
469 posts
Avalovesindie - Untitled - Tumblr Blog

Julia Soboleva (Latvian, b. Latvia, based Manchester, England) - Untitled, 2022, Mixed Media



Immoral Tales (Walerian Borowczyk, 1974)




Until When, 2004 (dir. Dahna Abourahme)

An woman from Ouled Neil, 1912, Algeria.

England, 1884

Church lady, Philadelphia, 1960s đđđđđ
someday i'll see you all again, but in the mean time I'll be collecting some new old friends


Look at this delicate, beautiful little creature who just sneezed and covered my face in a thin veneer of liquid snot.
ASALA: Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (part 1)

In 1915, ottoman turkey committed the Genocide of Armenians: more than 1.5 million Armenians were massacred.
Women were assaulted, raped, sexually mutilated and tortured. Many were killed by bayoneting or died from prolonged sexual abuse. The âlucky onesâ managed to kill themselves, while others were sold as slaves, forced to work as prostitutes or into marriage by their perpetrators. An eyewitness testified, "It was a very common thing for them to rape our girls in our presence. Very often they violated eight or ten year old girls, and as a consequence many would be unable to walk, and were shot."
The men were usually separated from the rest of âthe deporteesâ during the first few days and executed, but, of course, not before being tortured and mutilated. Some were crucified, beheaded, others were often drowned by being tied together back-to-back before being thrown in the water. So many bodies floated down the Tigris and Euphrates that they sometimes blocked the rivers and needed to be cleared with explosives. Other rotting corpses became stuck to the riverbanks, and still others traveled as far as the Persian Gulf.
In 1918, the young turk regime took the war into the Caucasus, where approximately 1,800,000 Armenians lived under Russian dominion. Ottoman forces advancing through East Armenia and Azerbaijan here too engaged in systematic massacres. The expulsions and massacres carried by the nationalist turks between 1920 and 1922 added tens of thousands of more victims. By 1923 the entire landmass of Asia Minor and historic West Armenia had been expunged of its Armenian population. The destruction of the Armenian communities in this part of the world was total.
And yet, despite all of thisâthe unimaginable horrors that plagued the Armenian nation in the early 20th centuryâwhat do you think the world did in response? After this descent into hell, after the suffering, the bloodshed, the total annihilationâwhat followed? Silence. Deafening, shameful silence, as always.

Silenceâuntil it was shattered 58 years later, when, at the age of 78, having exhausted every peaceful avenue to draw the worldâs attention to the Armenian Question and faced with nothing but ignorance, Gourgen Yanikyan fired 13 bullets at the Turkish consul and vice-consul. This singular act of defiance wiped 58 years of dust from the forgotten pages of Armenian history, forcing the world to confront the cause once again.By sacrificing his freedom, Yanikyan ignited a movement. His act became the catalyst for a wave of Armenian activism, inspiring the creation of ASALA, who would go on to fight for the recognition of the genocide.

In 1975, a group of Lebanese-Armenians led by Iraqi-Armenian Hakob Hakobyan, all of whose parents and/or grandparents were survivors of the genocide, inspired by Yanikyanâs self-sacrifice, decided to found an underground organization, which through armed actions will again bring the Armenian Question into the international political and legal dimension, present the recognition of the Armenian Genocide carried out by the turks in 1914-1923 by the international community, and create prerequisites for the liberation of Western Armenia. The organization was called ASALA - Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia.
The military operations of the ASALA were mainly aimed at turkish embassies, consulates, diplomats, government officials, military and police institutions, the turkish business environment, especially the offices of "turkish airlines corporation", as well as the state and public structures of other countries, which showed financial or military support to the turkish state.

Now, why am I telling you about this today? Well, today - on September 24th marks the 43rd anniversary of the Van Operation (24/09/1981), carried out by 4 Armenian ASALA soldiers - Vazgen Sislyan, Hakob Julfayan, Gevorg Gyuzelyan and Aram Basmajyan. On this day in 1981, four Armenian youths, aged 20-24, armed with pistols, automatic rifles and explosives, seized the turkish consulate in Paris, holding it under their control for 15 hours.
4 Soldiers of The Van Operation taking off their masks
The trial of âVANâ turned into a trial of the turkish government. The âVANâ operation and the political trial that followed it played a major role in bringing the Armenian issue to the international political arena, globalizing the territorial claim and the violated rights of the Armenian people, creating a new wave of condemnation of the reality of the Armenian genocide, strengthening the pride and spirit of struggle among Armenians.
When all the hope has slipped away, Itâs the mad who find a way.
Though violence is condemned, it is the cruel truth that it is the only language to which the world listens.
More about the Van Operation in the second part.






Bukharan Jewish women from Uzbekistan (Russian Empire), 1860s, from the Turkestan Album

Jewish headstone in the Minsk region, Belarus, 1907
âCodedâ in various symbolic images on gravestones were the portrait of the buried (their gender, occupation, lineage, character etc.) The hand with a jar means that the buried person was a Levite (a descendant of Leviâs tribe, from which cantors, musicians, key-keepers, treasurers, and other clergy were recruited).

An old Jewish woman in Volhynia, Ukraine, early 20th century. Photographed by Solomon Yudovin.


Fijian chef, Fiji, by Naoki Takyo

Slovak girl, Slovakia, by VĂkendovĂ˝ fotograf

Brooklyn Life, New York, August 14, 1915

Durham Morning Herald, North Carolina, March 27, 1914


The Daily Times, Davenport, Iowa, December 29, 1894

Amulet (âkameâaâ) against difficult childbirth. Beshenkovichi, Vitebsk Province, Belarus. Late 19th century.
The text is repeated twice, in the left and right part of the amulet: âAdam and Eve. To expel Lilith, Senoi, Sansenoi, Sammangelof.â The image and text are reproduced after âRaziel,â a mystic 11th century book that served as a kind of instruction for making amulets.

Daily Mirror, London, January 7, 1939

Preparation of a Jewish bride on her wedding day, Bukhara, Uzbekistan, around 2000

Preparing a Jewish bride before the wedding ceremony. Bukhara, Uzbekistan, around 2000.

Daily Press, Newport News, Virginia, April 16, 1933