Tag Archives: Armenia

Create art, not war.

Today I want to talk about a topic that is very close to me, and this topic is about who I am and what made me who I am today. I shared with you part of my life in my book, but today is more about my life after the war.
My entire family (from both sides) are refugees. No one from my family was born and stayed lived at their birthplace all their lives. My entire family for three generations were fighting for their families, fighting to stay alive, and to build happy and peaceful lives for their children (including yours truly).
I was a refugee/immigrant twice in my life. Twice I had to start from scratch. Twice I learned a new language. When you are learning a language from the comfort of your home – it’s nice, it’s the joy of learning something new. When you have to work to support your child and family from the first day in a new country without knowing a single word of the native language in that country – it’s stressful. Stressful because you don’t have time for a smooth transition. You don’t have time to learn because you have a child or family members you need to provide with warm clothes, food, electricity, an apartment, heat, and education. To be honest, I didn’t have the opportunity to take a single class to learn English. I learned English while working, cleaning toilets and cleaning streets. I felt, and I feel that I am the luckiest person in the world. I could work. I put a roof over my child’s head. It felt like magic (even now, after so many years).
Mothers and any good human will do everything necessary to provide for their child and to survive. We all did this to the best of our abilities.

Survival has its price.

This is what I want to talk about today. I ran for my life from Baky, Azerbaijan. I did not know if I would survive. It was scary, extremely scary. I had my mother and grandmother to take care of. I was thinking only about them, how to protect them, how to keep them alive. When your survival instinct kicks in, you don’t feel panic, and you are not scared. You are just frozen, and you are surviving. At some point when Azerbaijani “people” surrounded the house and when my mom and I were hiding, I was thinking that I would show myself to them, knowing that they would torture and kill me slowly. I thought that it was ok because I would give my mom time to run. We survived, and I felt my entire life was passing as I had silence around me. I did not feel anything. I was trying to forget all that had happened. This was my mistake.
When we ran from Baky, we left (as many Armenian people in Azerbaijan) everything we loved, families separated, and many lost their loved ones.
My mom, grandmother, and I left practically everything, but for me leaving my easel and paint supplies was the end of my art life. I did not paint for many, many years, and for me, it was the end.
In the last year and a half, we lost our auntie, my mother-in-law, and my mom. Because of COVID, I could not say goodbye to my mom and even attend her funeral. At that time, I understood that I needed help, I needed help to be able to sleep at night, I needed help to release this “survival mode.” I understood that asking for help is not a sign of weakness. It’s a sign of bravery. It’s OK to pause for a few minutes and take care of yourself and your mental health.
Why did I decide to talk about this today? It’s simple —war in Artsakh (my nation, Armenian people of Artsakh under unprecedented war from Azerbaijan). Armenian people are still trying to survive, keeping their territory and homes. Even this week, Armenian soldiers were brutally killed by the Azerbaijan army. Azerbaijani army occupying Armenian territories, disconnecting life support such as gas and electricity). Mothers and fathers of Artsakh don’t know if their children will be alive tomorrow.
The same is going on in Ukraine. Watching all of this, how refugees are trying to survive, seeing crying children, mothers, fathers, grandparents brought all my memories back. I feel the pain and horror of those people.
Today, I want to ask you to help people to survive, to help people to survive not only physically (and this is a priority), but mentally as well.
Don’t let them go inside “their shells,” don’t let them feel “frozen” as I felt.

Any war has only one face: the face of horror, devastation, losses, refugees running for their lives, cold, hunger, homelessness, and feeling alone.


Talk to them, hug them, tell them that they are not alone. As an artist, I know the power of art. People who are trying to survive today have nothing left. They are trying to survive. So many children (an entire generation of children) lost access to simple things such as water, food, and their home. During the horror of the war, a simple piece of paper and pencil, coloring books, and toys would make their hearts happy (even for a few minutes). They would see the light, and they would see the bright colors of childhood. It’s important. It’s important to protect the mental health of refugees right away, today, not tomorrow.
So I am asking you to donate art supplies. If you are an artist, donate your artwork.

UNHCR
rescue.org
USAID

Let’s create art, not war.

Spitak earthquake

I will never forget December 7th, 1988. On this day, the Spitak earthquake took away more than 25,000 lives, and 150,000 were injured. So many towns and villages were affected or destroyed. I will never forget 11:41 local time when it happened. I still can hear the sound that the ground made at that time. I was in Yerevan, but because the earthquake in Spitak was one of the strongest and devastating, we felt it in Yerevan. 

