Literature is the Mirror of Society

By Fatima Shahverdiyeva

Literature is the mirror of society. A person who does not read literature cannot possess enlightened thoughts. Literature helps us learn lessons from the events depicted in works and also protects our moral values.

However, sometimes works are written under the name of literature that completely promote terrorism and incite people toward it. Armenian writer Zori Balayan has written numerous books that glorify Armenian nationalism, support Armenian terrorism, and distort history to serve this ideology. Sometimes, one is surprised to see that some Armenian historians and writers have not hesitated to confess their own atrocities.

In the 1980s, Zori Balayan wrote the book “Hearth”, calling on Armenians to wage war against Turks, and it was they who initiated these conflicts. In 1988, our compatriots were forcibly expelled from the lands that are today called Armenia but are, in fact, the ancestral homeland of Turks. Hundreds of people perished while crossing mountains and valleys in freezing winter conditions, avalanches buried many, and infants fell prey to wild animals. Over the years, Armenians carried out 32 terrorist attacks against Azerbaijanis. The Khojaly genocide was called the “Tragedy of the Century.”

Zori Balayan’s horrifying statements, which have circulated on the internet, are even more shocking than these massacres. In 1996, he wrote a book titled “Revival of Our Souls.”

Revival of Our Souls, pages 260-262:

“When we entered one of the occupied houses with Khachatur, our soldiers had nailed a 13-year-old Turkish child to the window. To stop the child from screaming, Khachatur stuffed his mother’s severed breast into his mouth. Slowly, I approached the child and started peeling the skin off his abdomen, then his head and chest… I checked my watch—he died from blood loss after 7 minutes. I felt proud for having avenged 1% of my people’s suffering. Then, Khachatur dismembered the dead Turkish child and did the same to three other Turkish children. As an Armenian patriot, I fulfilled my duty.”

Zori Balayan was not the only one promoting terrorism through literature. However, no matter how much they glorify terrorism, the truth remains. Whether it is B. Ishkhanyan, obsessed with the “Great Armenia” fantasy, or M. Shaginyan, H. Tumanyan, D. Kheiryan, who encourage terrorism through their works, the reality is clear. The whole world knows how they carried out ruthless massacres with the help of their “sisters.”

For this reason, may the souls of journalists like National Hero Chingiz Mustafayev and Salatin Asgarova, who exposed these atrocities to the world, rest in peace!

Indeed, there is no need to search historical archives or prove anything. If we carefully examine the confessions of Armenians in modern times, it becomes even clearer that they are accustomed to committing genocide and feel no shame for these horrors.

As A. S. Pushkin said:
“You are a slave, you are a thief, you are an Armenian!”

www.delreport.com

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