Chapter 1 - Kursha "Kursha had golden ears and lips; its eyes the size of the moon; eyebrows like snakes; and barked like the rumbling sky" ancient Georgian pagan poetry.
In the early morning of the ‘ dog ’ s Friday ’ ,wolves holiday in pagan Georgia, Kursha awoke to the sound of a sweeping broom, quite unlike the mocking-bird ’ s attractive alarm.
The yard keeper! - Yazidi flashed into Kursha ’ s mind. "Murid," lawman, whom Kursha knew well. Yazidism is a Kurdish religious movement. Murids, Pirs, and Sheiks are the three castes that make up the Yazidis. Because he was the chief yard keeper, he had the long-handled broom. Another man, the yard keeper ’ s henchman, had the short one.
Kursha would observe the henchman ’ s envious and wistful eyes beaming from the balcony onto the yard keeper ’ s long-handled broom, aspiring to sweep with the same superiority and pride.
Kursha was a Caucasian livestock guardian dog, an ancient effective variety from the north-east mountains of Georgia and was respected by ancient Georgian pagan beliefs as the assistants of the gods, ‘ the eyes of the gods. ’
The Hatti country's sacred rituals, which were in many respects assimilated into central Anatolian religion, festivals, and mythology, also practice the kursha cult. Some researchers assert that the Sacral Kursa and the Illuyanka Tale had an impact on the Greek myth of the Golden Fleece.
The hounds are huge, hostile, and suspicious of outsiders. But at home with their owners and family, and as sheep guard dogs always self-confident.
Kursha lived on the balcony of Professor David K ’ s flat. Part of the house that stood close to the former Persian Embassy in the district of Sololaki, Tbilisi, Georgia.
Professor David K. worked at the Institute of the Experimental Pathology and Therapy in Sukhumi, the capital of the Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia under the jurisdiction of Georgia, but currently occupied by Russia. Local people still call it the ’ monkey nursery. ’ It was the first primate testing centre in the world.
Dr. David K. was a middle-aged man with an academic demeanor. The frequent visits to Western states left a deep trail of European elegance, and everyday behaviors were clearly Western intellectual behaviors that were acceptable to Europeans but appeared antagonistic to Soviet authorities influenced by communist "transvaluation." On the other hand, they caused nostalgic feelings among the indigenous city dwellers.
David K. was the eyewitness of dramatic historical events, starting from the collapse of the Russian empire, Georgian independence and the Soviet Occupation.
David K. had a small family: Anna, his wife and Peter, his son.
Professor David K. had numerous friends and acquaintances, but Vova M. and Datiko L. were two of his favourites. His companions were among the fortunate few who miraculously evaded the Soviet authorities' repressions. As a result, people suspected that they might have been working with Soviet intelligence. What were the chances? Maybe, maybe not; nonetheless, if we consider Anastas Mikoyan's statement on the 20th anniversary of the "Cheka," (The All-Russian Extraordinary Commission was the first of the Soviet secret-police organizations). "Every Citizen of the USSR is an NKVD's (People Commissariat for Internal Affairs) employee." The Soviet authorities' attitude on Soviet secret police may have become evident.
During the mandates of Lenin (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov,) Stalin, Khrushchev, and Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev, Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan was an old Armenian Bolshevik and Soviet statesman. "From Ilyich to Ilyich without imparkt or paralych," the public laughed about him.
It was the beginning of May 1963, half a year after