When Abram Ididze was 12, he decided to start a museum at his grandparents' home in Tusheti, Georgia.
"I heard all the time in my family about dispossession, shootings, repressions, deportations," he tellsJAM News.
His grandmother, Ofelia Gogotidze, "said that until you shoot them, I will not enter."
So Ididze and his mother, Tamara, packed up their things and fled the house, leaving Ofelia with a dowry of silver items, including women's jewelry, men's buttons, belts, and a horse harness.
Ten years later, Ididze and Gogotidze are running a museum of their own in the village of Zemo Alvani.
"Our goal is to tell the story of Tusheti from the point of view of the people who live there," says Ididze, now 22.
"We want to share the culture of Tusheti with the rest of the world."
The idea for the museum came to Ididze when he visited Tusheti for the first time as a child.
"When the Bolsheviks came, they dispossessed my grandfather and grandmother," he says.
"They hid these jewels in the wall, and that's
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