Nima Taradji

Photographer
  
Living in Gorelovka
Public Project
Living in Gorelovka
Copyright Nima Taradji Photography 2024
Date of Work Aug 2019 - Aug 2019
Updated Oct 2019
Topics agriculture, Borders, Christianity, Community, Documentary, Editorial, Emotion, Environment, Essays, georgia, gorelovka, Hope, Islam, Isolation, Landscape, Minority, Peace, peaceful coexistence, Photography, Photojournalism, Portraiture, Poverty, religious discrimination, Street, subsistence living, Travel
"The mystery of human existence lies not in just staying alive, but in finding something to live for."
"The Grand Inquisitor" in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov (1879-1880) 

Life in Gorelovka, a small village in southern Georgia about 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the Armenian border, is not easy. Not during the winter which lasts about seven months, nor during the rest of the year when the focus is preparing for winter. In July, however, Gorelovka is picturesque as great lush plains surround this small village of around 1000 people.

While the community is made up of those from different ethnic backgrounds - from Georgian refugees who have resettled this region after landslides destroyed their homes to relocated Muslims to the exiled Doukhobors - everyone faces the same concerns of survival relying on subsistence farming with very little commerce.  Despite the difficulty of everyday life and ethnic diversity, life is peaceful.

Gorelovka was founded in the 1840’s by the Doukhobors: a group of Christian Russians exiled to the region by Tsar Nicholas I.  They were exiled after burning their weapons of war, rejecting the Russian Orthodoxy, and - as pacifists - refusing to join the army or fight in any wars. The Doukhobors believe in peaceful coexistence with nature. Their approach to Christianity is conceptual in that they “internalize the words and conduct of God as portrayed in the Bible and by Jesus Christ to create a set of characters by which to act.” It is said that Leo Tolstoy helped many relocate to Canada where a large population of Doukhobors live today, while a minority of Doukhobors live in Georgia, Ukraine and other neighbor countries. When they came to Georgia, they built homes putting sand from the nearby lake on their roofs to keep warm, and painted their homes in joyful hues of white, blue and green as they created a communal living environment in this harsh region.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, non-Doukhobors began moving into the area. With the rise of nationalism and the arrival of Georgians into villages such a Gorelovka, the Doukhobors were no longer welcome - many moved away but a handful still remain.

Nearby Armenians also began moving into the region in good numbers and now wield a great deal of influence. In response to this influence and frustrated by the self-proclaimed independence in the Abkhazia region in the north of Georgia, the Georgian government promotes ethnic diversity by encouraging Muslims to settle abandoned homes in Gorelovka.  The plan appears to be that by diversifying the ethnic blend of the region, the Armenians will be less likely to want to follow the example in Abkhazia and declare their independence or worse yet: get annexed by their Armenian neighbors.

The Muslims who inhabit abandoned structures in the village, farm the land and live peacefully with everyone else. One notable separation however remains in the community: the Muslims are prohibited to bury their dead in the village cemetery forcing them to travel some 250 Kilometers (155 Miles) to the nearest Muslim cemetery.

As a result of various world events paths crossed and lives were changed.  The diverse people of Gorelovka have live in a harsh environment, surrounded by stunning scenery sliced by dilapidated roads.
13,231

Also by Nima Taradji —

Project

Dia De Los Muertos in Pilsen

Nima Taradji / Chicago, Illinois
Project

A Look Back at the 2016 Election - 1/3

Nima Taradji Photography / United States
Project

Pilsen Celebrates The 4th of July

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

Juneteenth Celebration-Flossmore, Illinois

Nima Taradji Photography / Flossmore, Illinois
Project

Spotify: Why Was I Born?

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

March For Gaza in Washington, DC

Nima Taradji Photography / washington dc
Project

A Hate Crime & A Funeral

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, illinois
Project

Protestors For & Against Kyle Rittenhouse

Nima Taradji Photography / kenosha, wisconsin
Project

Occupy

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

Pilsen Celebrates The Fourth

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

Published

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

The Protectors

Nima Taradji Photography / sacred stone camp, north dakota
Project

No War Protest - Chicago

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, illinois
Project

Hasankeyf: History Flooded

Nima Taradji Photography / hasankeyf, turkey
Project

God Child of Xochimilco

Nima Taradji Photography / Xochimilco, Mexico
Project

Red Hot Annie

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

Environmental Portraits

Nima Taradji / Chicago, Illinois
Project

The Conventions

Nima Taradji Photography / philadelphia
Project

Bajito y Suavecito

Nima Taradji Photography / Chicago, Illinois
Project

Shishmaref: A Native Struggle

Nima Taradji Photography / Shishmaref, Alaska
Project

Second Line

Nima Taradji Photography / new orleans, louisiana
Project

Guns in Schools

Nima Taradji Photography / Sidney, Ohio
Project

Lost Paradise

Nima Taradji Photography / armenia
Project

Lucha Libre

Nima Taradji Photography / villa park, illinois
Living in Gorelovka by Nima Taradji Photography
Sign-up for
For more access