Your Namak for Wednesday, May 31
Aliyev demands dissolution of Nagorno-Karabakh parliament, Pashinyan and Aliyev spar in Moscow, and Pegasus spyware targets Armenian civilians.
Hi there, here’s your weekly briefing of Armenian news in English, curated, reported and fact-checked by journalists Astrig Agopian and Maral Tavitian.
Aliyev Demands Dissolution of Nagorno-Karabakh Parliament
On May 28, speaking from the city of Lachin, Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev said he was willing to offer “concessions” and amnesty to Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) officials if they dissolved the region’s government and accepted Azerbaijani citizenship. Otherwise, he said Baku could take military action immediately. The Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) authorities described Aliyev’s remarks as threats, and a recent piece by the International Crisis Group reported “a growing risk of major violence in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.” U.S. officials have also said that “if relations deteriorate further, Washington is prepared to take a tougher line with Baku: if bloodshed rises beyond levels caused by the fighting to date, the U.S. might impose sanctions and visa bans.”
Pashinyan and Aliyev Spar in Moscow, No Agreement in Sight
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sparred at a meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Moscow last week, under the eyes of Vladimir Putin and other members. During the opening remarks, Pashinyan and Aliyev interrupted the Russian president and argued about the “Zangezur corridor” –– a route claimed by Baku to connect Azerbaijan to its enclave of Nakhichevan, passing through the sovereign territory of Armenia –– Azerbaijan’s construction of a checkpoint along the Lachin corridor and the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh. No agreement was signed, although both Baku and Yerevan have been hinting at a possible peace treaty. Pashinyan and Aliyev are scheduled to meet again on June 1 in Moldova.
Pegasus Spyware Targets Armenian Civilians
A joint investigation between Access Now, CyberHUB-AM, the Citizen Lab, Amnesty International and independent researcher Ruben Muradyan has uncovered hacking of civilians in Armenia with NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware. A dozen Armenian public figures were targeted with spyware between October 2020 and December 2022. Infections were found in the devices of two journalists from RFE/RL, the Human Rights Defender of Armenia, a United Nations official, the former spokesperson of Armenia’s Foreign Ministry and other civil society representatives. The investigators “believe that this operation is the work of a governmental Pegasus customer.” Circumstantial evidence suggests that the hack is related to the ongoing Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, and is believed to be the first proven case of Pegasus spyware used in an inter-state armed conflict.
Manuk Avedikyan: Meet an Armenian-American documenting the past and present of Armenian history
“We are interviewing people that are very engaged in the community, as well as people who barely interact with traditional diaspora infrastructure.”
Even if you have never spoken with Manuk Avedikyan before, his warm eye contact and affable demeanor will make you feel like fast friends. Like any good documentarian, when in conversation with you, he listens intently and with sincere interest.
The 35-year-old was born in Hollywood to Armenian parents from Turkey. He attended Armenian schools throughout his childhood –– Arshag Dickranian Armenian School in Hollywood and AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School in Canoga Park –– before continuing his education in history at California State University, Northridge.
Manuk grew up immersed in the large Armenian community of Los Angeles, and the Turkish-Armenian diaspora in particular. His father was cultural committee chair for the Organization of Istanbul Armenians, a group dedicated to advancing social and cultural opportunities for Turkish-Armenian immigrants.
“I was always going to community events, meaning plays, concerts, operas, art exhibits, films,” Manuk says. “If there was an Armenian community event, my dad was there, and my parents would both bring me.”
Manuk’s interest in history emerged at a young age –– an only child, he would often tag along to academic lectures his father organized. He describes his father as an “amateur history geek,” whose love for the subject rubbed off on his son.
“I was one of the only young kids at a professor [Richard] Hovannisian, or Vahakn Dadrian, or Taner Akçam, or others, and there I was,” Manuk says, listing the names of prominent scholars whose lectures he attended as a boy. That early exposure would shape his professional trajectory.
In 2012, propelled by his “young nationalistic mind” and chasing his to-be wife, Manuk moved to Yerevan to obtain his master’s in political science and international affairs from the American University of Armenia. Manuk’s time outside the classroom –– spent traveling throughout the country and region –– was just as impactful as his studies.
“It was a very vibrant three years. It was a very complicated three years,” Manuk says. “There were a lot of protests. So much so that there is even a Wikipedia page on it. And I was at pretty much all those protests.”
