So, it started with my children being sick, which was a very important fact, because the first three or four days I had to be attached to home. Davit had gone to Leningrad to do the pre-defense of his doctoral dissertation. But later, when he called me from there, he learned what was going on here, the defense of the doctorate did not take place, and it did not take place up until today. At the beginning, a small group was gathering near Opera, I just asked here and there what was happening, even though it was visible from my window. They said that there were the ecologists. Oh, I forgot the name, yes, the greens, no, no, no, no, it wasn’t Santrosyan, it was Igor Muradyan. It was Muradyan Igor with some group, these were the first several days. And Davit called every day and said, “What’s going on there? There is some news.” I said, “well, some group is gathered, it’s the greens, they are against this and that, they’re against Nairit, they’re against this, they’re against that, and suddenly, something very strange happened. For now, I’m only telling you what I have observed from the side, because I couldn’t leave the house. Their numbers increased, increased, and then I started to see that people were already pouring from the street, they were going, they were pouring, again literally in one week the entire Opera [square] was full, the entire Opera [square]. And the thing changed, the agenda completely changed, and other things had started. And we, perhaps you know Sveta, from the English [department]... Sveta from Karabakh. At that time, because Karabakh was already heard in the Opera, Sveta moved to my house, and was sleeping at my place, by the way, that was the time when that Lukyanov came from Moscow. He arrived here, spoke some nonsense, and this Sveta said, “Let’s write an open letter to Lukyanov, I can’t write in Russian something like that.” I said, “dear Sveta, it is a pointless thing, we should not spend the night in vain, that children have fever and you ask me why I am not going to the rally? Listen, what should I do with my kids to go to the rally.” In short, then when the number [of people] reached half a million, it was full, you can’t imagine, it became clear that it is something. Then the sit-in began, and from that phase on we were already very actively involved, because the youth that initiated the sit-in were Davit’s fourth-year students, orientalists, Tigran, Armen Kharazyan, etc. There were four active students. And there they started that sit-in, my children went and sat next to them, they would not go far from them, and Davit took their exams and tests there, he was like, “what should I do, I have to do it there, I have no other choice.” They were staying there all night, and as you know our house is very close [from the Opera House], all the people came [to us], well, it was cold, they came to our place, we had tea, then we went back, then I took tea to them, then the next group would come, all the time like that. Until the moment, when they brought the army into the city, and the army was already standing along the entire Cascade, on the sidewalk in front of it, along the Cascade. Right under our window, under the kitchen window, young soldiers were lined up like this. Mikael, who was six years old at the time, took his long thing, a toy gun, out of the small kitchen window along with his head, and shouted: “fascists”, and started shooting from his rifle. They came up to our place, the idiots. Didn’t they see that it was a child? They came and said “what is there in your place? We have to search.” We will do this, we will do that, in short... And then, as they say, it off we go. It was such a pace there, and kind of, you know, like this, like this [she is waving her hands up and down], all the time, all the time. First, there was some kind of hope, then it was absolute despair, until the arrest of the “Karabakh” Committee. Then they were arrested, then the earthquake happened, then everybody fell into frustration, like after the 2020 war, the same, we have already been through the same thing once, it’s terrible... so, but back then we had faith, yes, we had faith.