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My Mother's Voice - A Genocide Survival Story In Book And Film

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  • My Mother's Voice - A Genocide Survival Story In Book And Film

    MY MOTHER'S VOICE - A GENOCIDE SURVIVAL STORY IN BOOK AND FILM

    10:35, March 29, 2013

    Glendale, California, March 2013 - My Mother's Voice, an updated book
    (2013 Edition) and new documentary, tells the moving story of Flora
    Munushian's teenage years. The book and film are the work of her
    daughter Kay Mouradian.

    >From 1914-1919, Flora travelled from Hadjin, Turkey to Aleppo, Syria
    then ultimately to the United States, a survivor of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    "I am my mother's voice," Kay Mouradian declares in the new edition
    of her book and her moving documentary. "She told me in no uncertain
    terms that I was going to write a book about her."

    This hadn't been Mouradian's goal or even a thought until her mother's
    last years. Luckily, she did take up the challenge, presenting the
    story of her mother's harrowing teenage years from 1915-1919.

    Flora Munushian was a 14-year-old Armenian girl attending an American
    school in Hadjin, Turkey when a deportation order forced her community
    on a death march to Der Zor. Her father managed to stow his daughters
    in Aleppo, where she and her sister hid for the duration of WWI. Flora
    never saw her parents or her brothers again. At the age of 18, she
    sailed to the U.S. to marry an Armenian man she'd never met.

    Mouradian's narrative is well-paced and action-packed, with the right
    amount of carefully researched details. Told from her mother's point
    of view, the story highlights Flora's drive to get an education,
    her youthful idealism and her inner strength.

    The book is a great read for both young readers and adults, with a
    positive message and story arc.

    The film based on the book takes a more historical look at the
    genocide's impact on Flora and her family. Among its visuals: a copy
    and translation of the deportation order posted in Hadjin; a photograph
    of Rev. Hovhanness Eskijian, who rescued Flora, her sister and hundreds
    of Armenian orphans in Aleppo; and a photograph of Flora's family -
    most of whom perished during the march or in Der Zor.

    A neighbor introduced Mouradian to award-winning filmmaker Mark
    Friedman, who worked diligently with her to produce the documentary.

    "He was so far-sighted, and very resourceful," Mouradian said.

    Together they searched out original film footage and were able to
    use portions of the 1919 silent film Ravished Armenia that appears
    on Zareh Tjeknavorian's DVD Credo.

    Tjeknavorian wrote to Mouradian, "Congratulations to you and Mark for
    so beautifully and affectingly bringing the message of your mother's
    life to the world. Her voice speaks so eloquently through your own.

    This film, and the vast history it artfully distils into such a
    poignant and positive personal story is as much a testimony to the
    resiliency of family and culture across generations as it is to the
    evil that sought to destroy them. I am sure it will go a long way to
    honoring the memory of Flora and the millions she speaks for."

    The South Pasadena audience at a preview of the documentary last
    September was strongly affected by the film. "The film is tastefully,
    artfully done, the music is beautiful, and your narration hit all the
    right notes," one viewer wrote later. "It's a shock (and a shame)
    that this subject is not taught in high school history classes. I
    sure didn't know much about it until I moved to Glendale and started
    talking with Armenian friends."

    My Mother's Voice premiered at Toronto's Pomegranate Film Festival
    in October 2012, and was also featured at Los Angeles' ARPA Film
    Festival in December 2012.

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/24932/my-mothers-voice---a-genocide-survival-story-i
    n-book-and-film.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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