He Chose to Step Up, Not Turn Away
In 1976, at Yerevan Lake in Armenia, tragedy struck. A crowded trolleybus, carrying nearly one hundred passengers, veered off course and plunged into the cold, deep water. Within moments, the vehicle was upside down and sinking fast.
Shavarsh Karapetyan was just 23 years old then—a decorated swimming champion, out for his daily run by the lakeside. As he witnessed the disaster unfold, he didn’t pause to think. Instead, with no protective gear and no hesitation, he dove headfirst into the filthy, freezing lake.
Beneath the dark surface, Shavarsh dived ten meters deep. He kicked at the bus window with all the power in his legs, shattering the glass and badly injuring himself in the process. But this was only the beginning.
For nearly twenty minutes, without light and with broken glass cutting his legs, he made trip after trip—around twenty dives in total—pulling person after person from the doomed vehicle and bringing them to the surface. By the time it was over, he had rescued 37 people; 20 of them would survive, and nine more managed to escape through the door he had broken open.
The price for his heroism was steep. Shavarsh nearly died from severe lung infections and spent weeks in the hospital recovering, forever marked by wounds that would never fully heal.
And yet, only a year later, he summoned the strength to compete one last time, winning another gold medal and setting his eleventh world record before retiring from professional swimming.
Not everyone is given the chance to do something truly heroic. But when that moment arrived, Shavarsh Karapetyan chose to step forward, not turn away.
Let his story remind us: when fate tests our courage, greatness is found not in hesitation, but in the choice to act.