Aimar Ventsel: Georgia's paradoxes
Georgia is a good example of how tourists and tourism live in one world while the daily life of locals exists in another, writes Aimar Ventsel.
Georgia is a good example of how tourists and tourism live in one world while the daily life of locals exists in another, writes Aimar Ventsel.
I have a friend in Russia, in southern Siberia. We talk from time to time and he writes to me about the latest news. Most recently he wrote that Russians are tired of the war, yet people are afraid of the war ending. First, no one knows how the Ukraine–Russia war will end. Second, many Russians have made the war a source of income — a growing number of people enjoy all kinds of state support, and many do not want to see that abundance end.
I am currently in Georgia, in Batumi, and the abundance found in Russia has reached here as well. The beach is full of Russian tourists, and many Russians who have moved to Georgia can also be seen (for example, cars with Georgian plates). At the same time, I feel many Georgians are quietly fed up with Russians. For example, I have repeatedly encountered situations where stores serve customers only in Georgian. On the other hand, everyone who wants Russian money serves Russians in Russian. At the market, in pharmacies — everywhere it is possible to get service in Russian.
Batumi shows a few paradoxes. While international communication in Tbilisi increasingly takes place in English, Batumi has traditionally been a Russian‑speaking city where even many Georgians speak Russian as their first language. Another thing reminds me of Soviet times: although many service workers speak Russian to customers against their will, they are still stuck — they simply do not know enough English to switch to it.
I walked through the city listening to an English‑language podcast about Georgian politics. It turned out interesting things have happened: members of parliament got into fistfights, and the European Union was declared just as much an enemy of Georgia as Russia. This makes the situation interesting again, because the agenda of joining the European Union has not been officially removed from the table.
There is one new thing as well. A year ago store clerks did not ask what card I was paying with. Now Russians are here with their Mir cards, and apparently the payment system must be switched for them. But I must say that no one here lets the conditional or real fights happening far away in Tbilisi bother them. The tourist season is at its peak, money wants to be earned, and money, as we know, does not smell. Three years ago Russian tourists were not welcome anywhere because they were seen as chronic cheapskates, but now Russian tourists have returned to their money‑throwing behavior and
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