So in the end Kutaisi is as charming as remembered: A sooty, gritty old city in the center of Georgia where the dramatic landscape of mountains and vineyards pauses for a moment to become uninspiringly flat and barren. A parallel situation would be coming from Georgia to monitor elections in New York , looking forward to the beauty of the Catskills or Niagara Falls , at least a charming farming town, but instead getting assigned to Albany and its surrounding suburbs. And the contrast between Tbilisi and Kutaisi is just as pronounced as between New York City and Albany . In one, there is life and friends, bars and restaurants, parties and concerts. In the other, there is—well let me attempt to be more positive—there is a sprawling park in the center (unfortunately under construction and only relaxing if you like the sound of jackhammers), a cafeteria that serves five different kinds of khatchapuri (in addition to an inedible Georgian version of "pizza,") a bar that stays open until the ungodly hour of 11pm (at which point all nightlife ends in Kutaisi), an outdoor market (that seems to sell only watermelons and eggplants), and 5 new ATMs.
Upon arrival I strongly objected to living with Sven and Eka in the house that they had rented during their last stay in Kutaisi . Cramming into a little car together, spending hours a day trekking out over bad roads to small towns and villages to interview local election officials and candidates sounded like quite enough exposure to their "very special relationship" to me. However, I reconsidered my hardline stance upon our arrival. The house belongs to the widow of one of Kutaisi's most notorious gangsters—"Djoni" ( i.e. the awkward Russian transliteration of "Johnny")—who was shot in front of the house in the early 90s ending his reign of crime and terror in Kutaisi but leaving his wife Lali and their 3 year old daughter with several properties throughout the area. Set in a tropical oasis of banana trees, palms and orange flowered bushes, the house rises up three stories, each level sporting a series of sizable stone balconies and ornately barred windows. All exterior doors are made of steel, but once you get past them the house is beautifully trimmed with rich mahogany including a tremendous spiral staircase up to the 5 bedrooms. Mine is the largest with french doors that open onto a king-sized bed dressed in red sheets and heavy green velvet drapes that block out all sunlight and give an even more gothic feel to the sturdy mahogany furniture. Sven and Eka live in a corridor of their own sharing a marble-fixtured bathroom that always has hot water while the other two bedrooms remain empty. Djoni's widow also cooks our meals every night and has hired a maid to clean the house and wash our clothes. As my friend Svirga, a Lithuanian girl from the other election monitoring team based in Kutaisi , observed, "Oh wow, you are literally living in gangster's paradise."
To be fair, once we get far enough out past Kutaisi proper to the little satellite towns of the Imereti region with great names like Kharagauli, Zestaponi and Tkibuli, the scenery does become more interesting. I'm already collecting stories of crooked town officials and incompetence-inspired mayhem to share eventually.
The other night Svirga (a sweet svelte blond girl, not to be confused with my Swedish partner Sven) and I hit a new Kutaisi low before we managed to escape for a weekend in the mountains. It was Friday night and we were desperate to do something—anything—so going out with our drivers and Eka to a restaurant "downtown" suddenly sounded like a brilliant idea. I don't know what I'd pictured in a Kutaisi restaurant, but it certainly wasn't a basement full of men in tight clothing dancing what resembled the tango in each others arms. In most other cities around the world, you would walk into this scene of men in lycra twirling each other around and just assume you'd entered a gay bar. But not in Georgia , where gay men are severely beaten so that heterosexual men can preserve their god-given right to kiss each other in moments of high emotion, hold hands walking down the street and wear tight sleeveless tops while dancing cheek to cheek without ever having to worry about being called "gay."
"But where are the women?" Svirga and I asked spotting only one waitress in this crowd of about thirty men ages 18 to 45 out eating, drinking and dancing on their own. "At home with the kids" naturally, our drivers Ramaz and Shota explained. They puffed their chests with pride as all heads turned to watch them parade their foreign girls over to a table with a prime view of the dance floor. As the drivers began ordering platefuls of food and litres of wine for the table, Eka tried to give more context to the single-sex atmosphere. "All men here have been married since they were stupid seventeen year olds and kidnapped their wives," She rolled her eyes. "Now they are simply bored at home and go out for drinking together in the evenings."
