Armenians abroad

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Armenians abroad - welcomes all armenians living in Armenia,Artsakh and outside our beautiful homeland.This group is about our country,people,history,culture and more.

🇫🇷 Missak Manouchian - a hero of the French Resistance.🇦🇲Missak Manouchian (1906 - 1944) Armenian-born poet and communis...
07/11/2025

🇫🇷 Missak Manouchian - a hero of the French Resistance.

🇦🇲Missak Manouchian (1906 - 1944) Armenian-born poet and communist activist Manouchian was considered a hero among the French Resistance movement, which rose up against the N**i occupation of France.

Missak Manouchian (codename Michel Georges) was born in the city of Adıyaman, Kharberd Province of Western Armenia in 1906. His parents were killed during the Armenian Genocide carried out by the Ottoman state. Missak, who was left an orphan with his older brother Karapet (Garabed), were refugees who became inmates of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) orphanage in Jounie, Syria. The Armenian orphans in Syria, in accordance with the agreement reached in June 1925, were taken to France, where Missak began his epic journey. He joined the ranks of the French Communist Party in 1934 and began publishing the Armenian-language weekly newspaper "Zangou".

Manouchian was imprisoned and then released during the German occupation of France (1940-1944) during World War II. He then joined the resistance movement, leading a group of young people of various nationalities who were distinguished in the struggle against the occupying forces. The N**is, to discredit Manouchian and his fighters, included him in the infamous "Affiche Rouge" ("Official Red Notice") propaganda list, in which he was listed as the Armenian leader of the group - an attempt to show that non-French people were fighting the Germans.

French police officers arrested members of Manouchian's group in Évry on the morning of November 16, 1943. His wife Mélinée managed to escape and was sentenced to death in absentia.

Sixty-eight people in total were arrested on the charge of having contact with Manouchian's group.

Manouchian was tortured and, with 21 members of his group, was executed at Fort Mont-Valérien in Suresnes, a suburb of Paris, three months later, on February 21, 1944.

In his last letter to his wife on the day of his ex*****on, Manouchian wrote: “What can I write to you? Everything inside me is confused but at the same time clear. I joined the Liberation Army as a volunteer soldier, and am now dying on the threshold of victory and ultimate goal. I wish joy to those who will outlive us and taste the sweetness of tomorrow's freedom and peace."

Following the decree made by French President Emmanuel Macron on June 18, 2023, the remains of Missak Manouchian, a hero of the French resistance and his wife Mélinée, both survivors of the Armenian Genocide, were interred in France's Panthéon on February 21st 2024, commemorating the 80th anniversary of the ex*****on of Manouchian and his comrades.

Misak and Mélinée Manouchian became the first foreign individuals to be so honoured alongside French national heroes, thus becoming important symbols of friendship between the Armenian and French peoples.

06/11/2025

Artur Khachents performing Gini Lits at the foot of mount Khustup near monument of Garegin Nzhdeh

🇦🇲 Armenian physicist Gurgen Askaryan was the first to discover the effect that became the basis for lasers—technologies...
05/11/2025

🇦🇲 Armenian physicist Gurgen Askaryan was the first to discover the effect that became the basis for lasers—technologies without which medicine, science, and communications would not exist today.

He is best remembered for the Askaryan effect, which describes how charged particles moving faster than the speed of light in a dense medium produce a coherent burst of radio or microwave radiation. This phenomenon is now crucial in detecting ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and neutrinos using radio-based techniques. Askaryan also contributed significantly to plasma physics, nonlinear optics, and particle acceleration technologies. His pioneering work laid the foundation for modern cosmic ray experiments, influencing space exploration and deep-space communication research.

🔬 During the third year of his education G. Askaryan proposed a new method of registration of fast charged particles. His idea was the following. Suppose, there is an overheated transparent liquid. A very small amount of energy is sufficient to make it boil. Let a fast-charged particle pe*****te through this overheated liquid. The particle expends its energy on ionization of atoms located near its trajectory. This energy loss is transformed into heat in amount which is sufficient to induce boiling along particle's trajectory. Then the trajectory becomes observable because many bubbles are created along it.

🔗 Several years later, in 1952, the same idea was set forth independently by an American physicist Donald Arthur Glaser and was awarded with the Nobel Prize in 1960.

