Zamira's life, already stingy with small joys, is about to turn upside down. Her husband believes that it is time for the family to leave their familiar place. Faced with a fact, the woman will have to part with the familiar life, the center of which was a cow. The closeness between the animal and the man, squeezed in the vice of strong traditions, is about to shrink to the last shred. This means that Zamira will cling to it with an unexpected despair for herself.
Yavash Arsenyev wrote in his work “Cattle and its Use”: “Let the memory of the cow cause rage, and not the cow itself.” It seems that it is impossible to say more precisely.
Liana Sukiasyan