Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day: 4 things Christians must demand

Christian Post
April 24 2026

Armenians gathered at Saint Anna church in the center of Yerevan, Armenia, to celebrate Artsakh Republic Day on September 1, 2024. ANTHONY PIZZOFERRATO/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

Today, Armenians around the world will gather in churches and public squares to remember the first genocide of the 20th century.

They will light candles, sing hymns, and speak the names of 1.5 million men, women, and children who were driven from their homes and killed in massacres and forced deportations that lasted from 1915 to 1923. For many Christians, this day can feel like someone else’s history lesson. But it is not. It is our story too.

Armenia is widely recognized as the world’s first Christian nation, embracing the Gospel in the early fourth century. Its churches, monasteries, and martyrs stand at the very beginning of Christian civilization. When we mark Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, we are not simply looking back at an atrocity against a distant people. We remember not only tragedy, but a direct assault on a Christian nation and on Christians.

Memory, for Christians, is never meant to be passive. We remember so that we can see clearly, repent honestly, and act faithfully. If “never again” is to mean anything beyond a slogan, then April 24 must inform how we respond to Armenia’s present dangers.

The unfinished story

More than a century after the genocide, Armenians are still waiting for full acknowledgment and accountability. They are also facing new threats today, as the Republic of Armenia has come under sustained pressure from its larger neighbor, Azerbaijan.

Independent observers have documented four deeply troubling patterns: state-led hate speech against Armenians, a state-backed campaign that denies Armenian sovereignty, incursions into recognized Armenian territory, and the continued detention and abuse of Armenian prisoners. These patterns, documented by international courts, human rights organizations, and church advocates, carry deep moral significance for Christians.

These are not abstract policy debates. They are the real-world tests of whether words like “peace,” “normalization,” and “stability” are honest or empty. On this Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, I want to name four such tests, four concrete places where Azerbaijan’s behavior must change if there is to be any credible path to peace.

The four demands are simple to state:

1. Stop the hate speech

In December 2021, the International Court of Justice ordered Azerbaijan to prevent and punish hate speech against Armenians by officials and public institutions, recognizing the risk of incitement. This is not the language of activists; it is the language of the world’s highest court. The Court’s order came in response to evidence of state-led, systematic anti-Armenian rhetoric, including at the highest levels of government.

A report on “Aliyev and Hate Speech” documents repeated dehumanizing statements by President Ilham Aliyev and other officials, noting that such rhetoric continued even after the ICJ’s order. Further research has also shown anti-Armenian hostility institutionalized in schoolbooks, state media, and official narratives, describing Armenians as the most vilified group in the country.

As Christians, we understand that words matter. Scripture tells us that life and death are in the power of the tongue. Hate speech by state leaders is not a minor diplomatic misstep; it is a recognized early warning sign for mass violence and ethnic cleansing. When leaders mock, demonize, and dehumanize Armenians, they are preparing their people to accept whatever happens to them next.

Our first demand is clear: Azerbaijan must stop the hate speech, especially from officials and state-controlled institutions, and comply fully with the International Court of Justice’s order.

2. Shut down the “Western Azerbaijan” community

The second concern is less familiar to many Christians, but equally serious. In recent years, Azerbaijan has promoted an official concept called “Western Azerbaijan,” a term that frames the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia as historically Azerbaijani land. Alongside this concept, it has promoted an organization called the Western Azerbaijan Community as part of an official narrative that treats Armenia itself as a land to which Azerbaijan has historic claims.

Investigative reporting has shown that this community is not simply a grassroots group of displaced people. It is closely coordinated and supported by Azerbaijan’s Presidential Administration, functioning as a state-directed communication strategy. Analysts note that while the campaign uses humanitarian language, it carries clear irredentist undertones and helps keep nationalist fervor constantly alive.

In plain terms, this is a government-backed effort to rebrand Armenia as “Western Azerbaijan.” It is aimed not only at international audiences but at Azerbaijan’s own citizens, shaping public imagination to see Armenia not as a neighbor, but as a land that rightly belongs to them.

