21.03.2017 Views

VERSANT

A travel magazine design project by Hannah Mintek with photography by Corinne Thrash

A travel magazine design project
by Hannah Mintek with photography by Corinne Thrash

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

February 2017<br />

Volume 15: Georgia<br />

A Creeping occupation, medieval rituals,<br />

toasting culture, and the birthplace of wine


Contributors<br />

Front cover photo<br />

A local merchant at the Dry Bridge open<br />

air antique market. See page 68 for the<br />

Last Look from around Tbilisi’s old town.<br />

Back cover photo<br />

Sunset in the Caucasian Mountains,<br />

upper Svaneti. See page 38 for our main<br />

feature: Medieval Mountain Hideaway.<br />

versant<br />

EDITOR IN CHIEF Sarah Ramsson<br />

EXECUTIVE EDITOR Tara Harris<br />

SENIOR EDITOR Laura Linderman<br />

MANAGING EDITOR Jamie Weed<br />

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Sandy Smiertka<br />

ART DIRECTOR Hannah Mintek<br />

PHOTO DIRECTOR Corinne Thrash<br />

Corinne Thrash<br />

Artist, commercial photographer,<br />

and videographer<br />

based in Seattle, Corinne<br />

Thrash specializes in travel<br />

and marine photography. This<br />

month for Versant, Thrash<br />

has gone above and beyond<br />

in exploring the terrain of<br />

the Caucasus and the lives of<br />

Georgians. Spending nearly<br />

three weeks tirelessly shooting<br />

everything from the caves of<br />

Orthodox Christian monks to<br />

the incredible wine history of<br />

Georgia, her work executes an<br />

incredible range of diversity.<br />

Be sure to explore her main<br />

photo essay, Youth of Tbilisi,<br />

page 61, capturing a modernizing<br />

era of young adults; an<br />

intimate chance to reflect on<br />

the changing tides in Georgia’s<br />

development. Discover<br />

more of Thrash’s work:<br />

corinnethrash.com<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Annetta Black<br />

Haley Sweetland Edwards<br />

Jonathan Hirshon<br />

Brook Larmer<br />

Stosh Mintek<br />

Simon Ostrovsky<br />

Paul Salopek<br />

Corinne Thrash<br />

CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS<br />

Hannah Mintek<br />

Corinne Thrash<br />

DESIGN DIRECTOR Hannah Mintek<br />

INK, 68 JAY ST., STE. 315,<br />

SEATTLE, WA 98103<br />

TEL: +1 206 802 8495<br />

FAX: +1 206 555 1882<br />

EDITORIAL@<strong>VERSANT</strong>.COM<br />

<strong>VERSANT</strong>.COM<br />

WEBMASTER Kylie Della<br />

ADVERTISING<br />

MANAGING DIRECTOR<br />

Ambar de Kok Mercado<br />

U.S. GROUP PUBLISHING DIRECTOR<br />

Jenn Woodham<br />

INTERNATIONAL ADVERT DIRECTOR<br />

Ana Raab<br />

VP STRATEGY AND BUSINESS<br />

Dave Lohman<br />

COMMERCIAL DIRECTOR<br />

Sam To<br />

VP, SPECIAL PROJECTS<br />

Liz Ungar<br />

DIRECTOR, SPECIAL PROJECTS<br />

Jane Courage<br />

STRATEGIC ACCOUNTS DIRECTOR<br />

Carole Mouawad<br />

U.S. TERRITORY MANAGER<br />

Houssam Nassif<br />

PRODUCTION MANAGER<br />

Casey Milone<br />

PRODUCTION CONTROLLER<br />

Faye Ziegeweid<br />

Haley Edwards<br />

A correspondent at TIME,<br />

Edwards previously was an editor<br />

at the Washington Monthly<br />

where she wrote about policy<br />

and regulation. As a freelance<br />

reporter Edwards has covered<br />

stories around the Middle<br />

East and the Caucasus. Her<br />

installment of Getting Your<br />

Bearings this month comes<br />

from her personal experience<br />

of having lived and traveled<br />

throughout Georgia for<br />

two years. She has a passion<br />

for baby goats, world travel,<br />

and Georgian cheese bread.<br />

Paul Salopek<br />

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist<br />

and National Geographic<br />

Fellow Paul Salopek is<br />

retracing on foot our ancestors’<br />

migration out of Africa<br />

and across the globe. His<br />

21,000-mile odyssey began in<br />

Ethiopia and will end seven<br />

years later at the tip of South<br />

America. Now three years<br />

into his sojourn Salopek has<br />

passed through the cradle of<br />

culture in the Caucasus. His<br />

article Ghost of the Vine will<br />

leave you wanting to toast to<br />

peace and your ancestors.<br />

Simon Ostrovsky<br />

Soviet-born American<br />

documentary filmmaker<br />

and journalist best known<br />

for his coverage of the 2014<br />

crisis in Ukraine for VICE<br />

News and Selfie Soldiers, a<br />

2015 documentary. Ostrovsky<br />

won an Emmy Award in 2013<br />

for his work with VICE.<br />

In this issue, Ostrovsky’s<br />

article “The Russians are<br />

Coming: Georgia’s Creeping<br />

Occupation” explores Russia’s<br />

need for control in the<br />

Caucasus and its strain along<br />

separatist borders of Georgia.<br />

Versant is produced monthly by INK. All material is<br />

strictly copyrighted and all rights are reserved. No<br />

part of this publication may be reproduced in whole<br />

or part without the prior written permission of the<br />

copyright holder. This is a graphic design project of<br />

Hannah Mintek and is not a publication in circulation.<br />

No money was exchanged for this magazine.<br />

Contact: hannahmintek@gmail.com<br />

2 • versant


06 Getting Your Bearings<br />

08 Talk the Talk<br />

09 Experience: Vardzia<br />

14 Tradition: The Georgian Supra<br />

22 Politics: Russia is Coming<br />

30 Culture: Ghost of the Vine<br />

38 History: Medieval Mountain Hideaway<br />

56 Make: Salt of the Earth<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

58 From the Road: Jack and Bebu<br />

61 Perspective: Youth of Tbilisi<br />

68 Last Look


gamarjobaT<br />

Gamarjobat and Welcome!<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

As we seek to discover meaning and universal truths throughout our<br />

travels we may wonder if some places will touch our hearts more greatly<br />

than others. Georgia did that for me. In all of my journeys I have never<br />

been met with such depth of culture, passion, love, and intensity for<br />

life than in my time here.<br />

To say that Georgia is like no other country perhaps is to sound ignorant,<br />

but what you are likely to experience here is truly like no other.<br />

From its green valleys spread with vineyards to its ancient cathedrals<br />

and watchtowers perched on fantastic mountain overlooks, Georgia<br />

(Saqartvelo) is one of the most beautiful countries on earth and a marvelous<br />

canvas for walkers, horse riders, cyclists, skiers, rafters and<br />

travelers of every kind. Equally special are its proud, high-spirited, cultured<br />

people: Georgia claims to be the birthplace of wine, where guests<br />

are considered blessings, and hospitality is the very essence of life.<br />

A deeply complicated history has given Georgia a fascinating backdrop<br />

of architecture and arts, from cave cities to the history of silk<br />

road trading to the inimitable canvases of Pirosmani. Tbilisi, the<br />

capital, is still redolent of an age-old Eurasian crossroads. But this is<br />

also a country moving forward in the 21st century, with spectacular<br />

contemporary buildings, an impressive road renewal project<br />

under way, and ever-improving facilities for the visitors who<br />

are a growing part of its future.<br />

We welcome you to discover the incredible mark<br />

that Georgia could leave on your heart<br />

and memory.<br />

— Hannah Mintek


Getting Your Bearings<br />

GEORGIA: Getting Your Bearings<br />

The Basics<br />

Gotta Have Faith<br />

The Lay of the Land<br />

Georgia is a strip of land in the Caucasus<br />

region of Eurasia, just south of Russia between<br />

the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, north of<br />

Turkey, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. It’s a little<br />

