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Remembering Shushi: 18 Years After Liberation

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  • Remembering Shushi: 18 Years After Liberation

    REMEMBERING SHUSHI: 18 YEARS AFTER LIBERATION
    By Suren Musayelyan

    ArmeniaNow
    May 7, 2010

    When the bravest of Armenia's sons were on standby before launching
    an offensive that would mark a turning point in the Karabakh war 18
    years ago today, many perhaps had the glory of their World War II
    veteran grandfathers on their minds.

    In the early hours of May 8, 1992, 47 years after Armenians danced
    Kochari in Berlin at the end of World War Two in Europe, elite
    Armenian soldiers began to storm Shushi, an Azeri-held strategic
    town some ten kilometers south of the Karabakh capital. A day later,
    the Azeri stronghold that had turned the lives of civilians in
    lower-lying Stepanakert and nearby villages into hell, fell, opening
    up opportunities for further Armenian victories in the Karabakh war.

    Today, 18 years after that victory, participants of the Shushi
    liberation remember those days and their meaning for the future
    victories that would come in Karabakh battlefields.

    Doctor Aida Serobyan says she went to Karabakh after seeing on TV that
    people there were in dire need of doctors. She says the liberation
    of Shushi gave the residents of Stepanakert an opportunity to leave
    the basements of their homes and walk outside without fearing Azeri
    shelling for the first time in two years.

    "Babies, who were born in cellars, saw light for the first time after
    Shushi's liberation," says the doctor.

    Igor Sargsyan, one of the participants of the Shushi liberation,
    fought in the detachment consisting of students. Sargsyan says the
    Karabakh war is not over yet and that Armenians should be ready for
    renewed hostilities any moment.

    Sargsyan says the years of relative peace in Armenia and Karabakh
    that followed the 1994 ceasefire have somewhat altered the values as
    "heroism, devotion and self-sacrifice have given way to greed and
    meanness as virtues."

    But both Sargsyan and Serobyan say they will again go and fight for
    their homeland should it need their services.

    "If not we, then who was supposed to stand for the defense of the
    Homeland? Our generation performed its duty," says Sargsyan.
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