Despite his active participation in civic life, Manuk came to understand how many of his experiences in Armenia were complicated by impermanence and diaspora privilege. Unlike his local friends, he had the option to walk away when the country’s challenges became too heavy.
“I realized that I had the benefit of coming back to see my family and disengaging from this negative political environment,” Manuk says. “I have this luxury while my friends don’t have that luxury of taking a break.”
Manuk also took advantage of his proximity to Turkey to explore his roots, a practice he says many Armenians have rejected due to their violent subjugation during the Ottoman Empire. In 2015, he traveled to Istanbul for the centennial anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and visited his ancestral villages in historic Western Armenia, two experiences that he will never forget.
“We have thousands of years of Armenian identity and history rooted in this land that we supposedly call our homeland –– but don’t engage in the remnants of it in terms of physicality or human,” Manuk says.
Seeking to advance his career beyond the opportunities Armenia could provide at the time, Manuk returned to California and began working as a project manager at the USC Shoah Foundation.
Founded in 1994 by film director Steven Spielberg to preserve the memories of the Holocaust, the foundation’s archives now include more than 56,000 testimonies from survivors of numerous mass atrocities. Firsthand accounts of the Armenian Genocide comprise the second largest collection of testimonies housed in the foundation’s digital library.
In his role, Manuk watched and indexed more than 500 Armenian Genocide survivor testimonies, giving him a granular familiarity with the atrocity that few possess.
In April 2021, following decades of advocacy by Armenian-American groups, U.S. President Joe Biden officially recognized the Armenian Genocide. For many, the moment was both momentous and anti-climactic, but Manuk believes that recognition paved the way for a lot more work ahead.
“Now that Biden recognized the genocide, all doors are open. There are no restrictions. We can apply for as many grants as possible. We can do whatever we want because now it’s recognized by the country and our activism on an educational level is open,” Manuk says. “But that’s a lot of work and there’s not that many of us and too many of us are lawyers and doctors.”
Manuk is doing his part –– after more than seven years at the Shoah Foundation, he recently moved offices on campus to the USC Institute of Armenian Studies, where he oversees a project called “California History Through Armenian Experiences.” The project is dedicated to chronicling the rich history of Armenians in the Golden State, which Manuk describes as “the most diverse administrative unit of Armenians in the entire world.”
“You’ve got everyone here –– your Venezuelan Armenians, your Bakveci Evangelicals, your Rostov Armenians. Everyone. Whatever you want, you’ve got it here,” Manuk says.
While the project seeks to document the stories of active participants in Armenian public life, Manuk also enjoys turning the spotlight on the community’s unsung heroes.
“We are interviewing people that are very engaged in the community, as well as people who barely interact with traditional diaspora infrastructure,” Manuk says. “I interviewed a woman from a ladies’ auxiliary of a church. These women are not people that get a lot of recognition. They’re not well known. They’re not on stage giving speeches, but they’re the engines of the community. Without them, you really can’t get a lot of stuff done.”
Through his work, he has learned that there is no such thing as “the Armenian story” –– rather each Armenian is a collection of unique experiences and histories, and no single story is the same.
June 2, 2023: This piece was updated to correct the subject’s job title at the USC Institute of Armenian Studies and Shoah Foundation. He is a project manager, not an archivist. The pull quote was updated to accurately reflect the breadth of interviewees selected for the “California History Through Armenian Experiences” oral history project.
To read: Caught Between Two Worlds: A Family’s Historical Tale of Endurance, an editorial in Kaltblut Magazine by Victoria Pisarenko and Nareg Balian, photographed by David Galstian and Ani Van, about two sisters separated by the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh.
To watch: Բարև, ես եմ (Barev, Es Em), a film by Frounze Dovlatian made in 1965. The restored version was presented at this year’s Festival de Cannes. The movie tells the story of Armenian physicist Artem Alikhanyan, who reflects on the life choices he made to achieve his dream of building a space research center on Armenia’s highest mountain.
To read: ‘A suicide mission’: Anti-War Activists Explain the Challenges of Protesting in Azerbaijan, a story by Bashir Kitachayev for Meduza’s The Beet newsletter, about the challenges Azerbaijani anti-war activists face in voicing their opposition to the ongoing Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
That’s it for today, see you next week!
Questions? Story ideas? An urge to say barev/parev? You can send us a secure email at namaknews@protonmail.com.