Levon Ter-Petrossian
- first president of the Republic of Armenia
"By Gevork Nazaryan"

evon
Ter-Petrossian was born in 1945 in Syria. He is the son of Hakop Ter-Petrossian,
a political activist who played an important role in the formation of the Left Wing
political movement in Syria and as well as Lebanon. Levon Ter-Petrossian comes from
a stock and a clan of proud and noble Armenians of Mousa Ler (Mousa Dagh, Mount
of Moses), Armenians who for more than forty days fought against the onslaught of
barbarous Turkish regular army during the horrible year of 1915. The Mousa Lertsis
not only stopped the Turkish army into moving in and carrying out massacre in the
Armenian villages surrounding Mt. Mousa Ler, but also rendered a heavy blow to the
Turkish divisions in Cilicia. After more than forty days of heroic defense, most
of the Mousa Lertsis, were safely transported to Egyptian and Syrian ports by a
French battleship.
In 1946 during the Great Repatriation Ter-Petrossian family boarded the ship Russia
and along with thousands of compatriot families (along with my fathers family),
from Syria sailed to Soviet Armenia. The Armenian communist emissaries were promising
the Armenians returning to their homeland, proletariat utopia of Workers State,
equality, progress and happiness. Instead of open arms of fellow compatriots most
of the returning Armenians, most of whom were overjoyed with the fact of living
in their homeland, found the dreaded Stalinist purges, distrust and even jealousy
from the behalf of their kinsmen. In 1949 a new wave of terror struck all over the
Soviet Union, millions of former proletariats became bourgeoisie, agents and
spies of Western powers (especially those who had previous ties and connections
to non-Socialist parties such as ARF, which in itself was a Socialist party, with
strong nationalistic tendencies, but at that time adopted an overall anti-Soviet
and anti-Communist stance) and were sent to labor camps in Siberia, many were shot
under the pretext of the enemy of the people. After the death of Stalin in 1953,
the horrific purges and difficult tensions had seized and most of the new homesteaders
began to slowly merge into the general public. The Republic had gained and learned
a lot from the newcomers the advancement of republics wealth of the mind and knowledge,
was enormous.
The hayrenatarts wave introduced new ways and advancements to the homeland. Levon-Ter
Petrossian graduated from school and enrolled into prestigious Yerevan State University,
majoring in history (particularly in early Armenian history, his dissertation and
thesis was on the early relations between the Armenians and Nestorian Syrians, he
spoke fluently Syrian as well as Russian, French and Arabic, along with other several
languages). In 1965, upon the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide, Levon Ter-Petrossian participated in the Student Apprising as it later
became known. Many students from different universities and institutes participated
in a number of mass rallies and marches, clashed with the internal militia forces,
burned buses and trolleys. The students showed their conviction in reunification
of historical Western Armenia with the Armenian Republic.
The apprising was one of the earliest forms of showing the Armenian dissatisfaction
with Soviet central policies. After receiving a degree (1968) in history from the
YSU, Levon Ter-Petrossian transferred to a university in Leningrad (St. Petersburg),
where he received his doctorate (1971) in the field of oriental studies (Syriology,
not to be confused with Assyriology, study of Ashur). While in Leningrad in 1970,
he married Lucia Ter-Petrossian. In 1972, after returning to Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrossian
entered the Manouk Abeghyan Literature Institute of Armenian Academy of Sciences,
in 1978 after more than 6 years of research at the Academy of Sciences, he became
the senior researcher at the Matenadaran Depository and the Institute for the preservation,
study and publishing of ancient Manuscripts. He remained and continued his work
in Matenadaran until the year 1988, an eventful, crucial and significant year in
the history of the Armenian nation.
In late 87 the Armenians of Artsakh, which for decades had been unjustly placed
within Azeri Turk rule were collecting signatures and organizing for the referendum
of Nagorno-Karabakh Supreme Soviet which would act within the framework of the Soviet
Law and constitutionally make the decision of secession from the Soviet Azerbaijan
and reunification to Soviet Armenia. The Azeris answered the just please and cause
in a typical Turkic fashion. In February of 1988 in the city of Sumgait a huge blood
thirsty Azeri scoundrel mob with utmost barbarity attacked and massacred tens of
dozens of innocent Armenian civilians, old and young alike were beaten, raped and
slaughtered, some cases reported the burning of looted and obliterated corpses.
The massacres and the pogroms created an angry sentiment of revenge and retaliation
in Armenia and as well as Artsakh, it was in this crucial period, when an organizing
force of the masses was mostly needed that the Karabagh Committee was formed.
