Armenia, a tale of solidarity through books

An editorial by Alain Boinet

Behind the students, from left to right, Sylvain Tesson, Alain Boinet, Vincent Montagne and Renaud Lefebvre, at the SPFA Francophone Centre in Yerevan.

The 4 pallets of books from France arrived safely in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, on Monday 22 January 2025. They contain 2,700 books of contemporary French-language literature for students, an initiative of Défis Humanitaires and its partners (1) with the support of the French Embassy.

This Monday, at the SPFA francophone centre in Yerevan, we are here with Sylvain Tesson, the patron of this initiative, Vincent Montagne, president of the Syndicat National de l’Edition (SNE) and its director, Renaud Lefebvre, who have made it possible to collect 4000 new books free of charge from 12 publishing houses (2) on the basis of a list drawn up by level of age from 6 to 18.

Habet, Anna, Liana, Garéguine, Nelli, the teachers are here with some of the 60 students, many of them young girls like Meri, who was expelled from Artsakh with her family, and who sings us a song from her country. They are all learning French and speak it well.

We began the day by meeting representatives of two publishing houses, Antares and Newmag, as well as the Deputy Minister for Culture, Education and Sport, Daniel Danielyan, together with Xavier Richard from the embassy and David Tursz (Institut français). Partnership projects were outlined with Vincent Montagne and Renaud Lefebvre from the SNE, including the idea of Armenia taking part in the Paris Book Festival.

Together with the French ambassador, Olivier Decottignies, our delegation paid their respects at the memorial to the genocide perpetrated by the Young Turk government in 1915 and 1916, during which 1.5 million Armenians perished. Vincent Montagne laid a wreath on behalf of the SNE, and we placed white carnations in front of the flame which, day and night, serves as a reminder of their martyrdom.

Yerablur Cemetery

We then went to Yerablur cemetery, on the heights of Yerevan, where soldiers and volunteers, including students, killed during Azerbaijan’s 44-day war against Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020, are buried. Flags fly everywhere, as they do on Maïdan Square in Kiev in Ukraine, and on each grave we can see the face of each of the victims, most of them young people aged 18 to 20.

It was a day full of emotion, history and solidarity.

The next day, on our way to Goris, we stopped at the Vedi dam. This huge reservoir, the largest built since the Soviet period, was built in partnership with the Republic of Armenia thanks to a loan and expertise from the Agence Française de Développement (AFD) and a grant from the European Union.

VEDI reservoir, Mount Ararat in the distance. Photo Antoine Agoudjian

Olivier Decottignies is very proud of this project presented to us by Audrey from AFD. The Vedi reservoir will irrigate 3,000 hectares of farmland in the Ararat and Armavir plains, making the country and its people more self-sufficient and food sovereign. In front of us, immaculate Mount Ararat rises from the plain, splendid and snow-capped, at 5,165 metres.

The mountain road in this region of the Southern Caucasus is a long one, leading over snowy passes to the sub-prefecture of Goris, the last large town before the Azeri military positions.

We are warmly welcomed by Carmen, director of the SPFA French-speaking centre, which caters for 120 French-speaking pupils throughout the year. A group of women from Artsakh are waiting for us, bearing witness to the suffering of exile and hope. Here, they use sewing machines to make pretty handicrafts with floral motifs, enabling them to get together and provide for their families. Listening to them, I realise just how battered, courageous and enterprising these women are.

In Goris with students and books

It’s also a good time to meet the French pupils and open a parcel we’ve brought along containing books donated by publishers at the request of Vincent Montagne (SNE), with the support of the Auvergne Rhône-Alpes region, which is heavily involved in this province of Syunik. Among these books, there is ‘Céleste ma planète’ by Thimothée Fombelle, ‘Le Journal d’Aura’ by Marie Deplechin and ‘La panthères des neiges’ by Sylvain Tesson, who talks to these young girls who are both sad and happy.

I came here to Goris a year ago, and that’s when the Humanitarian Challenges project was born – to come back with these books. Although the classic authors are well known, contemporary authors were absent from the library. This is now the case in Goris, as it will soon be in the 76 establishments and libraries selected throughout Armenia’s 11 provinces.

