The Tail’s Telltales

The Tail’s Telltales

Around the town of Kapan and the surrounding villages, lake-like waters have been shaping. But on a closer inspection, they are not lakes at all — they are toxic tailings. What locals call “tails” is where the Soviet mining industry tried to bury its poisonous traces, while flooding homes, pastures, gravestones, springs, and human stories beneath foul-smelling, murky waters. 


Introduction

Through the past few years, I’ve been imagining this to be a research, a personal essay, a poetic documentary film, sometimes a soundscape. May I enjoy the liberty not to choose, not to claim anymore?

This something is born within my humble attempts to reflect on the amazement I had a few years ago, visiting my parents’ hometown. This something is born from the attempts to keep, cherish and reconstruct that amazement. Back then on the road to Kapan, my mother asked our driver about the lake-like waters we were passing by. Growing up, she did not see it, and she could not remember. The driver said it is not a lake at all. People from Yerevan or some tourists on their way to admire the new lake would discover it’s a toxic tailing, old one, somewhat our ongoing, enlarging Soviet heritage. For a town that grew thanks to the mining industry it is ‘natural’.

First thing I am told upon my arrival is that the interest in the tail (as it is called) has increased recently. Everything is political, I know that part.

I have tried to go to different spots from where we can see one of the tailings left by two combines and neverending mining. I have talked to people in Kapan and in the surrounding villages, have taken pictures and filmed whenever I saw one of these tailings accidentally. Getting fixated on water metamorphosis in general, I would take a picture of a city river when passing by, occasionally. The fragmented conversations I did not dare and did not need to call interviews are free floating somewhere below.

* Keeping out the names of my interlocutors (who I am very grateful to) is more a means of protection and generalization rather than anything else.

** The text was written in English as a result of my intuitive navigation through the linguistic ocean and then translated into Armenian.

