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Armenian Genocide, Armenian-Turkish relations, art, Hrant Dink, never forget, story without words
Posted by babylon crashing | Filed under Armenia, story without words
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19 Monday Jan 2015
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Armenian Genocide, Armenian-Turkish relations, art, Hrant Dink, never forget, story without words
Posted by babylon crashing | Filed under Armenia, story without words
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19 Friday Apr 2013
Posted in Armenia, Illustration and art, story without words
≈ Comments Off on a long march
This April 24 will commemorate the 98th day of remembrance since the 1915 events that led to the Armenian Genocide. In the same manner that the Nazis took the Jews, gays, gypsies and other undesirables to death camps, the Young Turks took 1.5 million of their own people to the desert of Der ez Zor to be massacred and die of exposure. The image that haunts me are the long lines of women and children being forced to march into the wilderness until they died from exhaustion.
03 Sunday Mar 2013
Posted in Armenia, Illustration and art, story without words
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1915, Armenia, Armenian Genocide, Der Zor, Medz Yeghern, Narine Abandian, Ottoman Turkey, որ հայերեն ցեղասպանությունը, story without words, The Great Calamity
A couple of years ago I was working on a graphic novel about the 1915 Armenian Genocide at the hands of the Young Turks. When I lived in Gyumri often when I’d visit a student’s house the grandmothers would read the coffee stains at the bottom of my cup (Armenian coffee is as thick as tar) and almost always my fortunes would be the same: I was very nice and would marry an Armenian and have lots of babies. That got me thinking about how useful soothsaying would have been back in 1915 when the Ottoman-Armenians were unaware of what their countrymen were about to do.
The story is about a young woman, Narine Abandian, who is told a different sort of future at the bottom of her coffee cup by her grandmother than she is normally use to hearing.