04:54:00 14.06.2026
This photo was taken about ten years ago, on November 30, 2016, when I had almost just landed in Armenia with the intention of settling permanently. It was the first time I saw the Nzhdeh statue in Yerevan up close. It had been installed on May 28 of the same year, about two months after the end of the Four-Day April War.
These events were a major motivation for my decision to move to Armenia, and I remember those days very well. In general, the public spirit was highly militant, and there were discussions, for example, about liberating Nakhichevan, something I often thought about and dreamed of as well. We were still enjoying the fruits of victory that our freedom fighters had carved out with their sweat and blood during the Artsakh Liberation War.
However, now, ten years later, I seem to be living in a completely opposite reality, where Artsakh is under occupation by the enemy, and instead of discussions about liberating Nakhichevan, people have reconciled themselves to this humiliated and defeated state. Instead of showing the strength of our arms, we show “heart emojis,” and conversations about struggle have been replaced with talks of fake “peace.” This 180-degree change did not come out of nowhere; it is clearly the result of a neo-Bolshevik conspiracy of foreign anti-Armenian forces and their treacherous collaborators who seek to eliminate our independence and destroy our country.
I have witnessed this abrupt change with my own eyes, and many, hearing this, may think I have become deeply disillusioned. On one hand, that would be true, but on the other, my sense of responsibility toward the Fatherland has only grown stronger. After returning from the 44-day conspiratorial war, year by year, the realization has become stronger within me that something must be done not only to restore the fighting spirit I saw in 2016, but to surpass it, because that is what our current critical situation demands.
In these days, when almost everyone has become submissive and carries a defeatist mindset, I am sometimes considered insane when I speak about bringing Baku to its knees and dismembering Azerbaijan into several parts. But my experience over the past ten years has shown me that our people often swing from one extreme to another, and that far too much depends on the nations leader.
I am confident that when the time comes to have a true national leadership and to build a national state, we will look back at these days and laugh at our absurd way of thinking, and we will wonder how we, as a nation, became so foolish and humiliated. We will overcome these difficult times, and once again speak about liberating our lands, because there is a dream that is Greater Armenia and it must be realized...
One Nation, One State, One Will
Towards Greater Armenia, Towards a Glorious Future!
#This_Time_the_World
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