Behistunskaa Nadpis- Armenia May 2026
The swallow flies east every spring. Past Lake Urmia. Past the broken bridge at Van. It lands on a khachkar that is not yet carved, in a kingdom that will call itself Hayastan long after Elamite is a ghost.
When the chisel slipped—deliberately, they said—I left a crack running down the neck of the kneeling rebel. The crack is still there. Rain found it. Then lichen. Then a British officer in 1835, pressing paper against the stone, copying my master’s lie. behistunskaa nadpis- armenia
He did not copy the swallow.
The king sat on his throne in Parsa, fat with gold and incense, while his scribes flattened clay. But my people—the rock-cutters, the rope-men, the ones with dust in their lungs—we kissed the cliff at Bagastana. Three hundred feet up, wind snapping at our backs like a whip. The swallow flies east every spring
The cliff keeps both truths.
In the space where Elamite kisses Akkadian, I hid a small bird. Not the Faravahar, not the king’s bow. A karkam —the swallow that nests in the gorges of the Araxes. My mother’s mother was from that land. She taught me to make butter in a goatskin, to curse the Medes under my breath, to know that Armina was not a satrap’s tax receipt but the sound of water over basalt. It lands on a khachkar that is not