Maryam looked at the children playing. She realized that every laugh she heard and every new brick laid in Karabakh was paid for by the pulse of her son’s heart. She whispered the words that were now carved into monuments across the nation: (You gave your life, so that we may live).
In the autumn of 2020, Polad had stood in the doorway, his uniform crisp and his kit bag heavy. His mother, Maryam, had tried to hold back tears as she pressed a small piece of bread into his hand—a traditional Azerbaijani send-off for those going to war.
She opened a small notebook Polad had left behind. On the last page, he had scribbled a single sentence: "Don’t cry for the ground I lie in; smile for the sky you walk under." Siz Can Verdiz Bizler Yasayaq
Weeks later, the news arrived. Polad had been among the first to scale the steep cliffs toward Shusha. He had been wounded but refused to leave his post until his squad reached the summit. He died as the sun rose over the liberated city.
The old oak table in the Aliyev household was covered in photographs, but one stood apart—framed in black ribbon. It showed Polad, a young man with a sharp jaw and eyes that seemed to look toward a horizon only he could see. Maryam looked at the children playing
"I’m going so that the children in Shusha can finally go to school without fear," he told her. "I’m going so our land can finally breathe again."
A year after the victory, Maryam sat in a newly rebuilt park in Agdam. Around her, children were laughing, chasing each other through rows of freshly planted trees. A young couple sat on a nearby bench, planning their wedding. The silence of the "Ghost City" had been replaced by the rhythm of life. In the autumn of 2020, Polad had stood
Her son had become the soil, the wind, and the very foundation of the peace that now allowed a new generation to dream.