
ArmInfo. From May 11 to 17, representatives of Armenia took part in the " Truth is One " project in St. Petersburg, dedicated to the 82nd anniversary of the Soviet people's victory in the Great Patriotic War.
According to the press service of the Russian House in Yerevan, over the course of the week, participants attended lectures by leading historians, visited thematic museums and memorial sites, met with survivors of the Siege of Leningrad, and participated in roundtables and discussions on patriotic education of youth and combating the falsification of history. A particularly moving highlight of the program was the meeting with female survivors of the Siege of Leningrad, who shared childhood memories of the blockade that deeply touched everyone present. According to the source, Armenia was represented by Anahit Grigoryants, director of the branch of the International Public Organization "Union of Orthodox Women," and Tatevik Lazaryan, a journalist and teacher.
In her welcoming remarks, Grigoryants emphasized the special bond between Armenia and Leningrad during the tragic years of the siege. "Armenia took in more than 200 young, malnourished children from besieged Leningrad, who found a second home here. Ten Armenian, Heroes of the Soviet Union, fought for Leningrad. Among them were Lieutenant Colonel Nelson Stepanyan, a twice-decorated ground-attack pilot of the Black Sea and Baltic Fleets, and Admiral of the Fleet Ivan Isakov, who served as Chief of the Naval Academy in Leningrad, a member of the Front's Military Council, and a representative of the Supreme High Command Headquarters. Out of 100,000 Armenian defenders of Leningrad—40,000 of whom were volunteers and city defenders— 20,000 never returned home. For a small country like Armenia, these are huge figures," she noted.
Grigoryants also shared a photograph of the Yerevan monument "To the Children of Sieged Leningrad" and noted that every year on January 27, the day the siege was completely lifted, flowers are laid at this monument in Armenia. In turn, Lazaryan presented her research paper, "Postmemory and Family Narratives of the Great Patriotic War," which explores the mechanisms of preserving and transmitting family memory between generations. She explained that her interest in the research topic was sparked by the stories of her parents, as well as the biographies of grandparents, relatives, and family members whose lives intertwined with wartime events. "History becomes closer, more comprehensible, and emotionally meaningful when revealed through real human destinies and personal biographies," the journalist emphasized.
According to the source, the project was organized by the St. Petersburg Committee for Foreign Relations with the support of Rossotrudnichestvo, bringing together compatriots from various countries around the topic of preserving historical memory.