🌍 The Armenians Abroad: The Spyurk (Սփյուռք) – The Strength of a Global Community🇦🇲The Armenian Diaspora, known as the S...
03/11/2025

🌍 The Armenians Abroad: The Spyurk (Սփյուռք) – The Strength of a Global Community

🇦🇲The Armenian Diaspora, known as the Spyurk (Սփյուռք), is one of the most vivid examples of a global nation. Today, the vast majority of Armenians (estimated at 9 to 10 million people) reside outside the Republic of Armenia, whose population is around 3 million. This expansive network, largely formed after the Genocide of 1915, stretches across every continent.

Today the largest Armenian communities are in Russia (2.25 million), USA (1.5 million), France (about 450,000). Other significant communities are in Georgia, Argentina, Lebanon, Iran, Poland, Ukraine, Germany, Australia, Brazil and Canada4. Another very important community used to exist in Syria, but after recent events most Armenians have fled the country, many of them asking for residency in Armenia.

Armenian communities outside Armenia have existed for centuries, stretching from Singapore to Venice and from Esfahan to Amsterdam. These communities were actively engaged in trade and largely contributed, on the one hand, to the economy, and on the other hand to identity maintenance, political mobilization, and knowledge transfer. Many important communities existed in Italy, Poland, India, Egypt, etc. Past invasions and foreign occupation of Armenia, the shaky political situation, the division of Armenia between Turkey and Persia (later between Turkey and Russia), all contributed to many Armenians leaving their homeland and creating small communities abroad. During the Middle Ages and up to the 18th century these communities played an active role in international trade. So much so, that British colonizers considered them competitors and sought ways to oust them from the market. Because of such a policy, the Armenian network in Asia and especially in Africa was severely damaged7. The geographical position, connecting Europe with Asia, the North with the South, and through which passed important trading routes, while being crucial for the development of trade, proved to be fatal for political instability, constant conquests by foreigners and endless struggle for freedom.

Despite having such active colonies abroad for a long time, the formation of the Diaspora, the 'diasporization' of the nation, however, has resulted from the mass extermination of Armenians by the Turks (1915-1916). In this context, the Armenian Diaspora is often regarded as a 'victim Diaspora', that shares common features with Jewish and African ones. However, regarding the Jewish case, there are many significant differences. The Jewish Diaspora had already been in existence for 2000 years when the Holocaust occurred, while a significant Armenian Diaspora emerged for the first time after the Armenian massacres of the late 19th century and especially during World War I. Armenians were an indigenous population where they lived, whereas Jews were a minority in Germany. N**is regarded Jews as racially inferior, whereas Armenians were accused of elitism by the Young Turks9, as they were relatively wealthy and hard-working. N**i Germany was in an advanced stage of modernization, whereas the Ottoman Empire was more regressed. Having lost much of the Ottoman Empire, the Turks were also afraid of losing the Armenian parts. They therefore began mass deportation and killings of Armenians. It is estimated that from 1915 to 1922 around 1.5 million Armenians were killed or died of starvation. The Turks, however, to this day refuse to call the tragic events ‘genocide’. Ironically enough, so does the Israeli State, whose people suffered a similar calamity only a few decades later.

The survivors fled to the nearest locations: Aleppo, then onwards to other cities in Syria, to Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Palestine and Egypt. Certain Armenian settlements had already been established; they enlarged these settlements, as well as creating new ones.
However, not everything turned out to be that easy. As Armenians put it, ‘Ours is a story of moving, rebuilding, moving again’. In fact, some will make a number of attempts to find a permanent home. A lot of Armenians residing in Europe and in North America today have migrated from Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq and Iran, where the unstable political situation, nationalism and violence forced them to seek a new haven.

What was left after the Genocide and the formation of Soviet Armenia in 1922 was one tenth of one time Greater Armenia, a small, rocky and devastated territory full of orphans and refugees. Moreover, Communist Russia's pressure compelled new waves of Armenians to leave the country for North America and Europe.

