Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Winds Of Change

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

  • Winds Of Change

    WINDS OF CHANGE

    Dr. Zareh Ouzounian, Toronto, 2 November 2012

    Dr. Ouzounian's article is published as guest editorial. Ed.

    Many thought this could never happen.

    Yet we all WANTED this to happen.

    The winds of change are finally blowing in Armenia.[sardarapat.jpg]

    The pre-independence years and the initial following years saw an
    Armenian people energized by statehood, excited by independence, and
    full of hope for a better future. And a lot was achieved, including
    winning a war against all odds. Anyone who had the opportunity of
    visiting Armenia in those early days of independence will remember
    that despite very dire economic conditions, there was "something"
    in the air, there was energy, hope, and excitement.

    Unfortunately, the picture has changed since. The colors have faded.

    Despair has replaced hope. Our record in recent years is less than
    satisfactory when it comes to governance, transparency, democracy,
    environment, equal opportunity, and civic rights. These concerns,
    along with an exponential growth of corruption, and the lack of
    hope for change are the main causes for an unprecedented number of
    Armenians leaving their ancestral land, emigrating mainly to Russia,
    the Americas and Western Europe for a better life. If it continues
    at this rate, this hemorrhage will potentially pose an existential
    question for Armenia because demographics are such a fundamental sine
    qua non factor of statehood.

    Even Azerbaijan president Ilham Aliyev alluded recently to this
    catastrophe, as reported by Naira Hayrumian in Lragir.am.  Armenia
    is losing its citizens to emigration to the tune of over 100,000/year!

    However, alongside this bleak picture, there seems to emerge a new
    glimmer of hope. We are witnessing the birth of a call for a "New
    Order". A significant number of Armenian citizens from all walks of
    life are starting to voice their refusal of the status quo. Several
    grass-root movements are emerging to reclaim their hope, their
    dignity, and their national and individual aspirations. Ecological,
    cultural, heritage, political reform (e.g. the Sardarapat Movement),
    civic rights, several groups are getting organized at the grass-root
    level with the stated objective of creating a more equitable, more
    harmonious, and more transparent society.

    These various groups, also known as "activists", or "civic rights
    movements" have been registering small victories, one small battle
    at a time. Their most recent success stories include the salvaging
    of the Trchkan waterfall from the construction of a power plant at
    that site, the preservation of green space in downtown Yerevan known
    as Mashtots purak, and the resignation of Member of Parliament Ruben
    Hairapetyan following the murder of an innocent man, Vahe Avetyan, in
    Hairapetyan's Harsnakar restaurant. Likewise, their sustained efforts
    have succeeded in creating a high-profile media exposure for the plight
    of the Teghout wild forest and surrounding villages facing extinction
    because of a proposed mega copper-mining project. The audience of these
    "civic movements " is growing steadily, and their voices are getting
    louder. Their collective actions have the potential of initiating a
    real metamorphosis of the Armenian psyche, and possibly nothing short
    of a real Renaissance of the Armenian society.

    These collective concerns, as well as the emerging new voices with
    their accompanying hopes and demands of a civil society, belong to
    the whole Armenian Nation, in the Diaspora as well as in Armenia and
    Artsakh. If we truly believe in the "One Nation" concept, we cannot
    stay on the sidelines of these proposed reforms. While it is true that
    change can occur only from within (Armenia), it is also true that the
    Diaspora can play a crucial role in the search for more transparency,
    justice, and accountability.

    This is the time for the Diaspora to stand-up with our people,
    this is the time for the Diaspora to reflect and return to the very
    fundamentals that guided the creation of all our political parties,
    churches, benevolent groups, and other institutions. This is the time
    to refrain from political manoeuvering, influence-peddling and power
    struggles that have misdirected our Diaspora's actions in recent
    years, thus becoming part of the problem. This is the time to think
    of new and more principled strategies to try and become part of the
    solution. This is the time to stop playing "small p" politics and to
    defend the principles for which all our institutions were created.

    As much as these civic movements need the Diaspora, the Diaspora
    equally needs this metamorphosis. It is a symbiotic relationship. The
    Diaspora can only benefit. It will be re-energized and will become
    stronger, and certainly more credible as it embraces more transparency,
    more accountability, and more principle-guided policies. The
    alternative to this path can only lead to dire consequences for the
    Armenian Nation, within Armenia, and in the Diaspora.

    This is the time to heed the call of the People.

    This is the time to stand on the right side of history.

    The winds of change may not blow again soon if we miss this
    opportunity.

     

    http://www.keghart.com/Ouzounian-change

Working...
X