ジョン・スタンメイヤーのインスタグラム(johnstanmeyer) - 8月2日 15時40分
Swipe ~ In less than 12 hours I’ll be seated in row 5C travelling from New York to Yerevan. With these few hours before leaving for Armenia I’m still wanting to share images from Uzbekistan, and something more, the dualities of experiences. The similarities of these two Stans (Armenia is also called Hayastan) is always present. Can you guess which table setting is Kiva, Uzbekistan, and which is Dilijan, Armenia? It’s amazing how during the Soviet days, these two countries absorbed so much commonality, even with breakfast tables.
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#diptych #armenia #hayastan #dilijan #dilizhan #uzbekistan #khiva @ナショナルジオグラフィック @natgeoimagecollection @outofedenwalk #table #breakfasttable #window @bridging.stories
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nocleveranecdote
John, I’m flying back to DC from Kyrgyzstan, where we held a conference with government & civil society representatives from Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, & Tajikistan. It’s amazing how much Soviet influence Kyrgyzstan, too, retains. It’s interesting, too, how they are trying to reconcile the Soviet culture of vodka & dancing with a resurgent Islamic influence of abstinence — is Armenia struggling with this too? I find it fascinating how all of these countries have spent the past 25 years defining each other by their differences instead of working together to find solutions to their common challenges.
polikakhchik
John ! You are going to my mythical home country. I am Armenian from Iran... never at home in any one country but I felt so connected to Armenia
May I suggest: there is very small modern art museum in Yerevan . It has a very interesting history as a museum and the history of modern art in Soviet political culture. You can go and ask before hand for a narrated walk through with the (woman) Director. I found it fascinating. It’s tiny and about an hours walk through . Enjoy and EAT well!! So much creative energy there.
renddyasap
1st Is Dilijan. Armenian also celebrate nowruz, so Sabzeh was there on the table (if its really a Sabzeh). And from the window, you can see the trees and branches, which is a Dilijan’s characteristic.
2nd Is Khiva. Cause on the window, i can see one of the dome in Itchan Kala far behind.
Aren’t it ? 😄
bytuba
When I see your photos, especially from Uzbekistan, my mind reminds me Turkey, Turkish traditions. So I just wanna ask which table is Turkey? We are the people suffering same pains and living similarly. Noone can change this. Lots of love from Turkey. P.S. Your shots are amazing!
maiadowlet
Second what other people already guessed: as Uzbekistan is one of those countries that celebrates Novruz, the first picture is I assume from Uzbekistan. Second is Armenia, because of the bottle of mineral water 😊 Enjoy Hayastan!
e_sefereliyeva
This plant belongs to Azerbaijan tradition.....every year on Novruz Holiday this plant is grown by Azerbaijan people.....Azerbaijan is BLUE TURKISH...But Armenians is not Turkish.
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