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Prefix for “friendly” or “logical”
‘A voice for Armenia is a voice for democracy’: Princeton Armenian Society responds to conflict abroad
By Rebecca Cho
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The Princeton Armenian Society is working to raise on-campus and national awareness of the recent invasion of the Republic of Armenia by the Azerbaijani Armed Forces.
The society aims to provide non-Armenians with credible sources of information on Armenia’s history of conflict, including the Armenian genocide from 1915 to 1923, the attacks on the Nagorno-Karabakh region in the Republic of Artsakh in 2020, and the current crisis which began overnight on Sept. 12 with the Azerbaijani invasion.
Over the course of the past year, the Princeton Armenian Society, led by copresidents Katerina Hovnanian-Alexanian ’25 and Hayk Yengibaryan ’26, has been taking steps to raise awareness of the injustices against the Armenian community. In March, the Princeton Armenian Society invited the Armenian Ambassador to the United States, Lilit Makunts, to campus to discuss the obstacles facing Armenia’s democratic regime.
Yengibaryan is a sports contributor for The Daily Princetonian.
“We are obligated as Armenians to do everything in our power to help our country. I personally have family members in Armenia and childhood friends who are at the frontlines defending our country,” Yengibaryan wrote in a text message to the ‘Prince.’
“This past week, I’ve dedicated over 40 hours to advocating for Armenia, including long nights with little sleep,” he added. “If our soldiers and servicemen and women can stay up all night defending our homeland, I can stay up to fight for my people. It becomes extremely hard for all Armenian-Americans to concentrate on their dayto-day life when this is happening.”
The society is currently working with Armenian student organizations from universities across the United States, including Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania, Cornell, Brown, UCLA, the University of Chicago, Stanford, and Columbia.
This cross-college collaboration started in an Instagram chat created by Hovnanian-Alexanian with a few friends. Hovnanian-Alexanian and Yengibaryan then started reaching out to members of the Armenian Student Associations of various colleges. This group chat grew in what she says was “a matter of minutes” as more people were added. Ultimately, over 100 college students joined the chat and collaborated on an open letter.
On Sept. 20, the Princeton Armenian Society posted the letter and a list of resources online, enlisting the support of the Princeton community.
“We urge our peers and educators to join us in condemning Azerbaijan’s assault on humanity and stand in solidarity with the Armenian people against authoritarianism,” the letter reads. “We challenge you to show the world that the American scholarly community does not accept these threats to democracy, diplomacy, and human rights.”
The effort proved its effect further than oncampus, with news of the collaboration reaching Armenian singer Serj Tankian, who reposted the open letter, and Rex Kalamian, the Armenian-American NBA assistant coach, who added his signature. The collaboration also reached news outlets run by Armenians.
The open letter has collected at least 1000 signatures in 24 hours. But less than 50 of those are from the Princeton community.
The Princeton Armenian Society is urging students and faculty to join efforts in spreading the word.
“The voice of the youth plays a central role in the efforts to raise awareness of the events in Armenia,” Yengibaryan told the ‘Prince.’ “We rely on the voices of the youth because this generation is the future of the diaspora. The students in our top universities today are going to go on to lead our country and have a voice in Congress and important matters.”
Rebecca Cho is a first-year from Long Island, N.Y. and a news contributor for the ‘Prince.’ She can be reached at rc5928@princeton.edu.
THE DAILY PRINCETONIAN STAFF
Students with Armenian Ambassador to the United States Lilit Makunts.
ON CAMPUS
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen talks democracy, war in Ukraine
By Michelle Miao and Jackie Zhou
News Contributors
Content Warning: The following article contains descriptions of war and violence.
“When I went there, I saw mass graves; I saw the body bags lying there — men, women, children. I saw these brutal scars of missiles and bombs that had been aimed deliberately at residential areas, hospitals, schools kindergartens,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said, describing her trip to Bucha, a town liberated by Ukrainian forces just days before her visit.
The war, she said, “is not only a war that Russia has unleashed against Ukraine. This is a war on our values.”
On Thursday, Sept. 22, von der Leyen spoke on campus, delivering the keynote address for Princeton’s “Europe’s Moment” event. Her speech focused on the importance of democracy, the European Commission’s response to the war in Ukraine, and the fight against climate change.
In response to the invasion, von der Leyen emphasized the necessity of close cooperation between the United States and the European Union (EU) in levying sanctions against Russia, as well as the shift in energy sourcing among EU nations.
In the vein of a larger discussion on Europe’s prior energy dependence on Russia, von der Leyen said, “Putin has built very strategically, and later on used, our dependency to blackmail us, basically to suffocate us.” However, she added, “This blackmailing has really united us. And it is a turning point, because we have decided, as a European Union: We will end our reliance on Russian fossil fuels.”
To achieve this, she called for massive investments in renewable energy, a strategy that includes diversifying energy sources to “regions where the [renewable] resources are in abundance.”
In addition to energy independence, these geopolitical shifts are also “fighting the right cause against climate change,” she said. Von der Leyen referred to the example of Pakistan to illustrate the urgency of the climate crisis and the international cooperation required to address it.
“I had yesterday a bilateral meeting with the Prime Minister of Pakistan: threequarters of [his] country is inundated — climate change, it is nothing but climate change,” she said. In order to address climate change, von der Leyen continued, “We need to develop a way of life and work that gives our planet a real fighting chance for the next generation.”
To achieve this, the European Commission has legally mandated goals for climate neutrality by 2050.
“We are the first highly industrialized continent that has put a concrete plan on the table on how we want to get there,” she said.
Von der Leyen also noted, “The green transition, but also the digital transition, will massively increase our needs for raw materials. Lithium for batteries; silicon metal for chips; rare earths to produce magnets, for example for electric vehicles.”
She expressed caution toward a monopoly on raw materials, explaining that the increased need for raw materials brings bad news.
Overall, the call to defend democratic values remained resonant throughout her address.
Invoking the University’s informal motto of “In the nation’s service and in the service of humanity,” she specifically addressed the need for the Princeton community to stand up for democracy in the face of challenges from countries like Russia and China.
The event was held in the Chancellor Green Rotunda. It was organized by the Liechtenstein Institute, Princeton School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA), and the European Union Program at Princeton. It was moderated by SPIA Professor Andrew Moravcsik with an introduction by SPIA Dean Amaney Jamal.
A Q&A followed von der Leyen’s speech. At the end of the event, Moravcsik unveiled a plaque dedicated to von der Leyen’s visit “to mark research, teaching, and policy initiatives with European partners.”
Michelle Miao is a news and newsletter contributor for the ‘Prince.’ She can be reached at mm3350@princeton.edu, @ michxllem on Twitter, or @_ michelleiao at Instagram.
Jackie Zhou is a news and newsletter contributor for the ‘Prince.’ She can be reached at jacqueline.zhou@princeton. edu or @jacq363 on Instagram.
