Topic

Armenian studies

Repatriation is not a sprint. It is a marathon.

Like every marathon, almost everyone hits a crisis at some point of repatriation. After years of observing hundreds of repatriation journeys as a co-founder and director of Repat Armenia – and going through one myself in 2010 from Moscow – I increasingly feel that most repatriates pass through at least three major crises. Not only […]

May 13, 2026 Vartan Marashlyan

The Armenians of Basra-Iraq: Rich Historical Legacy of Disappearing Community

The Armenian history and heritage of Basra, Iraq is rich and centuries old, yet it remains largely understudied and not widely documented. During their centuries-old presence in this port city in Southern Iraq, the Armenians contributed much to the city’s mercantile, trading and intellectual prosperity. Their historical presence can be compartmentalised into two historical periods: […]

April 15, 2026 Robert S H Istepanian

How My Dissertation Went Terribly, Wonderfully Wrong

When I arrived at St. John’s University to begin my PhD in history, my plan was to be a modernist. In my application, I had enthusiastically proposed to study modern perceptions of Middle Eastern women. I labored under this plan for two full academic years, all the while fulfilling my coursework requirements. One afternoon, I […]

February 24, 2026 Ashley Bozian