Levon Ter-Petrossian was one of the prominent and respected figures of the Karabagh
Committee. His speeches and ideal mesmerized the nation. His iron will and determination
in achieving total liberation and reunification of Artsakh with the Motherland quickly
made Levon-Ter Petrossian the leader of the newly emerging democratic movement.
The year of 1988 was marked with demonstrations (a republic wide work strike, organized
by the committee was an unprecedented event and was the first in the history of
U.S.S.R), mass rallies and pickets, with a peek of the movement a mass rally held
in Yerevan in mid 88, surpassed the mark of one million citizen demonstrators from
all over Armenia and the Diaspora.
On December 7, 1988 one of the worst tragedies in the history of the Armenian nation,
a powerful earthquake hit the Shirak and Lori districts. Cities such as Gyumri (Leninakan)
and Spitak were utterly obliterated, with a minimum estimated toll of more than
25,000 dead and countless others injured. The earthquake, not only rendered a hit
to the populace of the Shirak-Lori regions and paralyzed the economy, it was also
a great blow to the Karabakh movement which by late 88 had become a powerful political
force in Armenia. The Karabakh committee made the rescue and relief efforts in the
earthquake zone its first priority. Many volunteers, organized by the efforts of
the Committee were sent into the disaster area and labored in the many different
areas of relief works. The Soviet authority fearing the rapid growth of a new democratic
force, gaining popularity and operating outside the Communist framework began a
ring of arrests in the suspected list of extremists, separatists and nationalists.
All of the 11 members of the Karabagh Committee among them popular leaders such
as Levon Ter-Petrossian, Hambartsoum Galstyan, Raphael Ghazaryan, Vazgen Manoukyan,
Ashot Manoucharyan and Khachik Stamboultsyan, along with more than 200 collaborators
and sympathizers were promptly arrested and were reallocated to prison confinement
in Russia. Ironically the Communist goal of destroying the prestige and the image
of the Committee backfired. The members of the committee became the icons and the
heroes of the new democratic wave that began in the Freedom Square of Yerevan was
already beginning to spread to other parts of the Soviet Union and even to the Socialist
block in Eastern Europe.
Almost mythical stories were reaching the mass rallies in Yerevan; Galstyans 16
day hunger strike and isolation cell confinement; Stamboltsyans spiritual counselling
to convicted murderers; fundraising for the Armenian earthquake survivors among
common criminals. In Yerevan a martial law was imposed and Soviet Internal Troops
were sent in and began to patrol the streets and boulevards of Yerevan. In April
of 1989 the supporters of the Committee reorganized and formed the Armenian Pan-National
Movement (ANM), the struggle that began with the liberation of Artsakh turned into
an All-Armenian movement
The Political prisoners and the members of the Committee were released on May 31,
1989. They returned and entered Yerevan in triumph, hailed as heroes they were literally
carried on the shoulders of the supporters to the meeting of the tens of thousands
of supporters at the mass rally in front of the Matenadaran, which became the symbol
of the revival of Armenian spirit. The momentum of the political events quickly
shifted in to the hands of the newly emerging democratic ANM block. Already by the
end of 1989 the Soviet Union began to show signs of decay.
On June 16, 1989, three hundred and ten delegates from the various national parties
and organizations (amongst the largest represented were ANM, the environmentalists-Greens
Union, National Self-Determination Union headed by the returned political exile
Parouyr Hairikyan) met at Yerevan State University (YSU) to formalize the creation
of the ANM and affirm the groups dedication to universal self-determination, social
justice and democracy. The Armenian Supreme Soviet officially recognized the movement
on June 28, 1989. In August, four out of five candidates backed by the ANM won seats
to the legislature in the special elections.
The ANM convened its first congress in Yerevan on November 4-5 of 1989, the first
ANM conference concluded with the election of a 36-person executive committee (including
Levon Ter-Petrossian with the other10 members of the Karabagh Committee) and the
adoption of a statement outlining the movements goal and by-laws. As expected,
the reunification of Artsakh with Armenia headed the ANMs short-terms aims. Moreover,
many of the pronouncements on national self-defense, economic autonomy, separate
foreign policy, freedom of expression, and multiple forms of property ownership
would find their way into the Armenian Supreme Soviets declaration of independence
on August 24, 1990 (Although the official independence is considered September 21,
1991, the date of official, public independence referendum, Armenia was already
de-facto independent by early 1990).
On October 16th 1991 Levon Ter-Petrossian becomes Armenia's first democratically
Elected president. In 1998 President Levon Ter-Petrossian was elected for a second
term, but resigns in the same year. He was succeeded by Robert Kocharian, elected
2nd President of Armenia on April 1998.