SEARCHING FOR A PLACE: THE CASE OF IDPS OF ABKHAZIA

Authors

  • Ketevan Epadze Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University

Keywords:

Abkhazia, Conflict, Migration, Identity, Resettlement, Place Identity

Abstract

Within the disintegration of the Soviet Union, Georgia turned into a war zone. Territorial conflict over Abkhazia occurred in 1992 and lasted for over one year. This event traumatized thousands of Georgian families who were forced to leave their homes in order to survive and find peaceful shelters. Most of them had nowhere to go and were settled in the old stateowned building. Those people who migrated inside the Georgian state were identified as internally displaced persons (IDPs.) Over the years, they were trying to overcome the trauma of survival and losses. However, memories that remained after the war changed their identities, and their personal and social development. There is a stark contrast between old and new lives, which led to the tendency to shy away from reality and travel to the imaginary past. Most of the people who migrated could not regulate time and space rapture. It took a significant amount of time to realize the need to adapt to their new communities. The current situation indicates that nostalgia for the past still exists in the lives of internally displaced people, despite being able to attempt to balance the past and present. This paper utilizes the cause-effect structure and explains how and why war migration changed the lives of Georgian IDPs.

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Published

2017-03-29

How to Cite

Epadze, K. . (2017). SEARCHING FOR A PLACE: THE CASE OF IDPS OF ABKHAZIA. Analytical Bulletin, 1(10), 85–102. Retrieved from https://analytical-bulletin.cccs.am/index.php/ab/article/view/61