The events of that month last year seemed to have no end and sleep was the only time I could let myself reflect on all my thoughts about Western Armenia -- of a past that lives on, a present that kills hope and my place in the crossroads of time.
“No, it’s happening here!” My mother continued, finally waking me up on the morning of July 17.
Scrolling down my Facebook feed I saw the video messages of the Sasna Tsrer from the sieged police station. Not really understanding what was going on, I contacted my colleagues and headed to the CivilNet office in downtown Yerevan, where I stayed almost 24/7 for the following two weeks.
During those weeks, there was not a single moment when I could pause, take a deep breath and observe what was going on around me. We, the press, were part of the evolving story in my city. We lived through all the quiet and intense moments together with the members of the Sasna Tsrer, the police officers and the protesters who existed and acted through our lenses.
Following the protests at Freedom Square, crossing the barricades of exploding molotov-cocktails in Sari Tagh where no one dared to go, standing between the protesters and the police through the deafening noise of stun grenades on Khorenatsi Street, comforting the relatives of the Tsrer waiting at the doorsteps of hospitals late at night for news about the injured, and rushing inside the sieged police station to meet the fighters and seeing the rage and sacrifice in their eyes and thinking: “History is being created today and I’m a part of it. Maybe it’s our time to act, finally!”