I've worked with Narek in Artsakh, and proud to say that we are supporting this project with a 1,000,000 AMD grant from @LorikFund.
Instead of giving up after forced displacement Narek and his team are working. Work work work. ✊🇦🇲
104 students supported. ~$55,000 invested in their futures.
All forcibly displaced from Artsakh.
Through Lorik Fund’s Aznavour Saghyan Scholarship Fund, students like this are able to stay in university.
Help us reach the next one.
🔗 Link in bio @LorikFund
It’s pretty simple. If you buy and sell from the people that butchered small children, drowned them in the sea, burned our homes and churches, and then sell that crap to our own community to make money, you are a traitor.
Boycott turkish products & their “ Armenian” Importers
Our 13th family to receive a home in #armenia. The family of fallen Hero Nver Arstamyan from #Artsakh.
You can help. Become a supporter of @lorikfund
https://t.co/THWitQByMr
Thank you for supporting @LorikFund 's initiative providing homes to families forcibly displaced from Artsakh.
To date 13 families have received a permanent home. https://t.co/AzO3Jz09u1
Today, September 2, marks the Independence Day of the Republic of Artsakh.
Thirty-four years ago, on September 2, 1991, during a joint session of the People’s Deputies’ Regional Council of Nagorno-Karabakh and the District Council of Shahumyan, with the participation of deputies at all levels, the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh — also known as the Republic of Artsakh — was proclaimed.
Despite the current occupation, the steadfast vision of return endures, carried with determination in the hearts of generations.
“Netanyahu’s tack toward long withheld Israeli recognition of the Armenian Genocide - in the wake of its arming of Azerbaijan’s blockade and genocide of Artsakh’s Armenian Christians and amid ongoing threats to Jerusalem’s Armenian Christian Quarter and serious and sustained violations of international law in Gaza, akin to Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Artsakh - must, if it is to represent more than an attempt at tactical cover for is transgressions, be followed by a sharp break with Isreal’s military alliance with Azerbaijan and public pressure on Turkey to abandon its denial and obstruction of justice for the Armenian Genocide.” - @ANCA_DC Executive Director Aram Hamparian
Netanyahu's 'recognition' of the Armenian Genocide is a cynical attempt to use our nation's tragedy as cover to whitewash Israel's atrocities in Gaza – and avoid accountability for Israel's role in arming Azerbaijan's ethnic cleansing of Artsakh.
Armenians aren't buying it.
If Netanyahu wants to truly recognize the Armenian Genocide — he can stop selling weapons to Azerbaijan to ethnically cleanse Armenians. Until then, as he continues to starve and kill kids in Gaza, it’s all hollow.
Not everything at vernisage is toorkish, but some things certainly are. There are plenty of great Armenian craftsman producing and selling products at vernisage, but these toorkish textiles should be avoided, not simply because they enrich a country that occupies our land and...
We’ve been right about Pashinyan for the last 7 years, and we’re right today. No negotiation process he touches ends up well for the Armenian people.
November 9th 2020 Agreement: Failed
Return of POWs: Failed
Blockade of Artsakh: Failed
The Ethnic Cleansing of Artsakh: Failed
Return of Hostages: Failed
But sure, let’s try one more time, and this time on a deal reliant on the word of Aliyev and Trump.
We’ve seen peace deals before.
We’ve seen corridors before.
We’ve seen the US negotiate other countries geopolitics for them before.
We know what happens next.
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Then Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.”
— Matthew 16:24
On June 19, 1920, in Tiflis (modern-day Tbilisi), on Golovin Street (now Rustaveli Avenue), Armenian avenger Aram Yerkanyan assassinated Fatali Khan Khoyski, the Prime Minister of the first Musavat Republic of Azerbaijan.
This act marked one of the earliest operations of Operation Nemesis—a covert campaign approved at the 9th General Congress of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) in 1919.
Khoyski, along with Minister of Internal Affairs Beyboud Khan Javanshir, had played a central role in organizing the massacres of Armenians in Baku, Shamakhi, Gandzak (modern day Ganja), and other regions in 1918. These atrocities were carried out by Turkish forces under the command of Nuri Pasha, with direct support from the Musavat government, resulting in the mass killing of Armenian civilians.
Aram Yerkanyan, who opened fire in broad daylight in the city center, represented the resolve of Armenian operatives to pursue justice. According to eyewitnesses, Khoyski spotted Yerkanyan a moment before the shot—but saw nothing after.
Operation Nemesis was a secret assassination campaign conducted by a special unit of the ARF between 1920 and 1922. Its objective was to identify and eliminate Ottoman and regional officials responsible for the Armenian Genocide and related massacres. The operation involved detailed intelligence work, coordination across multiple countries, and a targeted approach to its missions. Among its most notable actions was the killing of Talaat Pasha in Berlin in 1921—one of the chief architects of the 1915 Genocide.
The assassination of Fatali Khan Khoyski was the first high-profile act of Operation Nemesis. It set the precedent for a series of targeted killings aimed not at collective punishment, but at personal accountability—where formal justice systems had failed to act.