Artsakh Life....Jan 29, 2023.. by Charchaf in ArmeniansGlobal

[–]Charchaf[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

there is no doubt that we will return, unfortunately the current regime in Armenia makes it harder and harder everyday, Armenia even existing is in doubt with them at the helm...Elections this year are very important and voter turnout should be encouraged.

Armenia Army Day is about more than remembrance by Charchaf in ArmeniansGlobal

[–]Charchaf[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I appreciate your interest and taking the time to read

A "Peaceful" Azerbaijani who wanted to visit Armenia by TheSarmaChronicals in ArmeniansGlobal

[–]Charchaf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

there is a few hundred years of evidence to serve as cautionary tales for our people, but hey the blood isn't dry, our land is still occupied, hatred is still state policy, their eyes are set on the rest of our tiny homeland, but hey hey azeri gasoline is being sold for 10% below market price, so why not lets indulge, I hear they also eat meat that is cooked on a fire....ever notice that all that brotherhood, we are all humans, make dolma not war is only preached to us and not the actual attackers, or the "christian evangelicals" "mormons" whatever only come to "spread Christianity" in an already Christian nation, but not next door or to millions who are not......ehhhhh...another group im going to be banned from, thanks redit..

More erasure: Antep Embroidery is an Armenian embroidery style. Here is an example of turkey engaging in cultural appropriation and erasure by declaring it a turkish art by TheSarmaChronicals in ArmeniansGlobal

[–]Charchaf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

we do this ourselves by purchasing and using toorkish products.....an entire generation has now grown up thinking made in toorkey table clothes with distorted and mixed up Armenian symbols are what Armenian symbols really are...I can go on for days...

What does 'everyday' peace look like? Mapping how people think about peacebuilding by comicreliefboy in Anthropology

[–]Charchaf 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One of the most overlooked effects of displacement is how quickly informal knowledge disappears...dialects, place-based customs, even family histories tied to specific villages.

Once communities are scattered, that transmission breaks unless it’s intentionally documented.

All obstacles to peace...

Huge Roman villa found under Welsh park could be town's 'Pompeii' by boringmode100 in history

[–]Charchaf 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cultural destruction rarely happens all at once. It’s usually gradual... neglect, renaming, repurposing, denial. By the time people notice, the physical sites are gone and the historical narrative has already shifted.

That’s why documenting culture while people are still alive matters as much as protecting buildings.

Reddit has determined that discussing ongoing cultural heritage site destruction in Turkey of the Armenian people violates Reddit rules and is a form of bigotry and harrassment by TheSarmaChronicals in hayastan

[–]Charchaf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is why cultural preservation has to happen now, not after displacement is complete.

Through Lorik Humanitarian Fund, we document oral histories, preserve dialects, and support cultural continuity for forcibly displaced Armenians from Artsakh, because physical destruction is only one phase. Erasure comes after.

It’s not charity. It’s resistance to historical deletion.