    until 1917, the Kars Oblast attracted a constant flow of Armenians,
    many of them survivors of the genocide. When the October Revolution
    withdrew the contingents stationed in the Empire's suburbs, the
    Armenians took over the city, integrating it into the Democratic
    Republic of Armenia. Up to 1920, when the Turkish advance swallowed up
    half the newborn Armenian State, Kars was the capital of the Armenian
    province of Vanand. Today, high on the fortress a huge red flag with
    half moon and star on it flutters in sky breaking its metallic grey
    colour.

    From my journal

    A railway track runs steadily through the prairie towards the East,
    without ever curving for about 70 kilometres up to Armenia. A 1-hour
    trip, if the border between the two Countries had not been closed for
    the past 20 years. On July 6th 1993, when the Turks shut it, the
    railway workers of both Countries wondered what to do with the
    locomotives left trapped on the wrong side of the barbed wire. Built
    in 1899, this was, for the rest of the following century, the only
    railway between NATO and the Soviet Union, the throbbing artery of men
    and freight between the two blocks sharing the world. To get here from
    Yerevan, it took me three days on buses, taxis and forced marches
    through solitary passes and snowy gorges of the Caucasus.

    A slam on the brakes and the bus stops at the entrance of Kars. Eight
    soldiers stare the passengers straight in the eye, their fingertips on
    the triggers of the rifles pointed at eye level. The officer checking
    the documents shouts out a name, articulating each syllable clearly.
    The name echoes on the bus like an electric shock. A young boy walks
    down the aisle meeting compassionate looks. Handcuffed on his back, he
    meekly disappears on the prison van along with other prisoners. The
    bus starts again and the man beside me shrugs: `Turkish Jandarma'.
    Indeed, that name still resounding in my head. I.M. A Kurdish name.

    >From the top of the fortress, the camera has trouble focusing on Kars'
    suburbs, suspended between fog and the prairie. But at the foot of the
    castle, clear is the image of the Armenian Cathedral of the Holy
    Apostles. Turned into a museum in the `60s, then into a mosque and
    then abandoned, the church is intact, despite its neglect. Rafi, my
    Armenian friend and child of the diaspora's words come to mind:
    `Armenians build schools and churches everywhere, then they
    disappear'. Uttered in Beirut, the sentence betrayed admiration for
    the Kurdish cause in Turkey, for their determination not to leave, for
    this people's tenacious claims for autonomy. Before history turned its
    back on the Armenians, a century ago, the two minorities lived side by
    side in this region, part of a multi-ethnic empire that extended from
    the Balkans to the Persian Gulf. `Sooner or later - Rafi added - the
    Kurds will have their own State in Anatolia. With the passing of time,
    we are disappearing from the Middle East'

    Days go by without talking, as the Kurdish winter starts. Among stands
    of spices and dried fruit at the bazaar, shepherds, hand labourers,
    merchants and farmers loiter, along with elders in traditional
    clothes: Kurdish alvars and dark vests on white shirts, Persian
    caftans, felt féz, tarbush streaked with gold. The variety of clothes
    and human features in this bordering strip of land recalls the
    linguistic richness of old times. Armenian, Turkish, Zazà, Kurmanji,
    Russian and a pentagram of languages cut back by Ankara's fierce
    politics of centralization based on Turkish monolingualism.

    Ani. The walls of the largest Armenian capital of all time surround
    nothing now. The pointed-arch door in the ramparts, shaped by the wind
    more than man, is the trompe l'`il in the constant recurring of the
    plateau. Gradually abandoned since the 16th century, with its 150,000
    inhabitants, Ani competed, by splendour and fame, with Baghdad,
    Istanbul and Beijing. Persian and Arab caravans exchanged goods in its
    squares; Byzantine, Armenian and Russian pilgrims prayed in its
    sanctuaries; Caucasian and Asian routes changed course just so they
    could cross its doors. Today, among these cold ruins, the only traces
    of life are big oxen pasturing on the Armenian history and a young
    Kurdish shepherd tending to them with a stick and creative cries.

    The apparent continuity of the land is broken as I proceed on what was
    the city's trade axis. While the horizon is shaped by the mosque of
    Menüçehr, the Cathedral, the Redeemer and Saint Gregory Churches, the
    plateau is suddenly swallowed up by windy gorges. Down below, like an
    enormous scar, the bed of the Arax river marks Ani's Eastern border.
    Beyond the canyon, again flat but at an altitude, from afar Armenia
    observes the open-hearted ruins of its ancient capital. Since 1920,
    the river has marked the border between the two Countries. After the
    Turkish-Armenian war, the prayers to leave at least that square
    kilometre to Armenian control were to no avail. Today, as then,
    sovereignty is not a matter of courtesy.

    At this point of the plateau, where the sky is no less concrete than
    the earth, it is the vault of heaven that gives shape to things.
    Beaten by wind and solitude, Ani does not easily give up its remains.
    How can this be the land that nourishes the diaspora's myth of return?
    But when the sun disappears behind the low profile of the horizon,
    leaving behind it a secretion of red, the steel sky starts melting and
    Ani changes colour, going from grey to crimson. Somehow, the monuments
    go back to the eternity they were first thought for, before the
    age-old human work went missing. In this frozen moment, the ghost of
    the deported people populates this land again, fulfilling Sarop's
    prophecy. And solitude turns into a privilege.

    The bus to Igdir veers South. At night, the plateau throbs with its
    own light, a white warmth that from the snowy profile of the mountains
    drops down to the valley warming up the plane. The road unwinds in
    this meadow of light. Tonight Beirut is still far, but I miss it less
    and less.

    http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Dossiers/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/Pastures-for-Angora-flocks-120935

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