At dawn, while it was still dark, we set off with Sylvain Tesson, photographer Antoine Agoudjian and Alix Montagne for Kornidzor, where we met up with Rasmik, a farmer looking after his 6 cows. On the terrace, as day breaks and the cold penetrates us, he points out an Azeri military position 200 metres away! The front line is in front of his house, where his 5 sons live with their wives and children. The village is home to displaced people from Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsak. Rasmik has decided to stay on his farm. To stay is to resist. His whole life is there, so why run away? A lesson in courageous humanity rooted in a harsh and rugged life.

Ramzik with Sylvain Tesson 200 metres from the Azerbaijan positions

On the way back, we stopped off in the village of Verischen, with its 2,200 inhabitants, including 35 families displaced from Artsakh, a total of 120 people. We visit a displaced family for whom a house has been rehabilitated by the Fonds Arménien de France with David and Chadounts, its local manager. At the town hall, we meet Artak, the mayor. One of his main problems is water, both for drinking and for farming. In 2021, the Azeris took control of the Black Lake upstream, as well as over 1,500 hectares of land. There are 17 water catchments, many of which need to be rehabilitated. This is a project to which Défis Humanitaires can contribute in addition to its books. When asked about the danger, Artak replies calmly, ‘We’re used to the threat. We are worried, but we don’t cry’. Living with them is their raison d’être.

We set off again for Yerevan, reflecting on what we have seen and understood on these roads of solidarity. As Jean-François Deniau said, ‘There is no hope in the silence of others’. We must break the silence, the abandonment, the indifference.

In humanitarian terms, Armenia can be described as an almost forgotten crisis. In September 2023, it hosted more than 100,000 displaced persons driven out of Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh, i.e. 3% of the Armenian population, yet it largely escaped the attention of the media and many European countries. Armenia has powerful hostile neighbours, including Azerbaijan, which threatens it and has massive military superiority. Finally, the country is situated on the new geopolitical axis that runs from Ukraine through Moldavia and Georgia to Armenia. It is now on the front line of the new East-West confrontation.

Lastly, the very existence of ethnic and/or national minorities is threatened throughout the world, and this is the case for Armenia and the Armenians, who are a part of humanity with the right to live free and independent lives.

Défis Humanitaires will continue its action, for which the support of your donation will be invaluable.

Thank you for your support.

Alain Boinet.

 

To read Sylvain Tesson’s report in Le Figaro Magazine, click here.

(1) We would like to thank Sylvain Tesson, writer and patron of this operation, Vincent Montagne, President of the Syndicat National de l’Edition (SNE) and its Director, Renaud Lefebvre, along with the entire SNE team, Antoine Agoudjian, photographer, Alix Montagne, Olivier Decottignies, French Ambassador to Armenia, as well as Xavier Richard and Dominique Vaysse. We would also like to thank the SPFA French-speaking centres, which welcome 350 students in their nine centres, with Janik Manissian, Hélène Ohandjanian, Habetnak Khachatryan, Anna Harutyuryan, Carmen Apunts and their teams. Finally, I would like to thank the members of the Défis Humanitaires committee of experts and its donors.

(2) List of publishing houses that we would like to thank for donating 2700 selected books: Albin Michel, Dargaud, Edition des Equateurs, Flammarion, Fleurus, Gallimard, Glénat, Hachette, La Martinière, L’Ecole des Loisirs, Seuil Jeunesse, Editions Paralèlles.

 

Alain Boinet is President of the association Défis Humanitaires, which publishes the online magazine www.defishumanitaires.com. He is the founder of the humanitarian association Solidarités International, of which he was Managing Director for 35 years. He is also a member of the Groupe de Concertation Humanitaire at the Centre de Crise et de Soutien of the French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, and of the Board of Directors of Solidarités International, the Partenariat Français pour l’Eau (PFE), the Véolia Foundation and the Think Tank (re)sources. He continues to travel to the field (Northeast Syria, Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh and Armenia) and to speak out in the media.

 

 

I invite you to read these interviews and articles published in the edition :

Solidarity with Armenian students. 

Let’s give them books of contemporary French literature.

Humanitarian project sponsored by writer Sylvain Tesson.


