Save Armenia

What is Happening to Armenian Christians in the Near East?

Armenia, the first Christian nation, faces serious existential threat from its Azeri and Turkish neighbors committed to ethnic and religious cleansing.

Armenian Christians in Nagorno-Karabakh, starved for nine months in a genocidal campaign by Azerbaijan, was recently attacked from Azeri forces.

Learn more about the crisis

Watch On YouTube

What can you do?

  1. 1

    Pray for peace in the region

  2. 2

    Raise awareness

  3. 3

    Contact your 2024 candidates and U.S. Representatives

  4. 4

    Sign up for updates

Raise Awareness on Social Media

Download Guide

Contact your 2024 candidates and U.S. Representatives

Azerbaijan will continue its blockade so long as it is convinced that Americans aren’t paying attention.

If Americans across the nation condemn this violence with one voice, Azerbaijan will take notice. We believe the best way to put this issue at the top of the American news cycle is to generate public comments from 2024 presidential candidates and current elected officials.

Therefore, we ask that you please contact the following leaders and ask them to publicly condemn Azerbaijan’s starvation of 120,000 Armenian Christians:

Contact

Sign Up for Updates

Name

For questions or inquiries, email dan@philosproject.org

VIP Delegation to Armenia

American influencers and leaders in Armenia

In June 2023, Philos brought a VIP delegation on a fact-finding trip to Armenia to better advocate for Armenians’ security in their ancestral homeland.

Meeting with Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturyan

President Khachaturyan met with our delegation to discuss shared Christian values, Armenia's geopolitical crisis, and how American Christians can foster relationships and better advocate for Armenians.

Saint Anna Church in Yerevan

We visited historical and cultural landmarks studying Armenia's Christian identity and rich heritage as the world's first Christian nation after conversion in 301 AD.

Visiting the Armenian border with Azerbaijan

To better understand the crisis in the region and potential solutions for Armenians, we met with government, military, and religious officials. We visited Jermuk, a town on the border with Azerbaijan and the site of recent incursions by Azeri forces.

Ambassador Samuel Brownback greets Jermuk Mayor

Special guest Samuel Brownback, former United States Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom, joined our delegation.

Delegation lays flowers at Armenian Genocide Memorial

We learned about the history of Armenian persecution in their homeland and honored the 1.5 million victims of the Armenian Genocide perpetrated by successive Ottoman regimes in the 19-20th century.

OUR LETTER TO PRESIDENT BIDEN

January 25, 2023

President Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Washington, DC. 20500

 

Dear President Biden:

 

Since December 12th a blockade along the Lachin Corridor has cut the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, largely Armenian Christians, off from the outside world, creating a humanitarian disaster that will soon reach a critical point. As an organization devoted to supporting indigenous Christian communities in the Near East, we have done our utmost, along with other organizations, to raise awareness. But media coverage until very recently has been sparse, and international interest in resolving the crisis is tepid at best.

 

Day by day the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh grows more dire, as routine shipments of basic supplies, medicines, and food supply on which the region is utterly dependent remain completely shut off, save a handful of International Red Cross humanitarian convoys. Soon the situation will become untenable for the 120,000 Armenians of Artsakh. That’s why we joined a recent warning issued by the Armenian National Committee of America that describes how more than a dozen risk factors for crimes against humanity are present in this mountain enclave. Some feel we are on the verge of a second Armenian genocide.

 

It is a manufactured crisis of Baku’s sinister design. Though thinly disguised as work of eco-activists protesting mining operations, the blockade’s intent was laid bare by President Aliyev ‘s offer that the road out was open to any Armenians who wished to leave. Ethnic cleansing…not eco-activism.

 

We acknowledge that this is a complex situation with a checkered past. The historic powerbroker in the region, Russia, has not mediated as it has in the past, perhaps because their ongoing, unjust war in Ukraine limits them from being more assertive.   It certainly can’t have made them more receptive to entreaties from the West to be more helpful. Meanwhile, Turkey has been unsurprisingly unwilling to rein in its Azeri protege.

 

We appreciate that members of your administration – Secretary Blinken and National Security Advisor Sullivan, in particular – have engaged diplomatically in an attempt to hasten negotiations that might resolve the ongoing crisis.  But the exigencies of the situation require more than the normal pace of diplomacy and actions beyond the release of public statements of condemnation.

 

To disarm the current crisis and move the parties toward meaningful negotiations we urge you to do the following things.  First, mobilize immediate humanitarian assistance to the Armenians blockaded in Nagorno-Karabakh.  Second, lend the full weight of your office and exercise personal leadership in working with allies to lift Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin Corridor, including using the power of U.S. sanctions—economic and diplomatic—to motivate the Azeri government.  Last, continue to engage meaningfully after the end of the blockade and throughout long-promised negotiations to help ensure a lasting and just peace.

 

From the start, your administration promised to put human rights at the center of its foreign policy, and you demonstrated clear moral leadership early in your presidency when you officially recognized the Armenian genocide.   We urge you to make good on that promise and that you avert a second Armenian genocide by taking decisive action now.

 

The lives of 120,000 Armenians and nearly 1,700 years of Christian culture hang in the balance.

 

Sincerely,

Robert Nicholson

President and CEO of The Philos Project

 

 

CC: The Honorable Anthony Blinken, Secretary of the Department of State, and Jake Sullivan, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs

 

 

The lives of 120,000 Armenians and nearly 1,700 years of Christian culture hang in the balance.