Categories: Genetics

The Cultural Armenian Genocide Continues To This Day

One of the components of the Armenian Genocide is cultural genocide. It did not begin and did not end in 1915-1923 but continues to this day. A hundred years ago, it was manifested toward both the Armenians of Western Armenia and other Armenian-populated regions of the Ottoman Empire, as well as toward other Christian peoples of the empire.

The fact that the thousand-year-old Apostolic Church in Kars, as well as dozens of other Christian churches are still being reformed into mosques is evidence that cultural genocide continues.

One of its manifestations is the mania of theft that has been continuing for decades, with ordinary citizens joining the cause of eradicating traces of Christianity with the permission of the state, imparting to this process a massive and, unfortunately, irreversible character.

Traces of Christianity haunt the ruling circles of the Turkish state not only in the far east of the country but also in its very heart – Istanbul with its multimillion population located at the crossroads of Europe and Asia and which pursues the values of world civilization.

The latest evidence is the decision of President Erdogan of the Republic of Turkey to convert the 1500-year-old Hagia Sophia into a mosque. Prior to this decision, Hagia Sophia had the status of a museum and was also considered one of the largest Christian Orthodox churches.

The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation considers this decision as a manifestation of cultural genocide carried out at the state level. Any act of genocide is subject to condemnation, and those responsible should be punished since the crime of genocide is not covered by a statute of limitations.

genocide-museum.am

Vigen Avetisyan

Recent Posts

From Lake Van to Yerevan: The Bronze Helmet of Urartu, the First Armenia

The crested bronze helmet on the left of this comparison was not made by a…

17 hours ago

A Tower Crowned by a Lion-Rider: Reading a Bronze Age Cult Vessel Through the Lens of the Armenian Highlands

A small, weathered piece of fired clay — barely 31 centimeters tall — sits today…

4 days ago

A Hand Reaching Through Three Millennia: The Bronze Pendant from Yeghvard

Pendant (Amulet) in the Shape of a Human Hand | 7th–6th centuries BC | Yeghvard…

2 weeks ago

Duduk (Tsiranapogh): The Ancient Voice of Armenia from the Bronze Age to UNESCO Heritage

Introduction The duduk (Armenian: դուդուկ)—traditionally known as tsiranapogh (ծիրանափող, “apricot-wood pipe”)—is one of the most…

2 weeks ago

The Earliest Known Mention of Yerevan in Armenian Epigraphy: The 874 Inscription of Sevanavank

Perched on the rocky peninsula of Lake Sevan, the medieval monastery of Sevanavank preserves one…

3 weeks ago

The Land of Kajants: Language, Kings, and Gods

Reconsidering the Language and Sacred Heritage of Urartu in Armenian Historical Thought For more than…

1 month ago