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  • Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute (AGMI) Organizes Events Devoted T

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM-INSTITUTE (AGMI) ORGANIZES EVENTS DEVOTED TO 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FILM 'AUCTION OF SOULS' OR 'MEMORIAL OF TRUTH'

    ArmInfo
    2009-02-26 17:02:00

    ArmInfo. On the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the "Ravished
    Armenia", the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute (AGMI) has issued
    a memorial postcard and has created an on-line exhibition at
    www.genocide-museum.am.

    "Ravished Armenia", one of the first documentary memoirs of an
    eyewitness of Armenian Genocide was published in 1918, in New York. In
    this book Arshaluys (Aurora) Mardiganian, a girl from Chmshkatsag,
    Armenian populated town in the Ottoman Empire, gave a detailed account
    of the terrible experiences she endured during the deportations. At
    the age of fourteen Arshaluys was beaten and tortured in harems of
    Turkish officials and Kurdish tribesmen.

    The book "Ravished Armenia" was completed when American Committee
    for Armenian and Syrian Relief offered to create a film based on
    the scenario of the book and all the profit, which later on reached
    $30 million, would be given to 60.000 Armenian orphans in the Near
    East for relief purposes. In 1918, at Metro Goldwin Mayer studio,
    director Oscar Apfel made "Auction of Souls" silent film, which
    actually became not only the first movie on the Armenian genocide,
    but also the first genocide movie ever made. More than 10.000 Armenian
    residents of Southern California, including 200 deported children,
    participated in the scenes.

    The premiere of the "Auction of Souls" was held on February 16, 1919,
    in Plaza Hotel, New York under the auspices of Oliver Harriman and
    George Vanderbilt, members of American Committee for Armenian and
    Syrian Relief.

    The film was shown in large cities of 23 U.S. states, in several
    countries of Latin America, including Mexico and Cuba. It was a
    success everywhere and was estimated as "epoch-making film".

    The "Auction of Souls" was taken to Great Britain in December, 1919,
    and censured. After long lasting negotiations the film was shown in
    Royal Albert Hall, by the permission of Scotland Yard and played for
    three weeks. At the beginning of 1920s Mardiganian's "Ravished Armenia"
    was censured and taken off the British and American libraries.

    For over eighty years film historians have been searching the world for
    the nine reels of Ravished Armenia but failed to find any trace. The
    remaining reels of the rare nitrate based film were lost. Some say the
    reels presumably sunk with a ship on their way to the port of Batoum,
    Georgia, or stolen by thieves. The full-length version of the film,
    which lasting 85 minutes, unfortunately, hasn't been saved.

    With the efforts of Eduard Gozanlian, an Armenian from Argentina,
    a 20 minute segment of the reel was found in 1994. One copy of that
    segment is kept in the funds of Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute. The
    film included English, French and Armenian subtitles for every
    scene. The list of the original subtitles for Ravished Armenia is
    preserved in The Selig Collection at the Margaret Herrick Library
    of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. They are also
    reproduced in Anthony Slide's book "Ravished Armenia and the Story
    of Aurora Mardiganian". This book was published by Scarecrow Press
    in 1997. It tells the story of the making of the film and reveals
    the young girl's survival story.
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