Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Letter to Monte: `Shame on us for abusing your legacy'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Letter to Monte: `Shame on us for abusing your legacy'

    A Letter to Monte: `Shame on us for abusing your legacy'

    hetq
    11:14, June 15, 2012

    By Norick Markosian


    It has been 19 years since you passed. A lot of things have changed,
    but a lot of things have also remained the same.

    Volumes have been written about you and your life, including an
    autobiography by your brother Markar. No one really knows what really
    took place on that godforsaken day of June 12, 1993.

    A couple of hours after you left this world, Saribek also passed away
    from the wounds that he received during that day's firefight. About
    three years later, Komitas lost his life on a reconnaissance mission.
    Vartan died of heart disease there years ago.

    Now, I can't help but to remember what you had once said once about
    your martyred soldiers, `Seems like the good people are leaving us in
    an untimely manner.' A few days after you passed away, we as a nation
    gave you a state funeral with full military honors, attended by many
    dignitaries and several of your close friends.

    We have erected monuments and named schools in your memory. There is
    even a military academy named after you. Your eternal home looks
    straight to Mount Ararat. Many of your lieutenants have become
    generals and are holding major posts in our military, but
    collectively, as a nation, we have failed to make your dream of an
    independent Armenia, with a just and lawful society, come true.

    About sixteen months after your passing, the Artsakh liberation war
    ended. It seems that our nation has to be first in everything: as we
    were the first nation who accepted Christianity as their state
    religion, we are also the first nation that annihilated its enemy's
    forces and their will to continue to fight. But thanks to the
    shortsightedness of our government officials, we agreed to sign a
    cease fire agreement rather than a capitulation accord.

    As of August, 1994 we have lost close to 300 of our sons in border
    skirmishes, due to the enemy's violation of the cease fire agreement.

    You should see the self-assured and victorious pose that Aliev Jr.
    assumes when he sits around the negotiation table to discuss the
    status of Artsakh with our presidents. It is still a mystery to me why
    we need to negotiate the fate of our nation and our national security
    when we were the clear cut victors.

    The territories where you and many of our nation's brightest
    sacrificed their lives to liberate, has now become a subject of
    debate. Contrary to your belief that our national security interests
    and long-lasting independence is directly related to the union of a
    free Artsakh and Armenia, some of our leaders are considering the
    return of the liberated territories in lieu of a stable peace with our
    neighboring enemy.

    Maybe it is the existence of this trend of thought among our top
    leaders that has prevented them from implementing a comprehensive plan
    for the resettlement of the liberated territories. Not much has
    changed in Artsakh since you saw it last, except for some newly built
    hotels and restaurants to attract Diaspora tourists and put money in
    the pockets of a few rich people who are connected to the top
    government officials.

    To state the state of Armenia for you, I have only one piece of good
    news - we are still `independent'. On one occasion you were asked by a
    reporter, `how would you like to see Armenia in the future?', and you
    quickly responded, `free of corruption'.

    Unfortunately the prevailing oligarchic/feudalistic system in today's
    Armenia has resulted in a lawlessness where rich people have
    monopolized every profitable business in Armenia and are exempt from
    paying taxes.

    The national poverty rate is almost 70%, our national debt has
    ballooned to unbelievable proportions, largely due to the fact that
    majority of the financial help which we receive from IMF and World
    Bank loans go straight to the pockets of the oligarchs.

    Our infrastructure is in shambles, there is no social welfare, nor is
    there any public healthcare system in place. The justice system is
    also suffering greatly. Judges and court decisions are bought and
    sold, like cheap merchandise on a given Sunday at a public bazaar,
    where one cannot help but to notice the abundance of imported goods
    manufactured in Turkey.

    Meanwhile, casinos frequented by the oligarchs and their family
    members, residential high-rise buildings with selling price tags only
    affordable by Diaspora Armenians, restaurants along the Zangou river
    where only tourist and few locals can afford to dine, are being built
    like wild flowers blossoming in spring time.

    The fact that our young generation today does not foresee a future for
    themselves, let alone a bright one, has given birth to a sense of
    hopelessness, resulting in a massive exodus from the motherland.

    So far, about 1.5 million Armenians have immigrated to the four
    corners of the world to secure their family's daily bread. The
    majority of the rest who have stayed will immigrate as soon as
    possible if they find the opportunity. All the while, officials insist
    on a population count of almost 3 million people for Armenia. Our
    population count fluctuates from election to election.

    Maybe, in next election, I will pay a visit to some of the voting
    precincts in the hope of seeing you and many of our martyrs who were
    lost in the liberation war. I say this because, when it comes voting
    time, miracles do happen in our country, where dead people arise from
    their graves and vote for a certain candidate.

    Last but not least, while our oligarchs are busy stealing our nation's
    wealth, destroying the environment, demolishing historical buildings,
    and turning our country into a cheap nightclub destination for
    visitors from our neighboring countries, our proverbial enemies,
    Turkey and Azerbaijan, are arming themselves to the teeth and waiting
    for the opportune moment to once and for all resolve the Armenian
    question.

    Yes the same Azeris, backed by Turkey and other superpowers of the
    Middle East, who you and the rest of our fighters beat to a pulp, are
    dreaming about plowing our land and discarding our nation into the
    annals of the history.

    Shame on us for abusing and mishandling the legacyyou left us. And
    further shame on us for not having finished what you started. I leave
    you in peace now.



    Home page



    Print

Working...
X