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Main Part

(i try to take                     
myself    
out  
of this some 
thing 
anything 
i know 
this is not possible 
learning 
to work 
from 
our position 
under 
lining 
it 
this is another 
attempt 
to do 
that 
gently 
if possible 
i want to know 
about 
the relations 
people develop 
with surrounding nature 
the relations 
nature develops 
with them us 
nature nurture 
gently
if possible 
i want to know 
about the different feelings 
feelings
what’s the difference 
no
i am not 
a spy
smile smile
the dialect 
is actually 
my native language
wait 
why do i have 
an accent again)
a man at the researcher’s office 
says
an ordinary person 
has no different
different feelings 
no relations
a fisherman does 
his fishing 
and tries to sell it 
nothing else 
no different different 
feelings
fishings 
and the historian the researcher
says 
he saw the tail 
from all the spots 
all the possible 
spots 
except maybe 
outer space 
and he had 
some feelings
amazements 
before 
but no more 
and they say 
talk to activists 
talk to lawyers 
they are smart 
are there feelings 
fillings 
and the researcher the historian 
says  
I ate the fish 
from the tail 
once 
and his friend 
says 
there are frogs 
living there
and you know
the meaning 
it means 
the water 
is clean pure 
and we should not 
name the tail 
waste 
as we do 
since it’s so useful
it has seventy elements 
even rare rare 
rhenium 
and we will use them 
we will use them all 
one day 
and they say 
at first 
in the beginning 
of it all 
an ordinary person 
does not understand 
and when he she understands 
it’s too late 
and sitting 
at my grandmother’s table 
listening to the sounds 
of the river
hearing them 
and they say 
day by day 
the sounds
will get
louder 
the river 
will flow 
faster 
and here 
it is
the wide part 
yet 
and they say 
when we were kids 
the water was white 
milky rivers smile smile
or grey
yellow 
the color of molybdenum 
it was turbid 
we were used to it 
that was 
our image 
of the river 
we saw no other 
and it is
not
to compare 
after this 
all the rivers 
we saw 
were valley rivers 
it is not 
to compare
and it was white 
again 
a few years ago
and the combine 
cleaned it 
and and 
years ago 
you could see the shiny lake 
from the road 
you can
not anymore 
we do not 
have the road 
anymore 
but we have new 
different roads 
mix and match 
you could see 
shiny shiny surface 
from our cemetery 
we saw it last April 
a bit frozen
and this 
melted March
too 
and 
(i am 
not alone) 
a teenager girl 
who grew up here 
says 
she went to our 
cemetery 
a few years ago
two or three 
and she thought 
it is a lake 
and her uncle said 
it is not 
he said 
it is
dangerous 
smelly 
and should be
avoided 
and the uncle 
works for the tail 
she tells me 
it looks beautiful from there 
other women say
it looks beautiful 
from the monastery 
uphill 
like a lake
and don’t you know 
in past we called 
our lakes 
seas 
and our nature 
ate these lakes 
she did 
but we still say 
and see 
sea 
seas 
all the time 
another girl 
says 
she saw it 
when she was six 
is this a lake 
the parents 
said 
you would 
dissolve inside 
and then 
later
she would 
do this chemical experiment 
with starch  
Newtonian fluid 
and she thought 
they are alike 
so can we compare 
and once 
the girls 
saw a little tail 
while on a trip 
to this fortress 
the last capital 
of Syunik kingdom 
that was captured 
some eight hundred 
and fifty years ago 
anyways they went 
and they started 
throwing stones 
to see 
what happens 
would they dissolve
and the stones 
made a sharp sound 
like ‘dmp’!
yes dmp
is it sharp or muted 
and the stone 
was stuck there
it ether 
stayed 
on the surface 
or jumped in
they thought 
they would explode
the stones right 
the stones 
but we can 
not find that part 
now 
they have put sand 
on it 
in Artsvanik they say 
they have a problem
with water 
there is
a source 
just far away 
just one 
it’s ok now
but
summers are bad 
and they say 
working in Chernobyl 
we survived 
we said 
because we are 
from Kapan 
we are used to this 
we got stronger 
you can not 
smell it now
but we used to
smell lime 
and it was bad 
but it is worse 
in Chapni 
since the wind blows 
that way 
the cows go there 
of course they do 
but it is fine 
we have cows 
it happens everywhere it does 
mutations happen everywhere 
anywhere 
they do 
we can’t really talk about it 
we don’t really know 
it is not 
researched enough 
they say
in the village you need 
at least one cow 
but we do not
have any 
we got rid 
of ours 
you have to follow it everywhere 
because it goes and
eats the fields out 
and we have small patches 
and is this cow 
a benefit or 
a burden 
and the small 
and the big 
patches are under the tail 
and the tail comes closer 
and closer 
but we are used to it 
we do not notice 
how it happens 
day by day 
there is this spring 
on our patch 
but as a joke 
the tail is there 
so we don’t grow 
anything  
but we go to collect the nuts 
and our husbands work there 
they ride the boats 
in the tails 
and they come in the boats 
to check things 
and we call them 
and they say 
do not call
go to the balcony you will see 
us 
and every day 
we pray
for them 
(do i feel bad for asking or 
joking 
if she waves
at the husband
as if it so cinematic)  
and they come and feed these three 
stray cats
that  came and stayed 
with us 
and ten years ago 
or even three 
the tail was far away 
you could not
see it from this point
but today 
mainly 
we do not
have water 
but we have a small patch 
near our house 
because it’s embarrassing 
to live in the village 
and not grow anything 
and
one boy has drunk water 
from some spring 
and died
it’s our Sevan
smile smile 
(have you heard this story 
about Iranian tourists 
who were taken there 
and told it’s lake Sevan) 
in eighties 
and nineties 
we went there with kids 
we brought chervil 
and hazelnuts 
there was a river 
but we do not remember the name 
we try try 
but we do not 
no we do not have photographs 
even 
when our sons went to army
they didn’t have a phone 
there was a girl 
who had a camera 
she came in summers 
when her grandparents 
were alive 
as other kids 
who used to come 
and there was one watermill 
it was broken 
but it’s left under the tail 
and the researchers the historians say 
it’s actually three villages 
that are left under 
and under 
the second tail 
first and second and third and and 
there are twelve mills 
and an aqueduct 
and when our kids
were kids 
they brought fish 
they got in the tail
home 
and we put them 
in the pool
and it could not 
survive 
in clean water 
it died 
and the water 
got yellow 
we changed 
the whole water 
and the ducks come 
and land there 
and stay and live 
what does a duck know 
but when you bring it
home 
it stinks
In Chapni 
the men tell 
our childhood is left
under the tail
we had 
sour water
sparkling spring 
and we made a hole 
and we swimmed there 
all summer we were there 
all people came 
from other places 
for this water 
and even others 
culturally others 
came
and put their tents 
and everybody came 
for it 
we had wonderful summers 
now we have only 
these lights 
the city provides 
and they are also rebuilding this 
and that 
and 
the man, the horse and the dog 
come from the hill 
from Artsvanik 
where is this tail 
going 
it goes nowhere 
rushing to gather his cows 
from around 
turquoise waters 
he asks says 
are you photographing 
the poisons 
there’s some cote 
around 
not built not used anymore 
rather built rebuilt 
the cows drown sometimes 
inside 
and nobody 
can save them 
or they go 
and take them out 
no they can’t
we heard these stories 
since our childhood 
they say 
well we don’t need 
their money 
but what can we do 
it’s good for the village
financially 
go to the cemetery 
and look 
people used to live 
up to 
their fifties 
and now they live 
up to 
their eighties 
when the average age 
in our country
is about seventy 
the cemetery is uphill 
as always
up to up to 
is it coming to this cemetery too 
in Artsvanik they said it’s coming 
to this cemetery 
up to 
the cemetery 
somebody said 
it already came 
it already came 
to the cemetery 
coming and not going 
and all the headstones 
are covered with 
white dust 
but it will 
upload till 
up to 
the end of this tower 
(back in 
the town 
do i feel bad 
for avoiding 
eating 
the cheese 
we brought) 
from Sevakar 
kids would go 
to that sour water spring
as well 
and somebody wanted 
to turn it 
into sanatorium 
but it did 
not work 
out 
maybe it would 
if our men lived 
up to up to
the sour water 
was a legendary 
place 
wasn’t it in our village
no it was really far 
did you have your own
in your village
too
is it really
under the tail now
we took eggs 
potatoes 
and sugar 
and we would take 
all the water 
out 
put it in that 
nearby river 
and we would wait 
for the new clear 
water to come 
from under the rock 
for a few hours 
and we would mix it 
with sugar 
to drink lemonade 
and then we would 
go inside 
in clothes
and we argued 
with the kids from Chapni 
it’s ours 
no it’s ours 
throwing rocks 
at each other 
and nobody had cameras 
but we did 
later on
and we took so many photos 
but sadly 
one day 
the film
fell into our 
river 
and your grandfather 
had a patch of soil 
there 
too 
and they would go 
and it’s left under 
we went there 
to collect walnuts 
together 
and when the combine came 
and said 
they wanted to buy 
their lands
they agreed 
you get to 
either sell them or 
leave the villages
and she said 
why are you
allowing this
it is your fathers’
lands 
and they said 
we can 
not work on them 
anymore 
we are old 
it is toxic 
it is fine 
the norm is half a meter
from the village 
and it is not 
that close
maybe eight hundred 
or something 
but it is toxic 
it is fine 
and a man says 
he offered a plan 
to put all this 
inside the holes 
we have from mining 
in our 
mining village 
where our cemetery
mine and the other girl’s 
is 
but nobody wants
to unite 
around this 
and he says 
the Soviets calculated it
all
and they would close it 
on time 
if they lasted a bit longer 
but then these 
capitalists came 
and they don’t
care about us 
but when they
took it out of the city 
sixty years ago 
it became a city 
and when we talk 
about the tail
we say tail
but we have five or so
and smaller ones 
they dry them up
and the first one 
the Kajaran one 
got closed long ago 
but you know 
when I go there 
my car gets weak 
shhhhhhhh don’t speak 
but you know 
there’s this guy 
he says that 
the panels were built
from the waste there 
and the buildings 
are radioactive 
anyways the half-life 
must be over
smile smile 
and when they found uranium 
they came and said 
uranium is good and safe 
as if 
we didn’t know 
what uranium is 
and our guys went there
at night 
and destroyed all their machines 
yes they did 
but the big tails 
used to be small
and talking 
about the big one 
they say it used
to be small 
just like the other one 
the one near the village 
where we used to swim 
we were young 
we would swim 
and then get washed
in a nearby spring 
and you know
you can still do that 
if you want 
am i 
(is this) 
artificial 
as the tail 
are we alike 
but we do not 
unite 
but we could
and we could 
cry 
three hundred 
and twenty five 
billions 
cubic meters 
of tears 
too 
adding salty waters 
to all the sour ones 
but we do not 
have space 
to store them 
don’t you know 
they wrote 
all our country 
is becoming 
a huge tail 
would we have 
many jobs then 
sweet sweat 
absorb stain 
but dries up 
finally sweet waters 
and this 
something 
must get 
        cut off
                but
                  how hard 
                                it is
                                     to do 
                                             so 
                                                with any 
                                                              tail

