Zoom Qartulad Apr 2026

By Nini Kapanadze

So the next time you join a Zoom meeting and hear someone shout “Ra ginda, ara me munda?” (What do you want, I’m not muted?), don’t be annoyed. Be honored. You’ve just been invited to the digital supra . Pull up a chair. Pour a glass. And for the love of all things holy—turn on your camera.

Suddenly, grandmas who had never used a smartphone were learning to “raise a glass” by lifting their laptops. Uncles were toasting with chacha in one hand and muting themselves with the other after a particularly loud “Gaumarjos!” The Zoom gallery view became a digital supra table: 20 faces in squares, each with a plate of khachapuri visible in the frame, each with a story. zoom qartulad

Georgian internet, while improving, is not perfect. During government-imposed internet restrictions or simple infrastructure lags, Zoom becomes a game of Russian roulette. One person’s audio arrives 12 seconds late, creating a surreal echo chamber. A toast about unity is heard as a disjointed glitch-folk remix.

When the pandemic forced this ritual online, Georgians refused to let the app dictate the rules. They hacked it. By Nini Kapanadze So the next time you

It started as a necessity. In March 2020, as the world slammed its doors against the pandemic, Georgia—a country of supra feasts, polyphonic singing, and fierce face-to-face negotiation—found itself suddenly, eerily silent. The tamada could no longer clink his glass. The supra table, the gravitational center of Georgian social life, vanished overnight.

Then there is the unspoken rule of the “Random Uncle.” Every Zoom Qartulad call has one participant who never speaks, keeps their camera off, but whose name is listed. Is he listening? Is he asleep? Is he even in the same country? No one asks. He is the digital ghost of every Georgian gathering—present but silent, holding a metaphorical glass of mineral water. From Crisis to Custom What makes Zoom Qartulad truly remarkable is how quickly it moved from a crisis tool to a cultural staple. Even as Georgia reopened, people kept Zooming. Pull up a chair

Tech startups in Tbilisi are now working on a “Georgian Mode” for video conferencing: a button that automatically allows five people to speak at once, a chacha glass visual effect, and a “Supra Timer” that reminds you when it’s been 45 minutes since the last toast.

Gaumarjos, Zoom Qartulad. Nini Kapanadze is a Tbilisi-based writer covering the intersection of technology, folklore, and fermented grapes.

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