The night before the earthquake, my mom and I landed in Yerevan after being hidden in Azerbaijan for more than ten days. I didn’t know if I would survive or be killed, until my plane landed in Armenia’s territory. It was late and a rainy night when our plane landed. When I understood that I survived, I dropped to my knees and kissed the Armenian land. I was crying, happy, but still had trouble believing that I survived and was safe. 

My grandmother was waiting for us. Because I was still in survivor mode, the peace of the house looked unreal, and I literally could not hear anything. I went to bed happy and believing that everything bad was behind us.

In the morning, when we woke up, my grandma made breakfast. After that, we decided to go outside to the store. Then 11:41 AM happened. My grandmother was holding her hands up putting her dress on, and at this second, the building started shaking! We heard the” earth cry.” 

I yelled to my mom and grandmom, “Run,” and we did run. We were living on the 8th floor and using the stairs we reached the six floor when all stopped. During this short time, so many people in Spitak and surrounding areas lost their lives. So many people lost their loved ones, homes, and everything. 

In Yerevan, we were scared to go back to our apartments/homes for so many months because of aftershocks. 

The entire world was shocked by what happened in Spitak. So many nations came to help. Armenian people will be forever grateful for that. 

Today marked 33 years since the Spitak Earthquake. I remember that day, I remember the innocent victims, and I pray that it will never happen again. 


My new tech blog post

Artsakh

Artsakh

In this post, I am asking for your help. I am asking for help to save the lives of mothers, fathers, children of Artsakh. We, as human beings and citizens of a free world, can’t stay silent or look away.
The Population Republic of Artsakh is only 150,932, and now, they are under another attack from Azerbaijan. Why? I can’t answer this question. I can’t explain why Azerbaijan committed “pogroms” of the Armenian population in 1988-1991. I don’t have an explanation of why Armenian people in Azerbaijan were killed, tortured, and raped. I don’t know and don’t want to know why they did it to Armenian people, civilians, families, children, mothers, grandmothers, grandfathers, brothers, uncles, aunties, and to the single families of each Armenian family in Azerbaijan.


What I do know is what I am, and my family survived the genocide committed by Azerbaijan to Armenian people. What I do know is that I really wish I could stop seeing my nightmares where I am trying to escape, save my family and loved ones from being killed in Azerbaijan. What I do know is that I will never stop seeing in front of me the 2-3 kilometer line of Armenian refugees, families with children and grandparents near the Azerbaijan airport trying to escape to ANYWHERE outside of Azerbaijan to stay alive.

I will never forget the pot of boiling water on top of our stove that my mother kept 24/7. She said, “if they come to our apartment, I will start splashing boiling water on them, and your grandmother will have the time to throw you from the balcony. I prefer that you die, then will let them torture and rape you before killing you.” I still hear every single word of the Armenian plane’s pilot saying, “You are in Armenian territory now. No one will touch you. You are safe now.” I remember how my heart counted every half second before the plane took off, and I still hear how everyone on the entire plane started crying and praying because we all understood that WE JUST SURVIVED. The entire plane survived, the entire plane of lucky people. Not too many Armenian people from Azerbaijan were as lucky as we were.

Many, many Armenians were killed, and before they were killed, they were tortured. The lucky ones, including myself, were relocated. We lost everything, which was built by generation after generation. But we did not complain about losing material things. Even when Armenian families were sleeping on the streets, train stations, and had nothing to eat or wear, in the cold or hot weather, we always felt lucky if all members of the family survived.
Armenian people survived two genocides: in Turkey in 1915 and in Azerbaijan in 1988-1991.

Now Armenian people of Artsakh are facing 3rd genocide by Azerbaijan, and that’s why I am asking you to please help the people of Artsakh. Please, help the children, mothers, and grandparents. Please help with your voices and donations. Every voice counts, every donation counts. I am asking you as a person who survived genocide. I did not read about it, I did not hear about it, I EXPERIENCED it, and that’s why I am asking you, please help. Please, don’t let another generation of Armenian people lose members of their families, homes, and lives. The Armenian people have survived two genocides, started their lives from nothing, and we are still standing and smiling. I am asking you to help the people of Artsakh to survive, smile, and not to bury their loved ones. Please, help the children of Artsakh to see the happy dream. Dreams where they are happy and not trying to escape being killed.

Please call your U.S. Representative now ask to help the people of Artsakh and Armenia


Call Your Senators to Support Artsakh Aid; Block anti-Armenian Amendment

If you can help with ANY donation, please do it.

P.S. I am not referring to ANY link outside of this blog “proving” that Armenian people were killed in Azerbaijan. I saw it all myself.

Here is the link to my book where I shared part of my life with you, guys. They part where I tried to stay alive and keep my family alive.

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