bigger than West Virginia and home to about<br />

4.6 million people.<br />

The Georgian Orthodox Church, which has<br />

its own patriarch, Ilia Meore, was the national<br />

religion for more than 1,500 years prior to the<br />

Communist era, when it was all but eliminated.<br />

But since the fall of the Soviet Union, the<br />

church has enjoyed a huge resurgence. Today,<br />

84 percent of the population is Orthodox.<br />

Georgia is hemmed in by mountains: the<br />

Greater Caucasus to the north, the Lesser<br />

Caucasus to the south, and the Likhi Range<br />

right down the middle. These mountain ranges<br />

make Georgia a patchwork of different climates.<br />

Western Georgia is mostly subtropical,<br />

covered in lush, green rainforests. On average,<br />

it rains there twice as much as it does<br />

in Seattle. But Eastern Georgia is drier, like<br />

California’s Central Valley.<br />

6 • versant


By Haley Sweetland Edwards<br />

White People<br />

Not the Peach State<br />

Gift of Gab<br />

The term “Caucasian” can be traced back to a<br />

19th-century German anthropologist named<br />

Johann Friedrich Blumenbach. Upon visiting<br />

Georgia, Blumenbach claimed to have discovered<br />

the origins of mankind. He labeled<br />

the race of white men “Caucasian,” after the<br />

nearby Caucasian Mountain range. Nowadays,<br />

Georgians have embraced the idea that they<br />

lent their genes to the whole of Europe. A<br />

popular tourism slogan around Georgia claims,<br />

“Europe started here.”<br />

Georgia the country is often confused with<br />

Georgia the US state, although the names<br />

are completely unrelated. The US state got<br />

its name from King George II, while the<br />

country’s name is derived from the Persian<br />

word Gurjistan, meaning “the land of the<br />

foreigners.” The people of Georgia are barely<br />

aware of the confusion, though; they call their<br />

country Sakartvelo.<br />

Most Georgians speak Georgian, or one of the<br />

three languages closely related to it — Svan,<br />

Megrelian, or Laz. All four belong to a family<br />

of “linguistic isolates,” meaning they have<br />

virtually no relationship to any other language.<br />

Georgian is also one of the oldest living languages<br />

in the world.<br />

versant.com • 7


Language<br />

Talk the Talk: Georgian Language<br />

Georgian (Kartuli) is the official language<br />

of Georgia and the country’s most widely<br />

spoken language, used on street signs and in<br />

all aspects of everyday life. There are about<br />

4.1 million people who speak Georgian on a<br />

daily basis: approximately 3.9 million living<br />

in Georgia and the rest living abroad, notably<br />

in Russia. Georgian (Kartuli) is related<br />

to three other languages, all spoken within<br />

Georgia and Northeastern Turkey: Megreli,<br />

Svan, and Laz. There are 15 common dialects<br />

of Georgian reaching as far as Turkey,<br />

Azerbaijan, Armenia and Iran.<br />

Important notes:<br />

There are no capital letters in Georgian.<br />

It is phonetically regular.<br />

It is an unstressed language — each syllable<br />

receives equal weight.<br />

Georgian distinguishes between aspirated<br />

and non-aspirated (ejective) consonants for<br />

t, p, k, ch, and ts.<br />

Diphthongs do not exist in Georgian.<br />

Alphabet: Georgian uses one of the world’s<br />

12 unique alphabets, Mkhedruli — “that of<br />

the warrior.”<br />

ა a<br />

ბ b<br />

გ g<br />

დ d<br />

ე e<br />

ვ v<br />

ზ z<br />

თ t<br />

ი i<br />

კ k’<br />

ლ l<br />

მ m<br />

ნ n<br />

ო o<br />

პ p’<br />

ჟ zj<br />

რ r<br />

ს s<br />

ტ t’<br />

უ u<br />

ფ p<br />

ქ k<br />

ღ gh<br />

ყ q’<br />

შ sh<br />

ჩ ch<br />

ც ts<br />

ძ dz<br />

წ ts’<br />

ჭ ch’<br />

ხ kh<br />

ჯ j<br />

ჰ h<br />

1 ერთი ehr-tee<br />

2 ორი oh-ree<br />

3 სამი sah-mee<br />

4 ოთხი oht-khee<br />

5 ხუთი khoo-tee<br />

6 ექვსი ehk-vsee<br />

7 შვიდი shvee-dee<br />

8 რვა rvah<br />

9 ცხრა tskhrah<br />

10 ათი ah-tee<br />

Yes (formal) დიახ dee-akh<br />

Ok კარგი k’ahr-gee<br />

No არა ah-rah<br />

Maybe ალბათ ahl-baht<br />

Where? სად? sahd?<br />

Hello გამარჯობა gah-mahr-joh-bah<br />

How are you? როგორა ხართ? roh-goh-rah khahrt?<br />

Fine, thank you. კარგად, გმადლობთ. k’ahr-gahd, gmahd-lohbt.<br />

Nice to meet you. სასიამოვნოა. sah-see-ah-mohv-noh-ah.<br />

Please თუ შეიძლება too sheh-eedz-leh-bah<br />

Thank you. გმადლობთ. gmahd-lohbt.<br />

Excuse me. უკაცრავად. oo-k’ahts-rah-vahd.<br />

I’m sorry. ბოდიში. boh-dee-shee<br />

Goodbye. ნახვამდის. nakh-vahm-dees.<br />

Help! დამეხმარეთ! dah-meh-khmah-reht!<br />

Good morning. დილა მშვიდობისა. dee-lah mshvee-doh-bee-sah.<br />

Good night. ღამე მშვიდობისა. ghah-meh mshvee-doh-bee-sah.<br />

Now ახლა ahkh-lah<br />

Later მერე meh-reh<br />

I don’t understand. ვერ გავიგე. vehr gah-vee-geh.<br />

Where is the toilet? სად არის ტუალეტი? sahd ah-rees t’oo-ah-leh-t’ee?<br />

I want… მე მინდა… meh meen-dah…<br />

What is your name? რა გქვიათ? rah gkvee-aht?<br />

My name is… მე მქვია… meh mkvee-ah…<br />

Do you speak English? ინგლისური იცით? eeng-lee-soo-ree ee-tseet?<br />

How much/many…? რამდენი…? rahm-deh-nee…?<br />

Stop to let me off. გამიჩერეთ. gah-mee-cheh-reht.<br />

It is delicious. გემრიელია. gehm-ree-eh-lee-ah.<br />

I don’t want anymore. მეთი არ მინდა. meti ar meen-dah.<br />

Cheers. გაუმარჯოს. gau-mar-jos.<br />

Here’s to you. გაგიმარჯოს. ga-gi-mar-jos.<br />

wine ღვინო ghvee-no<br />

water წყალი ts’q’ah-lee<br />

8 • versant


visit<br />

vardzia<br />

by Annetta Black<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash


Experience<br />

In desperate circumstances people are often driven to perform feats<br />

of mythical proportions. In the late 1100s the medieval kingdom of<br />

Georgia was resisting the onslaught of the Mongol hordes, the most<br />

devastating force Europe had ever seen. Queen Tamar ordered the<br />

construction of this underground sanctuary in 1185, and the digging<br />

began, carving into the side of the Erusheli mountain, located in the<br />

south of the country near the town of Aspindza.<br />

When completed this underground fortress extended 13 levels and<br />

contained 6000 apartments, a throne room and a large church with an<br />

external bell tower. It is assumed that the only access to this stronghold<br />

was via a hidden tunnel whose entrance was near the banks of<br />

the Mtkvari river. The outside slope of the mountain was covered with<br />

fertile terraces, suitable for cultivation, for which an intricate system of<br />

irrigation was designed. With such defenses, natural and man made,<br />

the place must have been all but impregnable to human forces. Alas,<br />

the glorious days of Vardzia didn’t last for very long. Though safe from<br />

the Mongols, mother nature was a different story altogether. In 1283,<br />

only a century after its construction, a devastating earthquake literally<br />

ripped the place apart. The quake shattered the mountain slope<br />

and destroyed more than two-thirds of the city, exposing the hidden<br />

innards of the remainder.<br />

However despite this, a monastery community persisted until 1551<br />

when it was raided and destroyed by Persian Sash Tahmasp.<br />

Since the end of Soviet rule Vardzia has again become a working<br />

monastery, with some caves inhabited by monks (and cordoned off<br />

to protect their privacy). About three hundred apartments and halls<br />

remain visitable and in some tunnels the old irrigation pipes still bring<br />

drinkable water.<br />

10 • versant


Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

versant.com • 11


THE GEORGIAN<br />

SUPRA<br />

Learning the delicate art of eating and toasting<br />

by Jonathan Hirshon<br />

In the deeply traditional culture of Georgia, a Supra (Georgian: სუფრა) is an age-old Georgian<br />

feast and an important part of Georgian social culture. Georgian wine flows freely and several to<br />

several dozens of courses of food come out throughout the night, often followed by dancing and<br />

signing. A supra can commonly go until 2 or 3 in the morning. Broadly, it is a traditionalized feast<br />

ideally characterized by an extremely abundant display of traditional foodstuffs.<br />

The supra is also an occasion for ritualized imbibing. Drinking wine or liquor at a supra is<br />

accompanied by ceremonial toasts, which are directed by the toastmaster, who combines the<br />

consumption of alcohol with specialized, emotional and articulate spoken word. Knowing the<br />

history and etiquette of a supra will ensure survival of the fittest when visiting Georgia.<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash


“A successful tamada must possess great rhetorical<br />

skill and be able to consume a large amount of<br />

alcohol without showing signs of drunkenness.”


A tamada giving the opening toast at a supra.<br />

Dishes begin to stack as guests arrive.<br />

Every supra follows the same set of rules,<br />

but the level of formality depends on<br />

the occasion. Supras can be held almost<br />

anywhere, including restaurants, gardens,<br />

schools, graveyards and, perhaps<br />

most commonly, at homes. Most often,<br />

guests sit at a table, which is covered<br />

with small plates of food that continue<br />

to be brought out and refreshed<br />

throughout the course of the supra.<br />

There are two types of supra: a festive<br />

supra (ლხინის სუფრა), called a keipi,<br />

and a sombre supra (ჭირის სუფრა),<br />

called a kelekhi, that is always held after<br />

burials.<br />

In Georgian, “supra” means “tablecloth”.<br />

It’s likely related to the Arabic<br />

sofra ‏(ةرفس)‏ and Turkish sofra, which<br />

are both words for traditional eating<br />

surfaces. Large public meals are never<br />

held in Georgia without a supra; when there are no tables, the supra<br />

is laid on the ground, typically seen during excursions to churches.<br />

At a supra, toasting is a high art and Georgians have elevated it<br />

to a degree not seen many other places in the world. What follows<br />

is how that toasting process, contest and history are all showcased<br />

during a supra.<br />

Regardless of size and type, a supra is always led by a tamada, or<br />

toastmaster, who introduces each toast during the feast. The tamada<br />

is elected by the banqueting guests or chosen by the host. A successful<br />

tamada must possess great rhetorical skill and be able to consume<br />

a large amount of alcohol without showing signs of drunkenness.<br />

During the meal, the tamada will propose a toast, and then speak<br />

at some length about the topic. The guests raise their glasses, but do<br />

not drink. After the tamada has spoken, the toast continues, usually<br />

in a counter-clockwise direction (to the right).<br />

The next guest who wishes to speak raises their glass, holds forth,<br />

and then drains their glass. If a guest does not wish to speak, they may<br />

drink from their glass after some words that particularly resonate for<br />

him or her. Eating is entirely appropriate during toasts, but talking is<br />

frowned upon. Once everyone who wishes to speak on the theme has<br />

done so, the tamada proposes a new toast, and the cycle begins again.<br />

While some of the more important toasts require drinking your<br />

glass to the bottom as a sign of respect (bolomde in Georgian), the traditions<br />

of the Georgian table space the drinking out over the course<br />

of the meal.<br />

Here are the rules. You cannot drink until the tamada (toastmaster)<br />

has made his toast and drinks. Only then, and usually in order<br />

around the table, can other revelers repeat the toast and drink. Never<br />

propose a different toast unless you are<br />

given permission: that is an offense to<br />

the tamada.<br />

If the toast is made to you as a visitor,<br />

to America or England, to the President<br />

or the Queen, or in any way bears<br />

directly upon your presence, you must<br />

wait to drink until everyone else has<br />

gone before you. Your toast in response<br />

should be one of thanks.<br />

Occasionally you will hear the<br />

tamada say “Alaverdi” to someone. This<br />

means that one guest has been chosen to<br />

elaborate the tamada’s toast. All other<br />

present their drink to this same theme.<br />

Georgians take traditional toasting<br />

very seriously. There is a structure and<br />

balance to a Georgian toast.<br />

Toasts are made with either wine<br />

(usually) or brandy (occasionally, either<br />

local or imported), and nothing else — toasting with beer can be considered<br />

