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CHAI KHANA: From letters to internet marriages (video)

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Selfies and mobile news alerts have yet to catch on among the elderly residents of Pshatavan, an impoverished farming hamlet on Armenia’s Turkish border. But if 23-year-old Lilit Grigoryan has her way, that could soon all change. A former online journalist, Pshatavan native Grigoryan works for the Armavir Development Center, a regional NGO that trains rural Armenians how to use digital technology to change their lives for the better – whether to find work, get the news, learn about their rights or even make new contacts. Over half of Armenia’s population is estimated to have internet access, but, even so, a digital divide exists between town and country, young and old. In one  2015 survey, a third of the rural respondents said they never use the internet at all; primarily because they don’t have access to a computer or know how to go online. Most of those over the age of 56 said the same. Those patterns exist as well in Pshatavan, a village of about 2,500 people, an hour’s drive from the capital, Yerevan. Mobile and internet services exist here, but the elderly prefer to stick to what they know – phones, many think, are only meant for calling family and friends abroad. Letters, rather than emails, are for conversations you can keep. Find more on the source website