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Silence Is Also Eloquent

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  • Silence Is Also Eloquent

    SILENCE IS ALSO ELOQUENT
    ARAM ABRAHAMYAN

    http://www.aravot.am/en/2012/07/26/94610/
    July 26, 2012 13:09

    The fact that Vano Siradeghyan's topic starts to concern our society
    from time to time is absolutely logical - this figure is one of the
    founders of our state. Who wants to see only the bad things in that
    state, naturally, will make a few biting remarks on this issue.

    However, I am trying to notice both the positive and the negative
    things in both the state and the founders of it and since Vano is
    not around, at the moment I would like to join those who stress his
    qualities, realizing, however, that the person who worked as the
    Minister of Interior in the hardest transition period could not be a
    little lower than the angels in all respects. I started to communicate
    with Vano unofficially in the fall of 1994 and I can assert that he
    noticed the drawbacks that were there in embryo at the time already
    and today they have become a hundred, a thousand times bigger. And, for
    example, his "Shamiram" pre-election program, which has been severely
    criticized, in my opinion, is an attempt to oppose first of all those
    manifestations of the government - did women fit the parliament more
    than Karamels, Kombikers and Nver Chakhoyan? You would say, certainly,
    the parliament should be elected by the people and the Ministry
    of Interior should not establish artificial parliamentary groups -
    in theory, it is right, but in practice, politics is the art of the
    possible. Let those who put Karamels and Kombikers in the parliament
    for the first time in 1995 not pretend that they have always been
    for fair elections.

    Generally, I have had many opportunities to become convinced that Vano
    was farsighted and already predicted many of today's vices at the
    time, when the change of power hadn't taken place yet and he hadn't
    published his publicistic articles. Vazgen Sargsyan once told me
    "many people praise Vano's intuition, but they don't understand that
    he just thinks very much about important things." Now, I am convinced,
    he continues thinking. And if he doesn't speak, sometimes silence is
    more eloquent than words.

    I share the wishes of those who want him back. However, that he comes
    back to Armenia, not to politics. His and all his Karabakh Committee
    colleagues' hour of triumph was years 1988-90 - their perceptions of
    the political struggle are connected to that period whether they want
    it or not. And today we live in absolutely different Armenia and in
    an absolutely different world. I think that there is no need to prove
    it thoroughly and highly appreciating those people's contribution,
    I think that their approaches are obsolete.

    >From the moral perspective, Vano's return will certainly play a
    positive role. Not to mention, how much the literature will gain
    from that.

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