an insult, though the patriarch recently deemed it to be ok.<br />

If you are being toasted, you are supposed to wait until the tamada<br />

has finished, then stand up and thank the toaster. Then, you should<br />

wait until everyone else is done before drinking your wine in one go. If<br />

the tamada says Alaverdi to you, you should elaborate on his toast. If a<br />

large ram or goat’s horn (called the khantsi) is brought out during the<br />

meal and filled with wine, then an honored guest — perhaps you — is<br />

supposed to drink it to the bottom.<br />

If someone else is being toasted, the easiest advice is to wait until<br />

everyone else is drinking to drink your wine. Other than that, it’s<br />

good advice to be quiet while the tamada is talking, and remember<br />

the various other rules of etiquette in Georgia, some of which are not<br />

putting feet on the furniture and not chewing gum in public.<br />

The proper response to Georgian toasts is “gaumarzos”, meaning<br />

literally ‘to your victory’; pragmatically it is equivalent to ‘cheers.’<br />

Immediately after the toast, people clink glasses with the tamada.<br />

Normally, when a foreigner is present, the tamada starts with a toast<br />

to long-lasting friendship with him or her.<br />

Traditions and national values are frequently mentioned. Every foreigner<br />

is paid the compliment of being a good representative of his<br />

or her country, and is assumed to be proud of this. The second toast<br />

could be to the guests’ home countries, to their families or family in<br />

general. Toasting mothers is mandatory, as is friendship, deceased<br />

relatives, existing and future children, peace, love, and the hostess.<br />

The tamada can combine topics into one toast, or split topics into<br />

several toasts. The more people present, the more formal the toasts.<br />

At evenings with close friends, the toasts are often quite witty and<br />

versant.com • 17


Tradition<br />

short. The course of toasting follows a variable thematic canon, which<br />

is accommodated to the specific occasion.<br />

The toast to the hostess, (normally the one who has prepared the<br />

meal) is usually the penultimate or last toast, and has certain implications<br />

for ‘opening up the closing’ of the evening.<br />

When such a toast is about to be offered, frequent attempts to delay<br />

its delivery can be observed, since this toast would end the evening.<br />

The time-order of the entire evening is thus reflected in the pattern<br />

of toasting. To a certain extent, every evening is prestructured by the<br />

pattern of toasting.<br />

Important toasts are marked by a shift of position. Whereas the<br />

tamada and all the other men rise to their feet, the women remain<br />

seated. Additionally, the relevance of a specific toast is indicated by<br />

the appropriate quantity of wine that is to be drunk in one gulp after<br />

its deliverance, and by the drinking-vessel used (glass vs. horn).<br />

Drinking a lot of alcohol is considered a necessary component of<br />

displaying masculinity. Since the tamada is required to empty his<br />

drinking-vessel completely after every toast, he must possess a high<br />

tolerance to alcohol — particularly on special occasions, when drinking-vessels<br />

are commonly made out of bull horns.<br />

Joyous Supra — ლხინის სუფრა<br />

Funeral Supra — ხელეჰი<br />

The pattern of marriage toasting is different from the pattern<br />

appropriate for toasting the birth of a child. Education, rhetorics,<br />

and a good sense of humor can all be demonstrated while<br />

delivering a toast. On a typical lxinis supra (happy banquet)<br />

with guests, the thematic sequence of toasting progresses<br />

approximately in the following fashion:<br />

• to our acquaintance and friendship<br />

• to the well-being of the guests, relatives and friends<br />

• to the family of the guests<br />

• to the parents and the older generation,<br />

• to the dead and the saints, (wine is poured<br />

onto a piece of bread for this toast)<br />

• to existing and yet unborn children,<br />

• to the women present at the table,<br />

• to love,<br />

• to the guests’ mothers,<br />

• to peace on earth,<br />

• to the hostess,<br />

• to the tamada himself.<br />

The following order for toasts is typical for a funeral supra:<br />

to the tamada:<br />

• to the person who has died<br />

• to his or her spouse (if dead)<br />

• to the person’s parents (if dead)<br />

• to the person’s grandparents (if dead)<br />

• to the person’s other dead relatives<br />

• to people from Georgia who died in the war<br />

• to Georgians who died abroad<br />

• to families who have no descendants<br />

• to the spouse of the deceased (if living)<br />

• to the children of the deceased (if living)<br />

• to the surviving parents<br />

• to the surviving siblings<br />

• to the surviving relatives<br />

• to the surviving friends and neighbors<br />

• to the other members of the supra<br />

• to people who have been good to<br />

the family of the deceased.<br />

18 • versant


“To be a good tamada demands close<br />

observation of the surrounding social world.”<br />

Talking stops when the tamada begins to give a toast. To continue<br />

talking is considered impolite. At a supra, informal talking is hardly<br />

possible, because the themes to be talked about are prestructured to a<br />

certain degree in accordance with the canonic order of toasting.<br />

Discussions keep getting interrupted by a toast. The tamada manages<br />

to start the toasting by suddenly raising his glass and calling a<br />

formula, or xalxo (folks), or some personal form of address. Anyone<br />

speaking is then expected to stop in order to listen to the tamada.<br />

The toast normally stands out distinctly from other talking activity by<br />

gestures, intonation, position shifting, and addressing.<br />

Although the toasts are well-known over generations, there is never<br />

one toast like the other. The tamada produces performances that are<br />

similar rather than identical, as is typical for oral genres. Changes<br />

from one concrete performance to the next are determined by the<br />

preferences of the individual speaker, his perception of the audience’s<br />

taste, and sometimes by the audience’s open reaction. The audience is<br />

constantly taken into consideration.<br />

There is no formal teaching in how to give a toast; one trains to<br />

become a good toast giver by listening to the toasts given at the table.<br />

People talk about the toasts delivered during an evening later on. The<br />

evaluation of special toasts is also a common theme. Criteria of judgment<br />

include the manner of delivery, the balance of traditional and<br />

creative performance features, the fluency of speaking, and the sensitive<br />

finding of social qualities to praise.<br />

When a marriage is discussed, one necessarily also talks about the<br />

excellence and originality of the toasts presented on that occasion.<br />

Excellence is judged by the perfect fulfillment of the generic norms,<br />

while originality is judged by the creativity used within the given<br />

procedure. Both should be optimally matched.<br />

Praise to the people present and to those absent is a central function<br />

of the toasts. Since praise is a social endeavor, the tamada has to<br />

be a good social observer. The person who is the subject of the toast<br />

is honored by the whole group; thus, the genre helps to establish and<br />

re-establish social bonds and norms. To be a good tamada demands<br />

close observation of the surrounding social world.<br />

By praising known and unknown qualities of living and deceased<br />

people, a good tamada shows that he is more than simply a man of<br />

words. He is the one who makes people see new dimensions of the<br />

subject, and who keeps the memory of the deceased alive.<br />

The tamada has to guarantee that the dinner ends with good feelings<br />

among all the participants, a goal which is highly valued and<br />

respected by Georgians.<br />

Formulae are used in every toast, and there is a fixed set that provides<br />

a stock for every tamada, for example, “me minda shemogtavazot,<br />

sadghegrzelo” (I want to offer you a toast), “kargad qopna” (to their<br />

well-being), “ janmrteloba vusurvot” (I wish them health), “bedniereba<br />

vusurvot” (I wish them good luck), “mshoblebs dagilocavt sul qvelas”<br />

(I bless all your parents/best wishes for all your parents), “ghmertma<br />

gaumarjos sul qvelas” (God shall give all of them his favor).<br />

However, a toast that consists only of formulaic phrases is considered<br />

to be a poor one. A good tamada combines traditional and creative<br />

phrases. He can give voice to his own individuality, and at the same<br />

time be sensitive to the audience’s pleasure.<br />

Men gather for a funeral supra to honor the<br />

passing of a member of their community.<br />

versant.com • 19


Photo © Corinne Thrash


A ritualized toast-competition, called alaverdi, is often established<br />

between the men at the table. The tamada talks about a specific topic,<br />

and the other men must modify this topic in the subsequent toasts.<br />

When one alaverdi round is completed the tamada must decide who<br />

will open the next round. His decision should be based on the criteria<br />

of the toast’s originality, its formulation, and the approval it received<br />

from the table. Table rhetoric is an important sign of Georgian masculinity.<br />

Men who cannot take part are considered insufficient, weak,<br />

or unmanly.<br />

In the special form of alaverdi toasting competition, the tamada<br />

symbolically grants other men his power of speech. Whomever he<br />

hands the drink-horn or the glass to becomes temporarily the tamada,<br />

and as such, the center of attraction of the dinner-party. He is then<br />

expected to vary and elaborate on the topic already determined by<br />

the head-tamada.<br />

In formal contexts, the competition is about ‘who is the best.’ The<br />

head-tamada, taking into consideration the approval of the people<br />

present, judges who was best. In the next round, the winner is given<br />

the right to speak as the second tamada. It is frequently very obvious<br />

that the head-tamada himself was the best, and he laboriously tries to<br />

remain in that position.<br />

The audience at the table can express their appreciation of specific<br />

toasts by paying compliments, clapping, or making non-verbal gestures<br />

(however, this does not occur in the following example). In alaverdidrinking,<br />

it becomes especially apparent that the power of words is a<br />

sign of masculinity in Georgian culture.<br />

Two women ‘vakhtanguri’ at a wedding, symbolically<br />

drinking wine from a pair of high heels.<br />

versant.com • 21


Politics<br />

In July 2015, Russian backed forces moved the boundary fence between<br />

Russian-occupied South Ossetia and Georgia — placing more Georgian<br />

territory under Russian control. Georgians refer to this as the creeping<br />

occupation, and several people who unfortunately live in the area now<br />

have a different citizenship.<br />

Simon Ostrovsky traveled to Georgia to see how the country is<br />

handling Russia’s quiet invasion, and meet those getting caught in<br />

the crossfire.<br />

“I am 82 years old. For over 80 years I’ve been a citizen of Georgia.<br />

And now they’ve made me a Russian citizen. I don’t know who’s to<br />

blame. The Russians say it’s their territory. I will never leave Georgia.<br />

They can kill me, they can hang me if they like.”<br />

We’re outside the village of Bershueti, which is on Georgian territory<br />

right next to the demarcation line between Georgia and South<br />

Ossetia, and just yesterday two shepherds were actually captured by<br />

troops from the other side.<br />

South Ossetia is one of two regions of Georgia that Russia took<br />

over in a war in 2008. This summer Russia took things a step further.<br />

It posted fresh border markers and made claim to a mile-long section<br />

of a major U.S.-backed BP operated oil pipeline. Now Russia has the<br />

capability to sabotage its operation any time it wants to. Moscow now<br />

controls about a quarter of Georgia’s total territory. They arrest anyone<br />

who strays across this new de facto border. Georgians are calling it<br />

the Creeping Occupation.<br />

The entire world considers the land on both sides of this fence to<br />

belong to Georgia. Only Russia considers the land on one side to be<br />

part of an independent country, known as South Ossetia. But the<br />

fence ends, which is why it is not entirely clear for the local villages<br />

herding their sheep where they are allowed to go and where they’re<br />

not supposed to be.<br />

A young shepherd from the area agreed to take us around.<br />

Could you tell us what happened to Murazi yesterday?<br />

“Yes, Murazi [was taken] over there to Tskhinvali [the capital of<br />

the de facto state].”<br />

Two Georgians, Ivane Sekhniashvili and Murazi Javakhishvili,<br />

were out shepherding a herd in late October when armed men seized<br />

The Russians<br />

Are Coming:<br />

Georgia’s Creeping Occupation<br />

by Simon Ostrovsky


them in this area on November 3rd. Nobody has heard from them<br />

since, but everyone assumed they had been taken to jail in the rebel<br />

capital Tskhinvali.<br />

We were being watched. In South Ossetia alone, Russia has built 19<br />

border bases, and one of them is a mere 40 miles from Georgia’s capital,<br />

Tbilisi. Our guide was getting nervous about being interviewed<br />

so close to the territory separation fence and one of the Russian border<br />

bases, so we headed down into the nearby village to meet the detained<br />

shepherd’s family.<br />

“He was on his way to the pasture. He was on our side of the border,<br />

still far from it,” Meri Javakhishvili said (the wife of one of the detained<br />

