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Victory Belongs to All

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  • Victory Belongs to All

    VICTORY BELONGS TO ALL
    Editorial

    Hayots Ashkhar Daily
    Published on May 09, 2008
    Armenia


    And it is impossible to divide it


    The day of victory and the anniversary of the liberation of Shoushi is
    the cherished day of our calendar when we perceive ourselves as an
    entire unity` as triumphed people, a dignified nation and state that
    has earned the right to voice its opinion on the global level.

    Of course, all kinds of disputes and struggles around political
    beliefs, economic interests and other permanent and temporary values
    are possible inside such unity, but when the conversation goes around
    the May victories uniting us and the common responsibility deriving
    thereof, there automatically arises the following question: what do we
    have to divide in this particular sphere?

    The liberation of Shoushi ` an inseparable part of our generation's
    biography, is the `common capital' which cannot be divided into parts,
    no matter how much we may try. Neither is it possible to insist that it
    belongs to the former or present-day authorities, this or that
    political force and even some exclusive individual who is the author of
    the most heroic feat.

    The logic `whether the victory belongs to me or to you' transfers the
    continuing internal political disputes to an extremely dangerous plane.
    If the victory of Shoushi can be viewed by such logic too, what's the
    idea of a motherland, common memory and everything else that is
    impossible to divide?

    To view our common victory through the prism of an internal political
    struggle is a harmful bacillus that has already produced its impact on
    some participants of the Karabakh War and the heroic battle of Shoushi;
    it has even influenced some ordinary citizens.

    Discords are always possible while `measuring' each person's investment
    in the common victory following each war and the political processes
    resulting thereof, but as regards the defeat, it always remains in the
    status of an orphan. And only after the change of a whole generation
    does there arrive the moment of making an accurate and impartial
    assessment on the people's common victory. We are sure that the same
    will happen while assessing the Karabakh War in future.

    So is there any need to beat to the punch today, on the regular
    anniversary of the liberation of Shoushi, and view the history of the
    unfinished foreign policy confrontation through the prism of the
    `black-and-white' logic?

    If lose the `last stronghold' of our unity towards the external
    challenges, we may also be deprived of the outcomes of the common
    victory. Thereafter, we will certainly try to attribute the
    responsibility of the common defeat to one another - a situation that
    has happened many times in the course of our history.

    Smart and far-sighted peoples never try to divide the victories they
    gained in the past; they think about new ones. While the short-sighted
    peoples, on the contrary, hold such long disputes over the
    participation of this or that individual in the process of achieving
    the victories that the enemy perceives the moment of launching an
    attack and seizing back the victory. Today, the temporary splitting in
    the Armenian society has made our enemy happy, but it is not yet sure
    whether the Armenians will become united again should Karabakh or
    Shoushi become an issue of discussion.

    On May 2, Ter-Petrosyan made the following statement, `In case there is
    a military threat, I myself will call on the people and the activists
    of the pan-national movement to temporarily cease the struggle and
    settle down to the protection of their motherland.' But if the
    protection of his motherland is really his cherished desire, what gives
    him the right to approve the unrestrained propaganda which now tends to
    divide the outcomes of the victory gained at the cost of the lives of
    thousands of martyrs.

    All that is gained through bloodsheds is a sacred value, and a sacred
    value is never divided into parts; it should be worshiped devotedly,
    without any bias. Our common victory - the liberation of Shoushi and
    the entire territory of Karabakh, is the value which has only one
    owner, and that owner is the Armenian nation. All the rest ` from
    soldier to general, have been and continue to remain the descendents of
    the Armenian people, regardless the form and the extent of their
    investment. Otherwise, the people will cease their existence as whole
    unity resisting the external challenges, and the state will turn into a
    tool for satisfying some temporary ambitions existing inside it.

    Realizing that the united responsibility is the last and the most
    powerful stronghold for the existence of the Armenian people, today, on
    May 9, we congratulate all the participants of the unprecedented heroic
    battle of Karabakh, regardless their political affiliation and views.
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