ArmInfo. The denial of the historical fact of the Armenian Genocide by the Armenian authorities, the desecration of the memory of martyrs recognized as saints, the silence of the church and the collaboration of a significant part of the intelligentsia, in particular historians, with mediocrities, leads to the devaluation and falsification of national memory and heritage.
This was written on his Facebook page by Armenian historian, former director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute at the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia Hayk Demoyan.
"We are marking the 110th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the most shameful and depressing situation. The obvious patronage of some intellectual circles of the Diaspora to a group of foreign agents who illegally seized power in Armenia cannot go unnoticed either. As a result, we are witnessing a new creation of a national tragedy, in which everyone is participating, each to the best of their ability. Everyone hopes that their silence and anti-state actions will be quickly forgotten. But these are empty hopes. Everything is recorded to be passed on to future generations," Demoyan noted.
The historian noted that this is only part of the current state policy, explaining that inciting hatred and intolerance is one of the most effective methods of maintaining power.
"The memory of the Armenian Genocide is, first and foremost, a matter of security and self-preservation, not a matter of ensuring border trade or alternative exports. If you forget about it or consciously consign this memory to oblivion, you are doomed to repeat history. This is a simple formula: widespread apathy and dulling of the collective instinct for self-preservation, sponsored by the authorities and their propagandists, are aimed precisely at destroying this instinct," the historian explained.
In this vein, Demoyan said that in the coming days he will publish previously unpublished facts with a number of disgusting episodes found in the Armenian Genocide Museum so that the public can see the true identities of some people and their patrons who are making hopeless efforts to become visible and recognizable in society. In addition, he expressed his intention to publish short stories on the Armenian Genocide, which in a publicly accessible format will help to understand the real scale and consequences of the tragedy that occurred.
"I also call on all of you to join this important ceremony of remembrance and remembrance. Until April 24, as a sign of respect and remembrance, read five memoirs of a survivor: just five destinies that will help us understand and re-evaluate human life and heroism, as well as true values, and come out of the nationwide stupor that foreshadows a new catastrophe. I assure you that reading such books will help strengthen the understanding that, as a people doomed to complete destruction, we have no right to show intolerance and hatred towards each other," Demoyan concluded.
In February, the Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of Armenia Zhanna Andreasyan, during a session of the National Assembly, stated that the repair of the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex would not be completed by the 110th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, justifying this by the fact that the condition of the complex was worse than expected.
Earlier, the Prime Minister of Armenia, at a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community in Switzerland, questioned the fact of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. "We must understand what happened and why it happened. And how we perceived it, through whom we perceived it: how did it happen that in 1939 there was no agenda for the Armenian Genocide, but in 1950 it appeared? How this happened, we should understand or should not understand," the Armenian Prime Minister noted. Independent experts are inclined to believe that he is apparently either unaware that the term Genocide was introduced into circulation by genocide scholar Raphael Lemkin only in 1944, or he is deliberately trying to create a narrative that "this issue was artificially raised by the Soviet Union to put pressure on Turkey."