shepherds). “They took him to the other side and photographed him<br />

there. I don’t know exactly who took him, but there are Russians over<br />

there, and I believe they got him. I don’t know what to do. I can’t<br />

imagine what steps to take, what’s necessary. If you ask around the<br />

village there is no harder working person than my husband,” Meri says<br />

as she wipes the tears from her cheeks. “He didn’t have bad relations<br />

with the Russians when there was peace between us. On the contrary,<br />

they always treated each other with respect.”<br />

These detentions are a huge issue for people living along the new<br />

de facto borderline. According to rebel South Ossetia’s own statistics<br />

more than 320 people have been detained so far for what they call<br />

“In South Ossetia alone, Russia<br />

has built 19 border bases.”<br />

“illegal crossings”. But Russia’s border creation policy is causing other<br />

problems as well.<br />

One of the consequences of the so-called “borderization policy” is<br />

that it doesn’t always follow the boundaries even of villages. This barbed<br />

wire fence was put right in the middle of the village of Khurvaleti, and<br />

it in fact even goes through the yard of a Georgian resident who has<br />

ended up on the other side.<br />

Russian forces on break as they deploy troops<br />

to build the next installment of fencing.


Signs against the newly constructed fence warn<br />

residents and other wanderers to keep clear.<br />

“I’ve lived here for 80 years,” says Dato Vanishvili. “I am 82 years<br />

old. For over 80 years I’ve been a citizen of Georgia. And now they’ve<br />

made me a Russian citizen [with this fence]. What kind of life is this<br />

to live? Why am I being hassled like this? They put this fence up in<br />

one month’s time. Where am I to go? I barely managed to build this<br />

house in my lifetime. If I leave they will take the roof off and destroy<br />

the whole house. If I try to cross the borderline they will arrest me,<br />

take me to Tskhinvali and fine me, and how am I supposed to pay<br />

them? If they don’t fine me they would throw me in jail. Bless the<br />

[Georgian] police officers, they have helped me a lot, otherwise I’d be<br />

dead. The other day they brought me a loaf of bread. They passed it to<br />

“The war really put people in a<br />

difficult situation. It’s not only<br />

this village, all of Georgia is<br />

going backwards.”<br />

me like this [demonstrating reaching through the barbed wire fence].<br />

I don’t know who’s to blame. The Russians say it’s their territory. But<br />

for 80 years it wasn’t theirs, so how can it be theirs now? How am I<br />

to leave my house now? Who would I leave this house to? I finally<br />

finished building it [after all these years]. I will never leave Georgia.<br />

They can kill me, they can hang me if they like.”<br />

“We know that the Russian Federation of South Ossetians erected<br />

the fences; Georgians call it the Creeping Occupation,” says Kestutis<br />

Jankauskas (Ambassador of the European Union Monitoring Mission).<br />

“The other side calls it building the state border infrastructure. These<br />

things impede people’s daily lives. Can’t they visit their graveyards?<br />

They sometimes cannot do that because the graveyard is across [the<br />

border]. Then people cannot have irrigation [for their farms] which<br />

they used to have in previous years. They cannot visit relatives, so it<br />

has a direct impact on their daily lives. In some parts it’s hundreds of<br />

families effected. [With regard to the recent incident of two shepherds<br />

being detained] usually people spend one or two nights in detention<br />

and they pay a fine of about 2,000 rubles and they are released within<br />

about 48 hours; [in about 90% of the cases].”<br />

But by now the shepherds had been missing for three days. We went<br />

to check with the family to see if they had heard any news. “Everybody<br />

is hoping for the best,” said David Javakhishvili (a son of one of the<br />

detained shepherds). “[A fine of 2,000 rubles] may not be much for<br />

some people, but for people who are struggling it’s definitely a lot. The<br />

war really put people in a difficult situation. It’s not only this village,<br />

all of Georgia is going backwards.”<br />

We are now on a patrol with the European Union Monitoring<br />

Mission. They are a delegation from the European Union which goes<br />

around and checks up on all of the activities around the South Ossetian<br />

border, and they are going to show us around today to tell us what’s<br />

been happening recently.<br />

“In front of us you can see the IDP camp, Nadarbazevi,” says Gino<br />

Colazio (an EU Monitor). “And to the left of the Nadarbazevi camp<br />

we have a newly installed green sign. And on the right side of the IDP<br />

camp you can see another new green sign, which is just 500 meters<br />

(1,640 feet) from the [main] highway. We are very close to the Baku-<br />

Supsa pipeline.” This is the southernmost point that the Russians and<br />

24 • versant


Putin’s face was graffitied on the side of dumpsters<br />

throughout Tbilisi after the war in 2008.<br />

South Ossetians have claimed. It’s just a couple hundred yards from<br />

the main highway that goes through Georgia, and it’s also south of<br />

the Baku-Supsa pipeline, which was a major U.S.-backed project.<br />

Back in 1999 when the 560 million dollar Baku-Supsa pipeline was<br />

inaugurated the U.S. hailed it as a major breakthrough for the independence<br />

of Georgia and the oil-producing Azerbaijan. “President<br />

Clinton, on behalf of the entire administration, played an especially<br />

important role so that this large-scale project could develop,” stated<br />

then-President of Georgia, Eduard Shevardnadze.<br />

For now, Russia has simply marked the area as its own, but if it were<br />

to disrupt the pipeline or the main highway it would be a catastrophe<br />

for Georgia. Georgia used to be a staunch U.S. ally. They even named<br />

one of the major streets of the capital after George W. Bush. But after<br />

the war with Russia in 2008 it seems like their pro-western resolve<br />

may be wavering. [The Georgian government] still goes through the<br />

motions of being in the western camp, placing EU flags on everything,<br />

sending Georgian troops out on NATO missions around the<br />

world, but their response to Russia’s expanding territorial claims inside<br />

Georgia have been so weak that some people think Georgia’s current<br />

leadership may have actually sold out to Russia.<br />

Speaking of NATO, the alliance was about to open a facility in<br />

Georgia, so we went there to meet top officials and ask them what<br />

they were going to do about Russia’s expanding border along Georgia’s<br />

South Ossetian state. All of the country’s top political leadership<br />

including the Prime Minister, the President, as well as the Defense<br />

Minister are here, and they have invited NATO’s top commander, the<br />

Secretary General, to attend as well. So with this gathering NATO is<br />

trying to show that it is still committed to a relationship with Georgia<br />

even though the Russian troops are just about 100 kilometers away<br />

from here installing more fencing.<br />

With Russian troops so close Georgia’s leader felt that it was important<br />

to say the training center wasn’t a threat to them. “I would like to<br />

point out that the activities of the training center are not in any way<br />

directed against any of the neighboring countries,” states Georgia’s<br />

Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili. “Moreover, it will serve for regional<br />

security, stability and peace-building.”<br />

“This [new NATO facility] is something that was planned and decided<br />

upon well before the events [of new borderlines being drawn along<br />

South Ossetia by Russian troops],” stated Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary<br />

“Some people think Georgia’s<br />

current leadership may have<br />

actually sold out to Russia.”<br />

General of NATO. “This is part of what we call the Comprehensive<br />

Package, the increased cooperation between NATO and Georgia.”<br />

Even NATO’s leader doesn’t want to anger Russia.<br />

Our correspondent asked Tinatin Khidasheli, the Defense Minister<br />

of Georgia, why Georgian forces have taken no action against the<br />

recent territorial claims that the Russian and South Ossetian forces<br />

have been making near major Georgian infrastructure. “Georgia is<br />

taking every responsible action for the security of its country, and<br />

responsible for not allowing war on its own territory. These are diplomatic<br />

actions that we are taking and it is the actuation of the world<br />

versant.com • 25


Politics<br />

community for the Georgian cause, and we are not going to allow<br />

Russia to provoke us into another war.” Upon being pressed to respond<br />

to critics who claim she (and others in the administration) have a pro-<br />

Russian policy, Khidasheli countered by saying “I’m not responsible for<br />

every craziness that I hear. There is no human being in this country<br />

you will find (and you can go out in the street and ask my name) who<br />

will say [that our policy is pro-Russian].”<br />

All of the Georgian officials that we spoke to seemed to be pushing<br />

the line that it was dangerous to provoke Russia by reacting to its latest<br />

moves, but not everybody in Georgia sees things that way. We’ve<br />

come to the National Movement headquarters. They are the avowedly<br />

anti-Russian party, which is now in opposition. “The Georgian Defense<br />

Minister represents the fraction of their coalition who is rhetorically<br />

the most pro-western, so they play a fig leaf role in that,” says Giga<br />

Bokeria, Foreign Secretary of the United National Movement. “We<br />

welcome the NATO training facility. After the Russian invasion in<br />

Ukraine and after there is [now] finally an awakening to Putin’s challenge<br />

there were certain steps made by the European Alliance and<br />

generally the west, and one of its steps with respect to Georgia was<br />

this [NATO] center, which is good but not sufficient. But you cannot<br />

have a concept in which your goal is to say “we are just doing nothing<br />

and we are good guys, and our western friends will tell us ‘well<br />

good, you are not creating another headache for us’”. Repeating every<br />

day, day in and day out “Russia will crush you, Russia will crush you”<br />

makes no point, we all know that this is a danger and that Georgia will<br />

Khurvaleti IDP camp, stuck between Russian-occupied Ossetia<br />

and Georgia’s main highway. Above: two of the camp’s residents.


