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Saghatel Hanisyan: "The Lord Takes The Master And The Wolves, The Wa

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  • Saghatel Hanisyan: "The Lord Takes The Master And The Wolves, The Wa

    SAGHATEL HANISYAN: "THE LORD TAKES THE MASTER AND THE WOLVES, THE WAIF"

    http://hetq.am/eng/articles/23889/saghatel-hanisyan-%E2%80%9Cthe-lord-takes-the-master-and-the-wolves-the-waif%E2%80%9D.html
    13:08, February 27, 2013

    Everyone in the Lori village of Shnogh knows Saghatel Hanisyan.

    The 52 year-old Artsakh war vet is something of a local fixture,
    whose battle exploits and stories of a mischievous youth have been
    heard countless times.

    Recently, Saghatel fell ill. He was more concerned about how he would
    heat the house where he lives with his Sokhak, his wife of two years,
    and his sister Rozan.

    Saghatel spent five years on the frontlines, He only returned after
    the ceasefire.

    After graduating from high school, Saghatel studied at the Alaverdi
    Technical Institute and later at Yerevan's Radio Technical School.

    In 1988, he joined up with a volunteer unit in Shnogh that took up
    defense position in Noyemberyan. Later, with an Alaverdi ARF volunteer
    unit, he left for Ghazanchi. In 1991, Saghatel was in Martouni where
    he joined Manvel Grigoryan's unit.

    Saghatel says that he hasn't forgotten any episode from the war
    years and is ready to recount them at anytime to anyone interested
    in listening.

    Many are interested to hear his war tales. Others can't believe that
    he fought in the war. Many Artsakh fighters used the guns, grenades
    and bullets Saghatel fashioned. Guns are part of his life. One day,
    Saghatel was arrested for possessing a few handmade bullets.

    "I had brought back a few bullets that I had made. They came and took
    me to the Alaverdi Criminal Unit. I fought for five years and they
    arrested me for having five bullets. They questioned me for several
    days. I didn't know if it was night or day," he recounts.

    Saghatel holds no grudges however and tells the story with a grin on
    his face. Nevertheless, he confesses that he doesn't understand why
    some of the Artsakh fighters are praised and covered in the press
    while others like him are overlooked.

    He regrets that he brought nothing back with him from the war as a
    memento. The only reminder of his war years is a photo in a history
    book. He's never seen it but local school kids talk about it.

    Shnogh residents say that Saghatel stood out even as a child. They
    recount that in the second grade Saghatel broke the lock of the school
    cafeteria and ate all the cream for the pastries. Years later, one of
    the school's classrooms caught fire as a result of a lab experiment
    Saghatel was conducting that went wrong. There are many such stories
    of the mishaps involving Saghatel.

    Today, Saghatel doesn't have a job. Neither does his wife and sister.

    In the past, Saghatel used to repair local farm equipment for the
    villagers, mostly getting paid in barter. More recently, Saghatel
    was a woodworker in the forest.

    Women's work in the village is seasonal. Rozan tends the gardens
    of others and Sokhak collects local herbs for sale. All three get
    by on the few cents they make and Sokhak's 15,500 AMD ($40) monthly
    medical allowance.

    Saghatel receives no assistance from the government. He says that
    while the Vanadzor Hospital offered to operate on him for free,
    he doesn't even have the money for transportation.

    "Treatment should be totally free. They say it's free but it ain't. As
    the saying goes, the Lord takes the master and the wolves, the waif,"
    Saghatel says with a smile.

    By Sona Amirjanyan

    Yerevan State University Faculty of Journalism 4th year student

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