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Our Boys Fought and Died So That We Could Live Well

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  • Our Boys Fought and Died So That We Could Live Well

    Our Boys Fought and Died So That We Could Live Well

    Anahit Danielyan
    06-05-2008 16:57:18 - KarabakhOpen

    43 year-old Margarita still cannot come to grips with the fact that we
    lost so many good boys during the Artsakh War. `What a great bunch of
    guys they were - Davit, Ashot, Vitali...' she states as she counts off
    their names one by one. Margarita could go on telling stories about all
    of them: how they would try to maintain themselves correctly and at
    attention in the company of the girls or how the boys would delve into
    their pockets for some leftover sweets to give them. And the girls, in
    turn, would help out the boys whenever possible.

    At first glance you wouldn't think that Margarita Taranyan, a woman of
    graceful steps and beauty, experienced the entire tumultuous course of
    the Artsakh War not only as a nurse but also carrying a gun when the
    need arose. As she relates, carrying a gun didn't come easy since she
    knew in her heart that she didn't have it in her to kill anyone. At the
    same time, along with the boys and the other girls, Karineh, the
    Anahits the second Margarita and Gayaneh, she participated in battles
    along a number of fronts.

    In 1992, when the Azeri forces had advanced to the gates of Askeran,
    she came upon a notice in Stepanakert announcing the formation of an
    `Artsakh Women's Detachment' and that women and girls were being
    recruited. She immediately decided to enlist but knew that her
    traditionally inclined parents would be difficult to convince. She
    remained resolute however in her choice.

    Margarita recounts that in the beginning she would fool her parents,
    telling them that the unit wasn't participating in the battles and that
    they remained close to the city. Later on, when the truth came out it
    was too late. She describes that, `When I enlisted the training we
    received was quite varied. It included civil defense, first aid, map
    reading, physical exercises, even how to dig defense trenches. Only 12
    out of the 25 women who started the course made it till the end.'

    In the fall of 1992, when the unit was prepared to assume its first
    military operation, a commander of one of the detachments came to the
    training center and requested that it requisition three nurses to his
    command. Margarita and two girls named Anahit were sent. The first
    battle they participated in ended in victory and there weren't even any
    casualties. `That night we mumbled about how we weren't given the
    chance to show off our acquired skills. The chance to do so was quick
    in coming but it never occurred to me that my first act of dispensing
    medical treatment would be to an Azeri guy. They brought the injured
    Azeri soldier to our tent at midnight. We treated his wounds and even
    fed the tall, handsome lad.' is how Margarita recollects her first
    night in battle.

    Margarita's large black eyes get teary every time she relives those
    battles; how intense they were and how many boys died in her hands. `I
    still can't fathom how we came out of it alive. It's unbelievable that
    my health wasn't affected after all those cold and difficult days.' Her
    eyes fill with tears as she recounts how the other girl named Margarita
    in the unit met her fate, how they had to wait till midnight to collect
    her dead body from the battlefield. Margarita wrote the following entry
    in her diary about that fateful day - Today, our unit had its first
    victim. Margarita Sargsyan was killed. We all knew that one of us could
    be killed at any time but we weren't expecting such a heavy blow.'

    Now, even with the war years behind her, Margarita, who received a
    degree in child education, continues to serve in the ranks of the
    Defense Army with the rank of Major at the Central Command
    Headquarters. She also serves as the Secretary of the Artsakh branch of
    the Armenian Relief Society. She tries to juggle the two jobs and
    extends a loving hand to all in need. She notes with a degree of
    sadness that, `It greatly concerns me that it is not customary to
    extend a helping hand to those around us. It was just the opposite
    during the war; every one would hand over their last piece of bread to
    help a soul in need.'

    Sadly Margarita, who experienced the vicissitudes of the war while
    never loosing touch with her feminine side, never found someone to
    spend her life with. Now she lives alone in a one-room apartment, on a
    major thoroughfare in Stepanakert, allotted to her by the Army. She
    says her salary is enough to get by on, as she is a person with meager
    needs.

    `We have to live in peaceful, normal conditions. We must help one
    another because that's the ideal that our boys fought and died for.'
    recounts Margarita who, for services rendered in the defense of the
    fatherland, was bestowed with the honorary `Combat Cross', 1st Class;
    1st and 2nd rank of `Impeccable Service' and the `Medal of Motherly
    Gratitude'.
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