“Repeating every day, day in and day out “Russia will crush you, Russia<br />

will crush you” makes no point, we all know that this is a danger and<br />

that Georgia will never be able on its own to win a war against Russia.”<br />

never be able on its own to win a war against Russia. We don’t want<br />

the war. What we should do is [put] this issue high on the international<br />

agenda, and this is completely not right now. Secondly, on the<br />

ground there should be much more reserved but resistance by law<br />

enforcement towards kidnappings, towards movement of the occupation<br />

[border] line.”<br />

So what has Georgia’s ‘go softly’ approach towards Russia actually<br />

achieved? I invited the Minister of Reconciliation, Paata Zakareishvili,<br />

to the borderlands to ask him. His job is to make the ethnic minorities<br />

living under Russian control want to return to Georgia. “The Russian<br />

occupation forces behave, from time to time, in a provocative way in<br />

order to increase tensions in Georgian society and to direct the world’s<br />

attention to the idea that there are a lot of problems in Georgia. Thank<br />

God, we have been able to refrain from reacting to these provocations.<br />

We’ve been in power for three years now. During this time, Russia has<br />

not been able to draw us into a situation that would lead to escalation.”<br />

Recently Zakareishvili said that Vladimir Putin, the Commanderin-Chief<br />

of the Russian forces, is not an enemy of Georgia. When<br />

questioned about this considering that Russia currently occupies about<br />

a quarter of Georgian territory he stated, “I said that a man cannot<br />

be the enemy of a state. That’s totally different. A man cannot be the<br />

enemy of a state. Only a state can be the enemy of a state.” In response<br />

to questions of Georgian civilians having their land divided by a border<br />

fence Zakareishvili said, “What you saw is more of a positive than a<br />

negative. Under [the last president of Georgia], Saakashvili, that person<br />

might not be living there. He might not even be alive.”<br />

Finally we got some good news. The rebels were releasing the<br />

Georgian shepherds to the Georgian authorities. They were brought to<br />

A solitary refugee’s grave sits in an abandoned<br />

farm near the border fence Russia has installed.<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash


Dato Vanishvili, a Georgian citizen whose land<br />

is now divided between the two governments.<br />

“So the question is, did Russia build the new fences to keep Georgians<br />

out or Russians and their ethnic Ossetian allies in?”<br />

a police station to give a statement about their four-day ordeal. “Their<br />

border was over on that side. I was close to their side,” says Murazi<br />

Javakhishvili. “[The soldiers] came and told us, ‘Come quickly, come<br />

with us!’ ‘What did we do?’ I asked. We hadn’t done anything. We<br />

weren’t on their territory. We were right next to it. And they came<br />

with dogs and automatic guns. Not follow them? Of course we had<br />

to follow them. On that road they drove like they were hauling sand<br />

instead of people. I told them to go slowly. ‘Don’t throw me out,’ I<br />

said. What can we do? It was what it was. We suffered. In old age<br />

they put me through this. I have a good grandchild. He gives me<br />

hope and inspires me to keep living. We were close, we had to follow<br />

the herd when they suddenly swarmed us like bandits. And they<br />

told us, ‘Come quickly, come quickly!’ How could I not have gone?<br />

What could I do?”<br />

Hundreds of people like Murazi Javakhishvili are rounded up by<br />

Russian border guards every year. But according to separatist South<br />

Ossetia’s own KGB most of these arrests are of South Ossetians and<br />

Russians picked up by the Russian border guards for trying to come<br />

into Georgia. So the question is, did Russia build the new fences to<br />

keep Georgians out or Russians and their ethnic Ossetian allies in?


Photo © Corinne Thrash


Ghost<br />

of the<br />

Vine<br />

In Georgia, science probes the<br />

roots of winemaking<br />

by Paul Salopek<br />

Meet Maka Kozhara: a wine expert. Young, intelligent, friendly.<br />

Kozhara sits in an immense cellar in a muddy green valley in the<br />

Republic of Georgia. The cellar lies beneath an imitation French<br />

château. The vineyards outside, planted in gnarled rows, stretch away for<br />

miles. Once, in the late 19th century, the château’s owner, a Francophile,<br />

a vintner and eccentric Georgian aristocrat, pumped barrels of homebrewed<br />

champagne through a large outdoor fountain: a golden spray<br />

of drinkable bubbles shot into the air.<br />

“It was for a party,” Kozhara says. “He loved wine.”


Culture<br />

Traditional winemaking vessels are still in use<br />

at Pheasant’s Tears Winery in Sighnaghi.<br />

Kozhara twirls a glass of wine in her hand. She holds the glass up<br />

to the ceiling light. She is interrogating a local red — observing what<br />

physicists call the Gibbs-Maranoni Effect: How the surface tension of<br />

a liquid varies depending on its chemical make-up. It is a diagnostic<br />

tool. If small droplets of wine cling to the inside of a glass: the wine<br />

is dry, a high-alcohol vintage. If the wine drips sluggishly down the<br />

glass surface: a sweeter, less alcoholic nectar. Such faint dribbles are<br />

described, among connoisseurs, as the “legs” of a wine. But here in<br />

Georgia wines also possess legs of a different kind. Legs that travel.<br />

That conquer. That walk out of the Caucasus in the Bronze Age.<br />

The taproots of Georgia’s wine are muscular and very old. They<br />

drill down to the bedrock of time, into the deepest vaults of human<br />

memory. The earliest settled societies in the world — the empires of<br />

the Fertile Crescent, of Mesopotamia, of Egypt, and later of Greece<br />

and Rome — probably imported the secrets of viticulture from these<br />

remote valleys, these fields, these misty crags of Eurasia. Ancient<br />

Georgians famously brewed their wines in clay vats called kvevri.<br />

Today, these bulbous amphoras are still manufactured. Vintners still<br />

fill them with wine. The pots dot Georgia like gigantic dinosaur eggs.<br />

They are under farmers’ homes, in restaurants, in parks, in museums,<br />

outside gas stations. Kvevri are a symbol of Georgia: a source of pride,<br />

unity, strength. They deserve to appear on the national flag. It has<br />

been said that one reason why Georgians never converted en masse to<br />

Islam (Arabs invaded the region in the seventh century) was because<br />

of their attachment to wine. Georgians refused to give up drinking.<br />

Kozhara pours me a glass. It is her winery’s finest vintage, ink-dark,<br />

dense. The liquid shines in my hand. It exhales an aroma of earthy<br />

tannins. It is a scent that is deeply familiar, as old as civilization, that<br />

goes immediately to the head.<br />

“Wine” — Kozhara declares flatly — “is our religion.”<br />

To which the only possible response is: Amen.<br />

“We aren’t interested in proving that winemaking was born in<br />

Georgia,” insists David Lordkipanidze, the director of the Georgia<br />

National Museum, in Tbilisi. “That isn’t our goal. There are much<br />

better questions to ask. Why did it start? How did it spread across<br />

the ancient world? How do you connect today’s grape varieties to the<br />

wild grape? These are the important questions.”<br />

Lordkipanidze oversees a sprawling, multinational, scientific effort<br />

to unearth the origins of wine. The Americans have NASA. Iceland has<br />

BjÖrk. But Georgia has the “Research and Popularization of Georgian<br />

Grape and Wine Culture” project. Archaeologists and botanists from<br />

Georgia, geneticists from Denmark, Carbon-14 dating experts from<br />

Israel, and other specialists from the United States, Italy, France and<br />

Photographs © Corinne Thrash


A family’s home in western Georgia is decorated<br />

with generations of wine making tools.<br />

Canada have been collaborating since early 2014 to explore the primordial<br />

human entanglements with the grapevine.<br />

Patrick McGovern, a molecular archaeologist from the University<br />

of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and a member of this intellectual<br />

posse, calls wine perhaps the most “consequential beverage” in the<br />

story of our species.<br />

“Imagine groups of hunter-gatherers meeting for the first time,”<br />

McGovern says. “Wine helps to bring people together. It’s social lubrication.<br />

Alcohol does this.”<br />

Human beings have been consuming alcohol for so long that 10<br />

percent of the enzymes in our livers have evolved to metabolize it into<br />

energy: a sure sign of tippling’s antiquity. The oldest hard evidence of<br />

intentional fermentation comes from northern China, where chemical<br />

residues in pottery suggest that 9,000 years ago our ancestors quaffed<br />

a dawn cocktail of rice, honey and wild fruit.<br />

Grape wines came a bit later. McGovern surmises that their innovation<br />

was accidental: wild grapes crushed at the bottom of a container,<br />

their juices gone bad, partly digested by airborne yeasts. For thousands<br />

of years, the fermentation process remained a mystery. This gave<br />

wine its otherworldly power. “You have a mind-altering substance that<br />

comes out of nowhere,” McGovern says, “and so this drink starts to<br />

feature at the center of our religions. It became embedded in life, in<br />

family, in faith. Even the dead started to be buried with their wine.”<br />

From the beginning, wine was more than a mere intoxicant. It was<br />

an elixir. Its alcohol content and tree resins, added in ancient times as<br />

wine preservatives, had anti-bacterial qualities. In ages when sanitation<br />

was abysmal, drinking wine — or mixing it with water — reduced<br />

disease. Wine saved lives.<br />

“Cultures that made the first wines were productive, rich,” says<br />

Mindia Jalabadze, a Georgian archaeologist. “They were growing<br />

wheat and barley. They had sheep, pigs, and cattle — they bred them.<br />

Life was good. They also hunted and fished.”<br />

Jalabadze is talking about a Neolithic culture called Shulaveri-<br />

Shomu whose mound sites in Georgia arose during a wet cycle in the<br />

southern Caucasus and date back to first inklings of agriculture, before<br />

the time of metal. The villagers used stone tools, tools of bone. They<br />

crafted gigantic pots the size of refrigerators. Such vessels — precursors<br />

to the fabled kvevri — held grains and honey, but also wine. How<br />

can we know? One such pot is decorated with bunches of grapes.<br />

Biochemical analyses of the pottery, carried out by McGovern, shows<br />

evidence of tartaric acid, a telltale clue of grape brewing. These artifacts<br />

are 8,000 years old. Georgia’s winemaking heritage predates<br />

other ancient wine-related finds in Armenia and Iran by centuries.


