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«I don’t know where I am going and where my day will end». The last day of an Artsakh girl in Stepanakert

Julya
«I don’t know where I am going and where my day will end». The last day of an Artsakh girl in Stepanakert

Artsakh resident Nanar Poghosyan has spent her last night in her home in Stepanakert, or rather, illuminated it.

“Forgive me, grandfather, forgive me, guys, for the blood you shed; I stayed in Artsakh until the end to build and build—houses, dignity, honor, and name. Now I have no land, no home, no father, no homeland. I don’t know where I am going and where my day will end, but on the road to losing my homeland, I realized what it feels like to be a true orphan,” Poghosyan wrote on her Facebook page.

“P.S. Forgive me, grandfather, I couldn’t even cross the road to bid farewell to my native birthplace or even take the sacred photo hanging on the wall of my house with me. The most terrifying dawn of my life is on foreign desolate roads… I never imagined that one day I would have the last picture from my home window and I wouldn't be able to say goodbye to my other house because that’s what the Turk wants,” she added.

It is noteworthy that as of September 25 at 06:00, a total of 2,906 forcibly displaced persons have entered Armenia from Nagorno-Karabakh.

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