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Natural High: Odzun marries beauty & history in spectacular fashion

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  • Natural High: Odzun marries beauty & history in spectacular fashion

    Armenia Now, Armenia
    June 24 2005

    Natural High: Odzun marries beauty and history in spectacular fashion

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    To feel the Lori area in your palm, to merge with its sky and nature
    one should go up to the village of Odzun, 1,150 meters above the sea
    level, off the highway running from Vanadzor to Alaverdi.


    Wonder world: the houses of Odzun are built on the edge of ravine
    Ashot Dzavaryan, who drives a minibus between Odzun and Yerevan,
    says: `Those visiting the village for the first time always have a
    question - What were the people thinking when they decided to settle
    down here? But they answer it themselves when they look around: here
    is a wonder of the world!'

    Odzun is situated on a high plateau near the ravine on the left bank
    of the river Debed. In front of it are the Chatin Dagh mountains
    (meaning Difficult Mountains) while above Odzun are the mountains of
    Tsengo, Salart and Golurt covered with virgin forests. To the right
    of the village is the well-known Mount Lalvar, which means the flower
    mountain.

    `I would go to other countries only to be able to compare them with
    our nature and countryside. Ours is the best,' says 65-year-old
    locksmith from Odzun Seyran Hovasapyan.

    One of his ancestors, priest Hovasap, was a builder of Odzun's domed
    basilica church (6th Century). His ashes are located near the
    northern gate.

    Construction of the church was started by the Zakaryan rulers, who
    are considered Odzun's first residents. Seyran says that the village
    consisted of 30 tribes, of which only 7 or 8 remain now. During the
    Russian-Persian war in 1765, some people from Karabakh settled in
    Odzun.

    Today, 5,000 people live here. Villagers say that Odzun's name means
    `to consecrate or sanctify'. A villager, Arsen Titanyan, says it was
    also called Uzunlar.

    `The houses were built in a direct line to the edge of the ravine,
    like a string,' he says.

    Seyran says that life here warms up in summer as the village fills
    with tourists. During Soviet years, they exceeded the local
    population by 1.5 times. Now again, tourists visit often and pay to
    stay overnight in villagers' houses. Many prefer to stay in the Odzun
    guest house two kilometers from the village near a forest. From
    there, guests have a full view over the village.

    `The guests of our village are reluctant to leave. The local
    mountains, countryside, waters, air - it's a different world!' says
    the minibus driver.

    Monuments from different ages can be seen everywhere in Odzun and
    surrounding areas. A sculpture to Smbat Bagratuni stands in the
    center of the village near the church, and there are two medieval
    cemeteries with numerous tombstones and khachkars.

    One of Odzun's treasures is its life-giving waters. One source is in
    the forest in front of the holiday hotel. Hotel worker Andranik says
    that many sick people come here and recover with the aid of these
    waters. Seyran says people from as far as America and Australia come
    for the water and take it home in vessels.

    Still today clay pipes are preserved in the village through which
    centuries ago the people of Odzun channeled the water from the
    mountains to the village. They discovered its curative properties in
    this way:

    `Sixteen hundred years ago, Queen Parandzem was passing by with a
    large army. The army made a stopover in Odzun and an epidemic broke
    out. They began to drink water from Odzun's springs and the epidemic
    stopped. Queen Parandzem prayed and said: `Thanks God, you have
    bestowed life-giving water on us.'

    The guest house's 42-year-old chef Geghetsik Hovhannisyan says that
    besides water the area is rich in various useful herbs - thyme, mint,
    cat thyme, motherwort, milfoil.


    Alpine air and pure springs make natural food of Odzun especially
    delicious
    `We always treat our guests to Odzun's famous thyme khashlama. It was
    handed down to us by our forefathers. It is best made of lamb. We cut
    it into pieces, pour cold water on it and put it on the fire. Then we
    add tomato and pepper. Five or ten minutes before taking it off the
    fire, we add thyme,' explains Geghetsik.

    She gets down to her job and cooks meals from clean natural rural
    products. Butter, eggs, matsun, vegetables, cheese, sour cream - all
    this is purchased from the village. Many tourists come to buy things
    from villagers.

    Home-baked bread is sold everywhere in Odzun. Unlike other regions of
    Armenia, lavash is not baked here. Shop assistant Lusik explains:
    `This bread is baked in special bakeries made of bricks. Every house
    has a `bakery'. They bake 15 bread loafs at a time and eat them for
    several days.'

    The gate of Odzun's domed church is closed. The watchman, 50-year-old
    Garnik Davtyan, comes out of the house next door and unlocks the
    gate. He also acts as a guide.

    `The church was reconstructed in the 8th Century by Hovhan Odznetsi,
    and during the Soviet times it was turned into a storehouse. My
    mother worked as the manager of that storehouse. I remember I was a
    little kid and they took out the parchments and burned them in the
    yard,' says Garnik.

    Generally, the church is open on Sundays when a priest comes from
    Alaverdi. Garnik says it has a secret tunnel, used to protect priests
    against enemies.

    The secret 1.5-kilometer path towards the south-east of the village
    leads to the Surb Nshan Church on the plane near the ravine. Arsen,
    standing at the edge of the ravine, points to numerous holes in the
    rocks. He says that descending the ravine is dangerous, but there are
    special village guides who serve tourists.

    Garnik recalls that last year a group of tourists wanted to go
    through one of the openings, but after 30 or 40 meters they backed
    off as the way was closed.

    Surb Nshan's day is marked on the first Sunday of November, when
    people come on a pilgrimage and at night make 15 to 20 fires. Seyran
    says that Surb Nshan was a brave warlord and that it was in honor of
    his victories that the church in his name was built in the ravine.
    The monastery of Horomair was built later in the upper parts of the
    ravine.

    `They were built in places difficult of access, even when you look at
    them from a distance you become terrified. But it was done for a
    reason, to characterize the dauntless spirit of our people,' says
    Seyran.

    The Chatin Dagh mountain range in front of the monastery where there
    is Kuletavank monastery. Seyran says that it is difficult to go up
    there, but during the medieval wars they communicated from Kuletavank
    with Surb Nshan using colored flags.


    Basilica church of 6th century
    Besides forests the surroundings here are covered with motley carpets
    of flowers. White ox-eye daisies add splashes of white under the sun
    and it looks as if snow fell in certain places on the slopes of Lori
    mountains.

    >From the heights of the holiday hotel, one can watch the sunset
    falling on the village, mountains, and forest. The perfect
    combination of nature is divine.

    Geghetsik says: `Early in the morning and in the evening the air
    become twice as clear. The air here is very sharp; we have villagers
    who cannot stay at this height.'

    White clouds gather on Lalvar. They say here that Stepanavan's
    airport decides on flights according to the weather on the mountain.

    It begins to rain, but the sunset proudly continues to preserve its
    colors. Silence falls, colors become denser, only the outlines of
    mountains and clouds embracing each other are visible. Somewhere in
    the distance a cuckoo continues its call unabated.

    `Every day here is different. It is a fairytale which ends and begins
    anew,' says Geghetsik.

    http://news.google.ca/news?hl=en&ned=ca&q=armenia+OR+armenian+OR +armenians+OR+karabakh+OR+Qarabagh+OR+Garabagh+OR+ karabagh&ie=UTF-8&scoring=d&sa=N&start=0
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