Photo © Corinne Thrash


This year, researchers are combing the sites of Shulaveri-Shomu for<br />

prehistoric grape pips.<br />

One day, I visit the remains of a 2,200-year-old Roman town in<br />

central Georgia: Dzalisa. The beautiful mosaic floors of a palace are<br />

holed, bizarrely pocked, by clay cavities large enough to hold a man.<br />

They are kvevri. Medieval Georgians used the archaeological ruins<br />

to brew wine. South of Tbilisi, on a rocky mesa above a deep river<br />

gorge, lies the oldest hominid find outside Africa: a 1.8-million-yearold<br />

repository of hyena dens that contain the skulls of Homo erectus.<br />

In the ninth or tenth centuries, workers dug a gigantic kvevri into the<br />

site, destroying priceless pre-human bones.<br />

Georgia’s past is punctured by wine. It marinates in tannins.<br />

For more than two years, I have trekked north out of Africa. More<br />

than 5,000 years ago, wine marched in the opposite direction, south<br />

and west, out of its Caucasus cradle.<br />

“Typical human migrations involved mass slaughter,” says Stephen<br />

Batiuk, an archaeologist at the University of Toronto. “You know,<br />

migration by the sword. Population replacement. But not the people<br />

“Wine” — Kozhara declares flatly — “is our religion.”<br />

Kvevri buried beneath the bricks are filled with<br />

grape juice and ferment for months to years.


Giorgi checks the modernized kvevri system<br />

he and his partner designed for preparing wine.<br />

who brought wine culture with them. They spread out and then lived<br />

side-by-side with host cultures. They established symbiotic relationships.”<br />

Batiuk is talking about an iconic diaspora of the classical world: the<br />

expansion of Early Trans-Caucasian Culture (ETC), which radiated<br />

from the Caucasus into eastern Turkey, Iran, Syria, and the rest of the<br />

Levantine world in the third millennium B.C.<br />

Batiuk was struck by a pattern: Distinctive ETC pottery pops up<br />

wherever grape cultivation occurs.<br />

“These migrants seemed to be using wine technology as their contribution<br />

to society,” he says. “They weren’t ‘taking my job.’ They were<br />

showing up with seeds or grape cuttings and bringing a new job—viticulture,<br />

or at least refinements to viticulture. They were an additive<br />

element. They sort of democratized wine. Wherever they go, you see<br />

an explosion of wine goblets.”<br />

ETC pottery endured as a distinctive archaeological signature for<br />

700 to 1,000 years after leaving the Caucasus. This boggles experts<br />

such as Batiuk. Most immigrant cultures become integrated, absorbed,<br />

and vanish after just three generations. But there is no mystery here.<br />

On a pine-stubbled mountain above Tbilisi, a man named Beka<br />

Gotsadze home-brews wine in a shed outside his house.<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash


“ It became embedded<br />

in life, in family, in faith.<br />

Even the dead started<br />

to be buried with wine.”<br />

Gotsadze: big, affable, red-faced. His is one of tens of thousands of<br />

ordinary Georgian families who still squeeze magic from Vitis vinifera<br />

for their own enjoyment. He uses clay kvevri buried in the earth;<br />

the hill under his house is his incubator. He pipes coils of household<br />

tap water around the jars to control the fermentation. He employs<br />

no chemicals, no additives. His wines steep in the darkness the way<br />

Georgian wine always has: the grapes mashed together with their<br />

skins, their stems.<br />

Gotsadze says, “You put it in the ground and ask God: ‘Will this<br />

batch be good?’” He says: “Every wine producer is giving you his heart.<br />

My kids help me. They are giving you their hearts. The bacteria that<br />

ferment? They came on the wind! The clouds? They are in there. The<br />

sun is in there. The wine holds everything!”<br />

Gotsadze took his family’s wines to a competition in Italy once, to<br />

be judged. “The judge was amazed. He said, ‘Where have you been<br />

hiding all this time?’ I said, ‘Sorry, you know, but we’ve been a little<br />

busy over here, fighting the Russians!’”<br />

And at his raucous dinner table, a forest of stemmed glasses holds<br />

the dregs of tavkveri rosé, chinuri whites, saperavi reds. The eternal ETC<br />

thumbprint is there.


Photo © Corinne Thrash


Medieval<br />

Mountain<br />

Hideaway<br />

In the Svaneti region of Georgia’s Caucasus<br />

Mountains, the ways of the Middle Ages live on.<br />

By Brook Larmer


Roads wind by sharp cliffs to Mestia in Upper<br />

Svaneti. Previous page: the village of Cholashi.<br />

The men gather at dawn near the stone tower, cradling knives in callused hands. After<br />

a night of snowfall — the first of the season in Svaneti, a region high in Georgia’s<br />

Caucasus Mountains — the day has broken with icy clarity. Suddenly visible above<br />

the village of Cholashi, beyond the 70-foot-high towers that form its ancient skyline,<br />

is the ring of 15,000-foot peaks that for centuries has kept one of the last living<br />

medieval cultures barricaded from the outside world.<br />

Silence falls as Zviad Jachvliani, a burly former boxer with a salt-and-pepper beard,<br />

leads the men — and one recalcitrant bull — into a yard overlooking the snowdusted<br />

valley. No words are needed. Today is a Svan feast day, ormotsi, marking the<br />

40th day after the death of a loved one, in this case Jachvliani’s grandmother. The<br />

men know what to do, for Svan traditions — animal sacrifices, ritual beard cutting,<br />

blood feuds — have been carried out in this wild corner of Georgia for more than a<br />

thousand years. “Things are changing in Svaneti,” Jachvliani, a 31-year-old father of<br />

three, says. “But our traditions will continue. They’re part of our DNA.”<br />

In the yard he maneuvers the bull to face east, where the sun has crept above the<br />

jagged crown of Mount Tetnuldi, near the Russian border. Long before the arrival of<br />

The men gather at dawn near the stone tower, cradling knives in callused hands. After<br />

a night of snowfall — the first of the season in Svaneti, a region high in Georgia’s<br />

“Things are changing in<br />

Svaneti,” Jachvliani says. “But<br />

our traditions will continue.<br />

They’re part of our DNA.”<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

Caucasus Mountains — the day has broken with icy clarity. Suddenly visible above<br />

the village of Cholashi, beyond the 70-foot-high towers that form its ancient skyline,<br />

is the ring of 15,000-foot peaks that for centuries has kept one of the last living<br />

medieval cultures barricaded from the outside world.<br />

Silence falls as Zviad Jachvliani, a burly former boxer with a salt-and-pepper beard,<br />

leads the men — and one recalcitrant bull — into a yard overlooking the snow-dusted<br />

valley. No words are needed. Today is a Svan feast day, ormotsi, marking the 40th<br />

day after the death of a loved one, in this case Jachvliani’s grandmother. The men<br />

know what to do, for Svan traditions — animal sacrifices, ritual beard cutting, blood<br />

feuds — have been carried out in this wild corner of Georgia for more than a thousand<br />

years. “Things are changing in Svaneti,” Jachvliani, a 31-year-old father of three, says.<br />

“But our traditions will continue. They’re part of our DNA.”<br />

In the yard he maneuvers the bull to face east, where the sun has crept above the<br />

jagged crown of Mount Tetnuldi, near the Russian border. Long before the arrival<br />

of Christianity in the first millennium, Svans worshipped the sun, and this spiritual<br />

force — along with its derivative, fire — still figures in local rituals. As the men with<br />

knives gather in front of him, Jachvliani pours a shot of moonshine on the ground, an<br />

offering to his grandmother. His elderly uncle chants a blessing. And then his cousin,<br />

cupping a candle against the wind, lights the hair on the bull’s forehead, lower back,<br />

and shoulders. It is the sign of the cross, rendered in fire.<br />

versant.com • 41


History<br />

After the blessing, the men lasso one of the bull’s legs with a rope and, heaving in<br />

unison, truss the bellowing beast over the branch of an apple tree. Jachvliani grabs<br />

its horns, while another villager, unsheathing a sharpened dagger, kneels down next<br />

to the bull and, almost tenderly, feels for the artery in its neck.<br />

Over the course of history many powerful empires — Arab, Mongol, Persian,<br />

Ottoman — sent armies rampaging through Georgia, the frontier between Europe<br />

and Asia. But the home of the Svans, a sliver of land hidden among the gorges of<br />

the Caucasus, remained unconquered until the Russians exerted control in the mid-<br />

19th century. Svaneti’s isolation has shaped its identity — and its historical value.<br />

In times of danger, lowland Georgians sent icons, jewels, and manuscripts to the<br />

mountain churches and towers for safekeeping, turning Svaneti into a repository of<br />

early Georgian culture. The Svans took their protective role seriously; an icon thief<br />

could be banished from a village or, worse, cursed by a deity.<br />

In their mountain fastness the people of Svaneti have managed to preserve an even<br />

older culture: their own. By the first century B.C. the Svans, thought by some to be<br />

descendants of Sumerian slaves, had a reputation as fierce warriors, documented in<br />

the writings of the Greek geographer Strabo. (Noting that the Svans used sheepskins<br />

to sift for gold in the rivers, Strabo also fueled speculation that Svaneti might have<br />

“Nowhere else can you find<br />

a place that carries on the<br />

customs and rituals of the<br />

European Middle Ages.”<br />

been the source of the golden fleece sought by Jason and the Argonauts.) By the time<br />

Christianity arrived, around the sixth century, Svan culture ran deep — with its own<br />

language, its own densely textured music, and complex codes of chivalry, revenge,<br />

and communal justice.<br />

If the only remnants of this ancient society were the couple of hundred stone towers<br />

that rise over Svan villages, that would be impressive enough. But these fortresses,<br />

built mostly from the 9th century into the 13th, are not emblems of a lost civilization;<br />

they’re the most visible signs of a culture that has endured almost miraculously<br />

through the ages. The Svans who still live in Upper Svaneti — home to some of the<br />

highest and most isolated villages in the Caucasus — hold fast to their traditions of<br />

singing, mourning, celebrating, and fiercely defending family honor. “Svaneti is a<br />

living ethnographic museum,” says Richard Bærug, a Norwegian academic and lodge<br />

owner who’s trying to help save Svan, a largely unwritten language many scholars<br />

believe predates Georgian, its more widely spoken cousin. “Nowhere else can you<br />

find a place that carries on the customs and rituals of the European Middle Ages.”<br />

What happens, though, when the Middle Ages meet the modern world? Since<br />

the last years of Soviet rule a quarter century ago, thousands of Svans have migrated<br />

to lowland Georgia, fleeing poverty, conflict, natural disasters — and criminal<br />

gangs. In 1996, when UNESCO bestowed World Heritage status on the highest<br />

cluster of Svan villages, Ushguli, the lone road that snakes into Svaneti was so terrorized<br />

by bandits that few dared to visit. Security forces busted the gangs in 2004.<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