Christians should recognize this pattern. When a state begins to rename someone else’s homeland, it is preparing its people to accept the erasure of that neighbor’s sovereignty. That is not reconciliation; it is preparation for further injustice.

Our second demand is straightforward: Azerbaijan must shut down the Western Azerbaijan Community as a state project and abandon this irredentist campaign entirely.

3. De-occupy Armenian territory

Since May 2021, as part of the ongoing Armenia-Azerbaijan border crisis, Azerbaijani forces have crossed into and remained on internationally recognized Armenian territory. Reports indicate that troops advanced into Armenia’s Syunik and Gegharkunik provinces, occupying strategic positions, attacking nearby communities, and displacing civilians.

Analysts estimate that Azerbaijan continues to occupy at least 215 square kilometers of Armenian territory, with dozens of towns and villages affected during escalations such as the September 2022 attacks. Global conflict trackers emphasize that these incursions create a constant risk of renewed war and undermine any sense of security for Armenian communities living near the border.

For Christians, the language of land and borders can feel technical, but it is not. Land is where families live, work, worship, and bury their dead. It is where churches are built, and communities endure. To keep foreign troops on someone else’s recognized territory is to keep those communities under permanent duress.

Our third demand follows directly: Azerbaijan must withdraw its forces from Armenian territory. A just peace cannot be built while recognized land remains under foreign military occupation.

4. Release the prisoners

The fourth area of concern is the fate of Armenian prisoners held in Azerbaijan, both prisoners of war and civilians.

Human rights organizations and atrocity monitors have documented grave abuses against Armenian detainees, including torture, extrajudicial killings, and degrading treatment. Following Azerbaijan’s September 2023 offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh and the forced exodus of more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians, reports highlighted the continued detention of Armenians in Azerbaijani custody as part of a broader pattern of coercion.

Religious freedom advocates have also raised alarms about the specifically Christian dimension of that abuse. A recent report by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom details cases in which Armenian Christian prisoners were denied Bibles, subjected to beatings, and even had cross tattoos burned off their bodies while in Azerbaijani detention. The same report warns of the ongoing destruction of Armenian Christian heritage in areas under Azerbaijani control.

International humanitarian law is clear: after active hostilities cease, prisoners of war must be promptly released and repatriated. Holding them as bargaining chips for political or territorial concessions is a violation of those norms.

Our fourth demand is therefore deeply moral and unmistakably Christian: Azerbaijan must release Armenian prisoners and cease both the abuse of detainees and the destruction of Armenian Christian heritage.

So, what should followers of Jesus do with this information?

First, we should remember rightly. That means not only honoring the holy martyrs of the Armenian Genocide, whom the Armenian Church has canonized, but also recognizing that the same people and church remain under threat today. The genocidal logic of the early 20th century has not disappeared; it has taken on new forms in our own time.

Second, we should pray specifically. Pray for Armenia’s leaders, for the protection of its borders, for the safety of Armenian prisoners, and for the repentance of those who traffic in hatred and lies. Pray for the Armenian Church as it ministers in the shadow of both historical trauma and present danger.

Third, we should speak and act. That means educating those around us about April 24 and about the current situation. It means asking our elected officials to press for these four concrete steps: stopping hate speech, shutting down the Western Azerbaijan campaign, de-occupying Armenian territory, and releasing Armenian prisoners.

When Christians raise their voices together, especially during a week when the world is paying attention, history shows that it matters. The question on this Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day is not whether you care. The question is what you will do about it.

Remember rightly. Pray specifically. Then pick up the phone, send the email, share this article, and ask your elected officials to stand with Armenia on these four demands. The martyrs of 1915 cannot speak for themselves. We can.

Dr. Paul Murray is CEO of Save Armenia and a Christian leader engaged in global religious freedom and policy advocacy.

Disclaimer: This article was contributed and translated into English by Ani Kharatian. While we strive for quality, the views and accuracy of the content remain the responsibility of the contributor. Please verify all facts independently before reposting or citing.

Direct link to this article: https://www.armenianclub.com/2026/04/25/armenian-genocide-remembrance-day-4-things-christians-must-demand/

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