In front of me in the room, the girls stood up and introduced themselves. They were learning French in the autonomous region of Nagorno-Karabakh, or Artsakh, from which 100,000 Armenians were expelled by Azerbaijan in September 2023.

They recount the painful exodus of their families, the feeling of abandonment and then the welcome they received in Armenia. One of them weeps silently as she recalls her heartbreak, while another sings a song from her homeland. Behind them, a library of books in French.

We are at the Centre Francophone SPFA in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, where Hélène and Habetnak, who run the centre, have invited me. In Paris, I met Janik, the warm and enterprising president of the association.

We do have books of classic French literature, but we don’t have any of the contemporary French literature that we’d so much like to read’, the young students told me.

In Armenia, there are nearly 300 schools and around ten French-speaking centres where French is taught, from primary school to university.

In Ilijan, for example, we were welcomed into a school by a small delegation including the French ambassador, the president of the rural mayors of France and members of the Fonds Arméniens de France. The pupils sang their national anthem, then a Jacques Brel song, recited poems and surprised us with a Marseillaise.

I found the same atmosphere in Goris, in the province of Syunik on the border with Azerbaijan, where Carmen enthusiastically runs the SPFA French-speaking centre, which welcomes students and refugees who come to meet up, help each other, work in the sewing workshop and learn French, which for them is a window on the world.

How can we help them?

What I feel is the vital need for Armenians not to be alone in adversity and to be able to count on support and friends.

For them, learning French means discovering another language, another culture, another country, and also being able to share their own. As always and as everywhere, the smallest peoples are the most threatened when they live surrounded by large, powerful and aggressive countries. Armenia is still under threat today.

Back in Yerevan, we spoke to Olivier Deccotignies and Dominique Vaysse from the embassy’s cooperation and cultural action department. We share the same observation, that there is a clear lack of contemporary French-language literature in libraries.

Together with our readers and the partners who will be supporting this project, we can offer schoolchildren and students a wonderful Christmas present with these books, which we hope will soon be available in French-speaking schools, colleges, universities, libraries and centres in Armenia.

We’re thinking of Daniel Pennac, Marie Desplechin, Anna Gavalda, Amin Maalouf and, in the world of comics, Enki Bilal, Riad Sattouf and many others.

Our aim is to collect 2,500 to 3,000 new books, selected according to the level of French, from the age of 6 up to 18 and beyond. To achieve this, we have selected 76 schools and libraries in the country’s 11 regions that will receive these books as soon as we have the necessary funding and all the books.

And we’re already dreaming of all those books on the library shelves and all those readers who will be able to discover new authors, today’s literary works and even comic strips and the latest methods of teaching French as a foreign language.

This project could be yours.

To make this dream come true, we need your support – readers, foundations, associations, local authorities and institutions – both to finance this project and to promote it, support it and give it the visibility and publicity that will encourage other similar initiatives.

With this project, we will also be paying tribute to Charles Aznavour, whose 100th birthday we are celebrating, and to Missak and Mélinée Manouchian, who are buried today in the Panthéon in Paris.

The project has already received the support of writer Sylvain Tesson, the Syndicat National de l’Edition and its president, Vincent Montagne, the French ambassador to Armenia, Olivier Deccotignies, the Armenian ambassador to France, Hasmik Tolmajian, the Centres francophones SPFA and its president, Janik Manissian, and of course the association and magazine Défis Humanitaires, which is organising it. Other partners will be joining them in the coming weeks.

Publishers have been asked to donate these new books in response to a call from the Syndicat National de l’Edition, and we have already received a thousand books in our warehouse in Paris.

Other books are in the process of being dispatched, and we now desperately need your donation to finance the costs inherent in the project (transport of books and customs clearance, logistics, delegation and travel to Armenia, communication and information for partners and donors).

I invite you to make a donation today to this wonderful project ‘Armenia, books of contemporary French literature for students’, here: (faireundon) for which we will send you a tax receipt.

This project depends on you! Thank you for making it possible (faireundon).

Many thanks for the students in Armenia.

Alain Boinet.

Chairman.

Défis Humanitaires.

PS/ We will keep you regularly informed of the progress of your support for this project. If necessary, you can contact us at: contact@défishumanitaires.com