42 • versant


Photo © Corinne Thrash


And now the government is implementing a plan to turn this medieval mountain<br />

zone into a tourist magnet.<br />

Svaneti arguably has seen more change in the past few years than in the past<br />

thousand. It’s not just the vans full of foreign backpackers discovering the region’s<br />

pristine trekking routes. In 2012 the government installed power lines to light up even<br />

the remotest villages. The road that links most villages of Upper Svaneti will soon<br />

be paved all the way to Ushguli. Frenzied construction has transformed the sleepy<br />

regional hub of Mestia into a faux Swiss resort town lined with clapboard chalets<br />

and bookended by hyper modern government buildings and an airport terminal<br />

out of The Jetsons. Meanwhile on the flanks of Mount Tetnuldi, directly across<br />

the river from Jachvliani’s home in Cholashi, one of Georgia’s largest ski resorts is<br />

beginning to take shape.<br />

Perhaps it makes some kind of karmic sense that the mountains and stone towers<br />

that kept outsiders at bay for all these centuries should now be enlisted to lure them<br />

in. But will all this change save the isolated region — or doom it?<br />

Bavchi Kaldani, the old family patriarch in Adishi, speaks in a hoarse whisper,<br />

but his words — in the abrupt cadences of Svan — land with force: “If I stop, I’ll die.”<br />

Even at age 86, with gnarled hands and a stooped back, Kaldani insists on carrying<br />

on the hard labor of Svan village life: chopping wood with a heavy ax, scything grass<br />

for his animals’ winter rations, and repairing his family’s stone tower.<br />

“My family has lived here for<br />

more than 1,200 years,” he<br />

says. “How could I let my<br />

village disappear?”<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

It’s a measure of the precariousness of mountain life that Kaldani too was once<br />

tempted to leave Svaneti. Raised in a machubi — a traditional stone dwelling for<br />

extended families, livestock included — he remembers when Adishi bustled with 60<br />

families, seven churches, and dozens of sacred artifacts. Clan leaders from across<br />

Svaneti rode days on horseback to pray before the village’s leather bound Adishi<br />

Gospels, dating from 897. Disaster always loomed, however, and Kaldani struggled to<br />

stockpile enough for the bitter winters, which even today cut off Adishi from the rest<br />

of Svaneti. Yet nothing prepared him for the deadly avalanches of 1987. He kept his<br />

family safe in the base of their stone tower, but dozens of others died across Svaneti<br />

that winter — and the exodus began.<br />

As more Svan families emigrated to lowland Georgia, Adishi became a ghost town.<br />

At one point only four families remained — Kaldani and his wife, the village librarian,<br />

among them. Kaldani’s sons, who had also abandoned Adishi, persuaded their<br />

parents to join them one winter on the arid plains. They lasted four months before<br />

rushing back to Adishi. “My family has lived here for more than 1,200 years,” he says.<br />

“How could I let my village disappear?”<br />

Going about his chores in his traditional woolen cap, Kaldani embodies the<br />

persistence of Svan culture — and the peril it faces. He is one of the few remaining<br />

fully fluent speakers of Svan. He is also one of the last village mediators, who have<br />

versant.com • 47


Photo © Corinne Thrash


History<br />

long been called upon to adjudicate disputes ranging from petty theft to long-running<br />

blood feuds. The obligation to defend family honor, though slightly tempered<br />

today, led to so many vendettas in early Svan society that scholars believe the stone<br />

towers were built to protect families not just from invaders and avalanches but<br />

also from one another.<br />

In the chaos after the fall of the Soviet Union, blood feuds returned with a vengeance.<br />

“I never rested,” Kaldani says. In some cases, after negotiating a blood price<br />

(usually 20 cows for a murder), he brought feuding families to a church and made<br />

them swear oaths on icons and baptize one another. The ritual, he says, ensures that<br />

the families “will not feud for 12 generations.”<br />

Blood feuds have virtually disappeared in Svaneti over the past decade, but the<br />

ancient justice codes, carried out by mediators like Kaldani, persist. Other village<br />

traditions endure too. Every August one local family hosts Adishi’s annual feast day,<br />

Lichaanishoba, drawing former villagers from the lowlands and couples praying for<br />

a son or giving thanks for the birth of one. Each couple brings a sheep as an offering,<br />

along with a jug of home-brewed spirits. In the summer of 2013, 500 people<br />

showed up. On a knoll next to the tiny 12th-century Church of St. George, 32 sheep<br />

were blessed and sacrificed.<br />

Blood feuds have virtually<br />

disappeared in Svaneti over the<br />

past decade, but the ancient<br />

justice codes persist.<br />

From atop the Kaldanis’ 50-foot stone tower, Adishi looks beautiful and forsaken.<br />

Rusted shutters swing in the breeze. Pine trees sprout from half-collapsed towers.<br />

The river below has washed out the dirt road leading to the village, making it accessible<br />

only on foot or horseback. Yet Adishi is coming back to life, thanks to Kaldani’s<br />

stubbornness and to the village’s location along a popular trekking route. In the past<br />

two years seven families have moved back to rebuild their homes and open small<br />

guesthouses, bringing the full-time population up to nearly 30. As two of Kaldani’s<br />

neighbors sharpen their scythes for the final days of grass cutting before winter,<br />

Adishi no longer feels abandoned. It feels reborn.<br />

The song of love and vengeance begins softly, with a lone voice tracing the line of<br />

an ancient melody. Other voices in the unheated room off Mestia’s main square soon<br />

join in, building a dense progression of harmonies and countermelodies that grows<br />

in urgency until it resolves in a single note of resounding clarity.<br />

This is some of the world’s oldest polyphonic music, a complex form that features<br />

two or more simultaneous lines of melody. It predates the arrival of Christianity in<br />

Svaneti by centuries. Yet none of the musicians in the room this autumn afternoon is<br />

over 25. When the session ends, the young men and women spill out into the square,<br />

chatting and laughing and air kissing — and thumbing their mobile phones. “We’re<br />

all on Facebook,” says Mariam Arghvliani, a 14-year-old girl who plays three ancient<br />

stringed instruments (including an L-shaped Svan wooden harp) for her youth folk<br />

ensemble, Lagusheda. “But that doesn’t mean we forget our heritage.”<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

50 • versant


It’s one of Svaneti’s bittersweet ironies that even as its language dies out, its traditional<br />

music is experiencing a revival. The resurgence is driven not by elders in the villages, the<br />

longtime keepers of Svan culture, but by young people in Mestia, a town whose modern<br />

aspirations are reflected in the undulating, futuristic police station that faces the stone<br />

towers on the slopes above.<br />

Like most in her generation, Arghvliani speaks only a smattering of Svan — “mostly just<br />

the lyrics to our songs,” she says. But her musical immersion began almost from birth; by age<br />

four she was singing in her aunt’s choir. Still, her talent might have withered, along with Svan<br />

musical tradition, were it not for a youth program launched 13 years ago by Svaneti’s charismatic<br />

cultural crusader, Father Giorgi Chartolani.<br />

Sitting in his church’s graveyard, Chartolani recalls the post-Soviet tumult that endangered<br />

a culture already weakened by nearly seven decades of Communist suppression. “Life was<br />

brutal then,” he says, stroking his long beard. The priest nods at the tombstones, some etched<br />

with the images of young men killed in feuds. “Villages were emptying out, our culture was<br />

disappearing,” he says, noting that 80 out of 120 known Svan songs have disappeared in the<br />

past two generations. “Something had to be done.” His program, which has taught traditional<br />

music and dance to hundreds of students like Arghvliani, was, he says, “a light in the darkness.”<br />

Now it illuminates an alternative future. That evening the young musicians return to Mestia’s<br />

square in full festival regalia: boys in burgundy cassocks, silver daggers hanging from their<br />

She sees her culture moving in two<br />

directions: “The Svan language will<br />

disappear with my generation,” she<br />

says. “But the music will live on.”<br />

Photo © Corinne Thrash<br />

belts; girls in long black peasant dresses. Their audience consists of 50 foreign tourists in colorful<br />

parkas, paying six dollars each for the show. The revival of Svan music was under way before<br />

tourists began arriving in Svaneti, but it wasn’t until 2012 that the all-male ensemble, Kviria,<br />

first performed for visitors. The outside world’s growing interest in the intricate musical form<br />

has had a rebound effect: More Svan children are flocking to Chartolani’s classes.<br />

Arghvliani doesn’t know yet if she’ll pursue a career in traditional music — she loves Beyoncé<br />

and dubstep too — or even if she’ll stay in Svaneti. She sees her culture moving in two directions:<br />

“The Svan language will disappear with my generation,” she says. “But the music will live on.”<br />

In Svaneti even old feuds can have lasting repercussions. A century ago in Cholashi, Jachvliani’s<br />

great-grandfather killed a neighbor to avenge the slaughtering of his prize bull. The feud ended<br />

when the Jachvlianis paid the neighbors two and a half acres of farmland and 20 head of cattle,<br />

a blood price whose effects can still be felt.<br />

The family now has just one bull. The severed head of the other, sacrificed in honor of<br />

Jachvliani’s dead grandmother, sits on a wooden table, eyes still open, thick gray tongue lolling<br />

sideways. Under the beast’s implacable gaze, Jachvliani and the other men of Cholashi devour<br />

the ormotsi’s ceremonial first dish: a spicy heart-and-liver stew. Later in the day, before the<br />

raucous evening feast, Jachvliani and several men who haven’t shaved in the 40 days since his<br />

grandmother’s death gather outside her room. A prayer, a toast. Then snippets of their scraggly<br />

beards are clipped off and placed on an offering table next to her wooden cane.<br />

versant.com • 53


The dead, like history itself, are kept close in Svaneti. Every month for a year the Jachvlianis<br />

will hold smaller feasts in the grandmother’s honor. Then, 70 days before Easter, the family<br />

will gather for Lamproba, a ceremony for “mentioning souls” that mixes pre-Christian<br />

and Christian elements. Jachvliani and his male relatives will carry flaming birch branches<br />

through the snow and lay them next to her grave. Toasts and prayers will be shared until<br />

the torches burn out.<br />

How long will the embers of tradition keep smoldering in Svaneti? On the morning after<br />

the ormotsi, a clean-shaven Jachvliani heads across the valley to his new job — on a construction<br />

crew paving the dirt road to the top of the pass. The road will eventually go all the way<br />

to Ushguli, but work on this section is enabling heavy machinery to access the emerging ski<br />

resort on Mount Tetnuldi. Next to the river below Cholashi, a chain-link fence encircles evidence<br />

of what’s to come: row after row of chairlifts and gondolas.<br />

The looming changes in this valley, along with a proposed hydroelectric dam farther south,<br />

unsettle many Svans. What will happen to their villages, their land, their traditions? Jachvliani<br />

tries to be optimistic. The ski resort, he says, could inject badly needed resources into their<br />

isolated region — and bring back some of the 20 families that left the village. “We need more<br />

jobs, more opportunities,” he says.<br />

Sitting with his widowed mother near the kitchen hearth, Jachvliani peers out at the mountains<br />

silhouetted against the sky. He stayed in Svaneti when his sisters left for lowland Georgia<br />

because he was the only son, the last man in the family. Now, at 31, he can’t imagine leaving.<br />