The two main tailings are the products of two branches of the copper-molybdenum combine, operating since 1952. The one in Kapan has the tailing in Gehanush, Kajaran’s one — in Artsvanik. The smaller tailings can be found around Kajaran. Until constructing these tailings in the 50s-60s, the waste ended up in Voghji river that flows in Kapan. 

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on the way to Chapni
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Chapni
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a room with a view in Artsvanik
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Chapni
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cows walking from the tailing, Chapni
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Chapni
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from Artsvanik to Kapan, after sunset
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Geghanush's tailing, from Geghanush
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Geghanush's tailing, from Geghanush
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on the way to Artsvanik
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from Kavart's cemetry
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from Kavart’s cemetery
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from Bahaburj
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from Bahaburj
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city river
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Baghaberd, where the girls were throwing stones, and the trace is gone
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city waters
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city waters
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city river
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the view from Vachagan
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last frozen april from the cemetery
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from Vachagan village
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from cemetery in Kavart
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Voghji river

skip

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Gehanush
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on the way to Ujanis village ears hearing our driver saying that the tailing has to come here
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city waters
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"the lake" or "the sea" as people called it, near the sour water and the river, from one of interlocutor's personal archive, the beginning of 2000s
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sour water, from one of my interlocutor's personal archive, the beginning of 2000s
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on the way to Chakaten
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on the way to Chakaten
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on the way to Chakaten
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city waters, Vachagan river
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city waters
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on the way from Chakaten
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from the monastery
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from the monastery
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from the monastery to Kapan
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from the monastery to Kapan
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from the monastery to Kapan
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Vardavank
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from the monastery
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Vardavank
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