"Kidnapped?" I asked assuming she'd just picked the wrong word. But no, Eka explained that most girls like her from the villages of Georgia are kidnapped when they reach puberty. Apparently, the tradition born of wild Cossacks riding off on horseback with stolen brides under their arms has been charmingly updated throughout the years to now involve bands of pimpled teenagers driving up in beat-up Ladas to whisk young girls off to cheap motels or a relative's house for the weekend. Three days later the girl is brought back to her village and forced to marry one of her kidnappers. The girl doesn't have much of a choice in the matter at this point since her parents won't take her back into their house after a kidnapping. It's assumed that she is no longer a virgin, even if she wasn't actually raped during the ordeal, and as upstanding parents you just wouldn't want to take that chance of having a daughter who wasn't a virgin in the house. I mean, what would the neighbors think?
Eka went on to explain that it's really not all that bad. Most of her friends are married to guys who kidnapped them when they were around fifteen and only one was against her will. Most of them kind of liked the boys who kidnapped them. They'd seen them around the village and exchanged interested glances, which is apparently code for 'I won't put up a fight when you and your friends come by to kidnap me.' Then when the car pulls up it's kind of like the boy asking the girl out on a first date and proposing marriage all in one shot. She can either run away screaming or if she likes him put up a mock protest before getting into the car. "In America , when you're fifteen and a boy likes you, the two of you go out to movies and eat popcorn, sometimes you get pizza. Your mom drives you," I explained for contrast, remembering again why I actually do like the States—no civil war and no pre-modern traditions that actively promote teenage pregnancy. A lot of the times, the girls are just curious, Eka offered, they get in the car because it seems fun, they're bored and they want to see what will happen. And I pictured myself so vividly at 15 peering through the front door of my parents' house at a car full of boys across the street, knowing that the one I have a crush on is in the backseat. The chances that I would have had the presence of mind not to go leaping into the car with exuberantly flushed cheeks and abandon are absolutely nil. Again, I thanked my lucky stars that my parents' house is located in King of Prussia , Pennsylvania rather than Kharagauli , Georgia . Though you do have to admit an elegant efficiency to the system. I mean why waste so many years going through the ups and downs of dating when you can just get everything from the first date through the honeymoon over in the space of a long weekend with a well-orchestrated kidnapping?
As we learned about one anachronistic Georgian mating ritual from Eka, we unwittingly became a party to another. Two of the men crowding the dance floor broke off from the pack and approached our table. "Oh shit, they're going to ask us to dance," I groaned. "Don't worry," Eka smirked, "They're not allowed to talk to us unless Shota and Ramaz say they can." And as predicted, the men came up to the table—one smaller with a Michael Jackson era jacket unbuttoned to his navel to reveal the entirety of his hairy pale abdomen and the other in a tight black tee shirt rising up awkwardly above a rolling khatchapuri-filled stomach. But rather than slobbering the drunken hellos and pick-up lines you'd expect to get from these guys in a western bar, they bypassed Svirga and I entirely and began heatedly talking with Shota and Ramaz. "How much for your women?" I translated in jest. Svirga was clearly not amused and expressed strong desire to get on the next plane back to Vilnius . The whole exchange was right out of a cave-man era sociology textbook: Males from one group leer at females from another. Males create frontline to defend females who are considered possessions rather than sentient beings. Outsider males approach and gesture at females. Insider males push at their chests forcing them back five feet from females to prevent accidental contact. Both sides put on displays of virility that include yelling, yawping, shoving and grunting. Both sides accept outcome that females will remain with original males. There is then wine-pouring and toasting to the health and fertility of the females as the outsider males clink glasses with the whole group in a conciliatory gesture before reluctantly retreating in defeat, taking the wine from our table with them as a consolation prize. Within ten minutes a new posse of men approached to move through the same set of theatrical yawps and gestures. And I have to admit that the immunity afforded us by Shota and Ramaz holding down the frontlines really was fun. Just a glance from Svirga or I was enough to inspire confidence in any guy out on the dance floor and send him panting up to our table certain that he would be the first to make it through the male gauntlet to the sweet feminine prize. Meanwhile, we could snicker from the safety of our defended position knowing we would never have to deal with the consequences of our wandering gaze. This of course got old very quickly though and we wrapped up the evening before Shota and Ramaz were too drunk to drive us home.
I don't know that I wound up extracting any pithy lessons from the night except that maybe in weighing the pros and cons of each system, equality for women is a pretty good deal. You may have to spend some more time and effort fending off sleazy men in bars and of course dating a lot of duds until you finally find a guy who inspires you, but in the end it's worth not being forced to live with the decisions you make as a doe-eyed 15 year old for the rest of your life. Oh and you get to have a mind and a career and all that too.
On that note I will leave you with more to come soon!