“Come back in ten years,” he says, laughing as his two young daughters climb on his back, “and<br />

see if our village has survived.” His confidence comes from Svaneti’s long history of survival,<br />

yes, but also from the simple fact that he is now one of the keepers of the flame.<br />

Photographs © Corinne Thrash<br />

54 • versant


Make<br />

Salt of the Earth<br />

In the mountains of Svaneti you will come across entirely different<br />

worlds of cuisine. The village of Soli is one such place. Tucked<br />

away amid the ancient Svan towers of centuries-old family lineage<br />

one can experience both the hospitality and deep traditions that the<br />

Khaptani family offers to visitors. From the detached kitchen hut to<br />

the nearby chicken coop you feel like you’ve entered another world<br />

from long ago.<br />

The food in turn also tastes otherworldly; herbs picked from heirloom<br />

gardens that have been used by their extended family for more<br />

generations than most any westerner can begin to imagine. It is here<br />

that we came to experience a truly incredible mix of spices ground<br />

together with garlic to make “Svan Salt”, known locally as ‘grandmother’s<br />

salt’. Traditionally used to compliment their boiled meat<br />

dumplings and oven baked cheese bread (pictured below), this spiced<br />

salt mix will be an incredible compliment to many western dishes.<br />

Try this salt on a simple salad of fresh sliced cucumber, tomatoes,<br />

and thinly sliced onions. Delicious as well on fried potatoes, broths<br />

and soups, breakfast omelets or fried eggs, or barbecued meat. The<br />

spiced salt is best kept tightly sealed to retain its full bodied flavor.<br />

Photographs © Corinne Thrash<br />

56 • versant


SVAN SALT<br />

200 – 300 grams garlic (peeled and rinsed)<br />

1 kilo salt<br />

2 cups ground fenugreek (approximately)<br />

1 cup ground coriander (approximately)<br />

1 tablespoon ground medium chili pepper<br />

1 tablespoon ground dill<br />

1 tablespoon ground marigold<br />

Begin by combining the salt with all spices in a large bowl. Using a<br />

hand grinder, electric meat grinder, or Cuisinart start to grind the<br />

garlic cloves in batches while adding the spice mix in equal amounts.<br />

Once all ingredients have been ground together repeat the process<br />

until your salt has an even consistency, rubbing between your hands<br />

every couple minutes to help in the process.<br />

The resulting svan salt will be almost wet to the touch when well<br />

combined. Add chili pepper to taste. Store in a mason jar or similarly<br />

well sealed container. Avoid storing in an unsealed container as this<br />

spiced salt is strong in scent. Finished svan salt can preserve for many<br />

years if well covered.<br />

versant.com • 57


From the Road<br />

Jack and Bebu<br />

By Stosh Mintek<br />

Jack was bleeding out of his ass. There was a lot of blood on the concrete step just<br />

outside the house, spattered in fat droplets in the mud of the front yard. No one was<br />

sure how long he’d been bleeding. Maybe a week, Dali thought. It was also hard to<br />

say what was causing it, whether it was issuing from an external wound on his hindquarters<br />

or genitals, or whether he was suffering some kind of internal complication,<br />

a digestive ailment of some advanced nature. Dali said it was from a wolf attack,<br />

though this seemed pretty unlikely. Jack wasn’t saying anything on the subject, of<br />

course. In the farmhouse, Uncle Nukri was loading a .22.<br />

We gathered around him, shivering in the cold morning light. Great angelic bodies<br />

of mist were passing through the village, filling the air with chilled moisture. Hannah<br />

58 • versant


crouched low, examining him, but Jack remained seated directly on<br />

the injury, his face noble and solemn despite the indignities being<br />

suffered. Austin scratched his head and stroked his graying muzzle,<br />

then recoiled from the smell of his own hand. “Fishy,” he said, and<br />

ducked inside to wash. Dali went about her chores, shuffling from barn<br />

to farmhouse to kitchen-house, bearing sacks of potatoes, shoveling<br />

manure patties out of the courtyard in the wake of the cows’ breakfast<br />

march to pasture. Harried with the tasks of the day, and the constant<br />

delightful burden of her big-stomached American guests, she had<br />

little time to attend to Jack’s condition, and showed little concern as<br />

she scooted by, all shawl and rubber boot.<br />

And Nino, who’d guided us safely to the village along a perilous sixhour<br />

drive into the heart of the Western Caucus Range, over collapsing<br />

roads and between sheer canyon drop-offs, was similarly demure on<br />

the subject of Jack. Treatment of any serious kind wasn’t an option,<br />

she shrugged, as no veterinarians resided in the village. Whatever the<br />

cause, there was no specialist to diagnose it — and traveling across<br />

Svaneti in search of one was too expensive and time-consuming for<br />

the taxed family.<br />

But this wasn’t the reason that Jack continued to suffer untreated,<br />

or that Nino’s uncle Nukri was preparing to kill him today. No, the<br />

root cause sat inside the kitchen-house, nursing a cup of warm fresh<br />

milk and regarding us keenly through smudged window panes. Bebu<br />

was ninety and the senior member of the household, and while her<br />

feelings and opinions remained unspoken on most matters these days,<br />

there was one subject about which she was both fiercely expressive and<br />

decidedly uncompromising, and that was Jack.<br />

When he came close to the kitchen house, she rasped a sharp rebuke<br />

and rose, trembling, to her feet. When he persisted, lingering by the<br />

doorstep, she produced from a darkened corner a naked broomstick,<br />

and, raising it high over her squat frame, brought the weapon down<br />

full-strength on his thick skull. He took the hint, withdrawing into<br />

the courtyard, where it had begun to drizzle. There, he seated himself<br />

oh-so-gradually in the mud, while Bebu returned to her stove-side<br />

bench and eased onto her haunches.<br />

Jack, very simply, was Bebu’s nemesis, and vice versa. It was in certain<br />

ways a fitting pairing. They were of similar size and length, Jack<br />

having perhaps 10 pounds on her, Bebu maybe 6 inches in length.<br />

Their dispositions were also markedly similar: in states of repose, both<br />

Jack and Bebu possessed a great ruminative capacity, and one might<br />

happen on either of them staring off into the middle distance, body<br />

still, expression engaged and vacant somehow at once. But they shared<br />

a fierce and instant temper, too — one which, once triggered, could<br />

send Bebu railing against offending chickens or cows (or, on many<br />

occasions, her sad-eyed squatting rival) with a naked broomstick, and<br />

which sent limping Jack roaring off against transgressing cars on the<br />

dirt street just up the hill from home, snarling and biting at the rattling<br />

metal hulls of Ladas and Marshrutkas with furious abandon.<br />

And there was the matter of their respective maladies. Jack’s wound<br />

was the more glaring, to be sure, and responded badly to his automotive<br />

assaults, issuing unrestrained spurts of bright red blood from his<br />

rump as he trotted back to the courtyard. But Bebu’s left hand was<br />

nothing to dismiss: sheathed in a cracked, oversize ski glove at most<br />

hours of the day, it would emerge at rare moments to be soothed by<br />

her right hand’s firm grip, revealed in the pale light to be nearly double<br />

its natural size, inflated from within by some malignant force, arthritis<br />

or cancer or Godknowswhat, plump and near bursting beneath<br />

taught frail skin.<br />

With no proper diagnosis or medicine on hand for Bebu’s condition,<br />

it stood to reason that she begrudged the loathed Jack any better. And<br />

surely his sanguineous leakage posed a sanitary issue that demanded<br />

a certain amount of domestic diligence. But even as simple a thing as<br />

an affectionate stroke of his forehead’s dirty scruff triggered a look of<br />

sour disdain on her face. What might have once transpired between<br />

them, months or years ago, in a state of youthful misbehavior, it was<br />

impossible to imagine. But it needn’t have been much. For here, in the<br />

wilds of northern Georgia, was a place of grudges everlasting. Blood<br />

feuds that divided households for centuries, that racked up bodies as<br />

steadily as families could conjure them forth. Too far removed to be<br />

troubled even by the most ambitious of feudal lords, the peoples of<br />

Svaneti engaged in their own domestic warfare, waged among handfuls<br />

of wind-hardened souls over offenses long forgotten and never<br />

forgiven. (Until the 20th century, a proposal was made when a young<br />

man threw a bullet into the front yard of the family of his desired girl<br />

— a promise that if such a wedding was not accepted, there would be<br />

much blood shed.)<br />

In this place, dogs were not bred for affection but for utility. They<br />

lived among the livestock, fending off ravenous mountain creatures<br />

and silhouetted thieves alike, trading their lives for scraps and the<br />

shelter of a damp barn. The only recreational function of Svan dogs<br />

was their engagement in organized fights, which were both legal and<br />

exceedingly popular in the high-country villages near the Abkhazian<br />

border. In this setting, too, affection for a dog was an inconvenience<br />

at best, a dangerous limitation at worst.<br />

And so Bebu marveled at the kindness her nemesis received at our<br />

hands, gloved hand flexing absently in her lap, while Dali and Nino<br />

maintained the comfortable indifference appropriate for such an occasion<br />

as Jack’s execution dictated. It was, in the end, Uncle Nukri who<br />

caved. Emerging from the farmhouse empty-handed, he looked us<br />

over, the expectant foreigners, and muttered in Svan. Nino’s translation<br />

was similarly pointed. “Jack looks better. Not killing him today.”<br />

Uncertain whether celebration was warranted, we looked down to<br />

see how he took the news. A single tail-thump sounded on the hard<br />

slate path. Inside, Bebu’s eyes twinkled. We patted his gnarled furry<br />

head goodbye, and set out to climb a mountain.<br />

versant.com • 59


YOUTH of TBILISI<br />

versant.com • 61


In her ongoing photo series ‘Youth’ artist and photographer Corinne Thrash examines the<br />

spirit and energy of the development of youth around the world. Her latest photo installment<br />

examines optimism of Georgia’s largest and quickest modernizing generation, youth of Tbilisi.<br />

versant.com • 63


66 • versant


Last Look<br />

“There are things known and there are things unknown, and in<br />

between are the doors of perception.”<br />

— Aldous Huxley<br />

Thank you for joining us in exploring the Georgian experience. We<br />

hope that your future travels take you to the Caucasus soon. Join us<br />

next month as we discover the lives and wonder of Bhutan. If you have<br />

spent time in Bhutan please share with us an image of windows or<br />

doors that have taken you to a world unknown: @versant<br />

Photographs © Corinne Thrash<br />

68 • versant


versant<br />

— versant.com —

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!