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  • Flipping Through The Files...

    FLIPPING THROUGH THE FILES...

    http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1081: flipping-through-the-files&catid=3:all&Itemid=4
    Wednesday, 26 June 2013 10:34

    Azat Artsakh newspaper is 90. But, to follow the historical truth,
    it is the anniversary of Khorhurdain Karabakh (Soviet Karabakh)
    newspaper, the successor of which is the current Azat Artsakh. Our
    newspaper was born in 1923 and first, albeit short-lived, was called
    Karabakh Geghchuk (Karabakh Peasant). For its almost age-old history,
    the newspaper was headed by about twenty editors, but it would be fair
    to mention today the name of the first one - Secretary of the Karabakh
    Provincial Committee Sero Manutsyan, who held this office until 1924.

    Subsequently, the paper was renamed into Khorhurdain Karabakh, having
    existed with that name for decades, and with the collapse of the
    Soviet Union, after a series of renaming, it was called Azat Artsakh
    (Free Artsakh).

    But, it was not only the name of the newspaper that was changing.

    Times were also changing and with them, of course, the newspaper
    itself, which was a peculiar mirror of the life. The birth of the
    newspaper exactly in June 1923 seems to be not accidental at all. As
    we know, the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast was formed as part
    of Azerbaijan on July 7, 1923, and it is natural that to promote a
    new, communist ideology and internationalist ideas in the NKAO, the
    Soviet power needed its own newspaper, which would correspond to the
    definition of Vladimir Lenin: "A newspaper is not only a collective
    propagandist and agitator, but also a collective organizer". And the
    fact that the Bolshevik government really paid great significance to
    the press is testified, at least, by the fact that in the summer of
    1925, First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Azerbaijani
    Communist Party Sergei Kirov arrived in Stepanakert and, having
    familiarized with the problems of the newspaper, rendered great
    assistance to it.

    As a real child of its time, Khorhurdain Karabakh, true to the
    traditions of the Bolshevik press, served to the communist ideas
    and advocated the principles of internationalism and friendship
    between peoples. Moreover, flipping through yellowed newspaper files
    of 30s, we found articles about death sentences to "enemies of the
    people". Today, from the height of the passed years, we can, surely,
    speak with some irony and even condemnation about the activity of
    the employees of the Khorhurdain Karabakh of those years, but we can
    also be sure that their publications were sincere, as they believed
    wholeheartedly in the purity of the communist leaders' intentions and
    in their advocated values, as well as were full of patriotic feelings
    towards the common Motherland - the USSR. In the difficult years of the
    Great Patriotic War, the newspaper became a peculiar bridge between
    the rear and front, inspiring the people to military and labor feats
    for the sake of the victory over the German fascism. All of this is
    our history. It is necessary to know and respect it, even with things
    that are unacceptable for us today. And we should also learn lessons
    from it.

    In the Soviet period, despite the enormous difficulties associated
    with the restriction of freedom of speech and outright censorship,
    the newspaper still managed to maintain the national identity and
    to remain at the height of its vocation - to express the people's
    interests. It is not accidental that during the Artsakh Movement
    the Khorhurdain Karabakh deservedly won the reputation of a truthful
    chronicler of the national-liberation struggle of the Karabakh people,
    standing close to its own people. It was the time of the newspaper's
    high point, with the circulation of nearly 100,000 copies. Thanks
    to the truly heroic job of the newspaper's staff, working in the
    most difficult conditions of political and ideological pressure by
    the authorities of Azerbaijan and tough military censorship by the
    Union Center, it managed to break the information blockade of Nagorno
    Karabakh and to bring the truth about the Movement not only to the
    Armenian community, but also to thousands of readers in the USSR. And
    the newspaper did it with dignity, presenting the objective situation,
    with no insults and attacks against the opposite party.

    The change of the social formation, which took place after the collapse
    of theSoviet Union, led to new challenges, becoming a serious test for
    our newspaper. The change of the political status of Nagorno Karabakh,
    which declared its independence, led also to the change of the status
    of the newspaper, which became republican.

    However, it is important to note that the basic mission of the
    newspaper has remained unchanged - to express and defend the
    interests and aspirations of the people, of a man, which was fully
    manifested in the most difficult years of the war with Azerbaijan and
    establishment of independent statehood. Today, its main goals are to
    give comprehensive coverage of the public-political, social-economic
    and cultural life of the NKR, in particular, the processes of
    state-building and democratization of the Karabakh society, to raise
    and to help solve the issues, which are urgent for the country and its
    citizens, to provide opportunities for a wide range of public opinion.

    In the conditions of the ongoing conflict with Azerbaijan, the war has
    moved to the information sphere, and therefore one of the priorities
    of the newspaper is to work for the truth and for exposing the lies
    of Azerbaijan.

    Of course, we'd not like to speak about something sad on the holiday,
    but, unfortunately, we have to. In due time, Khorhurdain Karabakh
    newspaper had its "own home", where it lived for decades.

    Today, it is devoid of it and is forced to work in very tight, one
    can say, "anachronistic" conditions. The issue has been repeatedly
    raised at the corresponding structures, but it hasn't reached its
    solution yet.

    We can often hear that in the age of television and Internet, the
    print media has no future. It is, surely, a disputable issue, but
    in our particular case, we can definitely state that Karabakh should
    have its own, print version of the newspaper. A newspaper is really
    a chronicler of time and the chronicle is left for descendants. Our
    newspaper should exist, at least, because it has lived for 90 years,
    which isn't succeeded by every newspaper. So, let's be glad for it and
    congratulate it on the solid and glorious anniversary. Congratulations
    to the whole society of the NKR and, above all, to our true readers,
    whose confidence is very dear to us.

    And we hope that our common newspaper will successfully continue its
    way of life.

    Leonid MARTIROSSIAN

    Editor-in-Chief of Azat Artsakh newspaper

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