The interwar period (1920-1945) was marked by a 'parallel' rebuilding. While devastated Soviet Armenia was reshaping its socio-economic structure according to Soviet principles, the Armenians scattered over the world were adapting to their host countries. The Genocide survivors were in great psychological and economic disarray. They faced major hardships regarding the language in the foreign countries where they arrived, finding jobs, and integrating to a new world and a new mentality. It took them decades to straighten their backs and to be able to stand firmly on their feet. Eventually, they organized themselves and established schools, cultural centers, churches and economic enterprises. The Armenian language has not only been maintained, but has also been consolidated through education and mass media.

Initially, most Genocide survivors were farmers; in the Middle East they were prominent in photography and in other modern, technical professions. In the United States they were known as rug merchants since they dominated the oriental carpet business. The second generation was mainly involved in managerial occupations, while third generation Armenians and immigrants after World War II are educated professionals and businesspeople.

A lot of Diaspora Armenians achieved great success in the host countries and contributed to their arts, social and economic life. Today they can be found in all arts and professions. Some of the most prominent representatives of the Diaspora are: in France, Charles Aznavour, Henri Verneuil, Eduard Balladur (former Prime Minister), Parick Fiori; in Russia, Arno Babajanian, Ivan Isakov, Gary Kasparov; in the USA, William Saroyan, Arshil Gorky, George Deukmejian (the Governor of California from 1983 to 1991). In France they are mainly found in the field of arts and sports, in the USA in enterprise and the sciences; in Turkey in linguistics and architecture (in 2010 an exhibition titled “Armenian Architects of Istanbul in the Era of Westernization,” featuring photos of 100 buildings constructed by 40 Armenian architects who lived in Istanbul at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, was opened in Istanbul). Many Diaspora Armenians have changed their last names, partly because they tend to be long and are easy to misspell and mispronounce and difficult to remember, partly because it is easier to get promoted with a shorter last name that sounds more native, especially in countries such as Turkey and Russia. Having found themselves in an unfavorable position, in these foreign countries, they had to put in more effort to gain recognition and lead a worthy life.
The Armenian people did not only survive the nightmare and tackle difficulties; they organized themselves to become one of the most vivacious and salient diasporas in the world. They adapted to circumstances without 'giving in to assimilation' and establishing various benevolent, cultural and political organizations. In her article ‘What it Means to be Armenian’, Dafina Boshnakova writes, ‘Their solidarity is so popular that Bulgarians started joking that all you need is put three Armenians together and they will immediately build a church, found a school and start publishing a newspaper’. The Armenian Diaspora has played a very important role in the crusade to recognize the Armenian genocide, for it is because of this tragic event that they lost their homeland and were destined to scatter all over the world.

During the Soviet rule, the contact of Diaspora with Armenia was limited. However, in the years 1945-1947 about 100,000 Armenians, many of them Genocide survivors, repatriated to Soviet Armenia.

The role of the Diaspora was eminent in carrying out various humanitarian and reconstruction activities in Armenia. After the disastrous earthquake of 1988, which left almost no stone unturned in the North of Soviet Armenia, the Diaspora was among the first to respond with humanitarian and monetary help.
In an interview conducted during the Karot (Nostalgia) Cultural Festival in 2010, the famous French actor, Gerard Depardieu, pointed out in surprise that he knows fourth generation Armenians in France who still speak the language. He perceives this as “carrying on living with the shadows of ancestors” A Syrian Armenian once interpreted the phenomenon of the preservation of the language and national identity by the notion that ‘people out there in the Diaspora adore Armenia’. Love and nostalgia are handed down from older generations to the younger ones. The nostalgia is not so much about the Republic, the territory that remains from the vast historical Armenia, but the lands they heard so much about from their early childhood, the cities their ancestors fled from: Van, Mush, Erzurum, Sason, Ardahan. Pilgrimages, however, are organized both to today’s Eastern Turkey, and to the Republic of Armenia.

Today there exist volunteer and internship programs for Diaspora Armenians aiming to strengthen ties with the homeland. Festivals and cultural programs are organized to bring together the Armenians of Armenia and those in Diaspora. The Ministry of Diaspora has created and promoted the program Արի տուն (Come Home), aiming at preserving the connection with young Armenians living abroad. It is evident that most Armenians already feel at home in the host countries; it is therefore even more amazing that many fourth generation Armenians feel that they are closely linked with the national identity and the country of Armenia, which many of them have never even seen.

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