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My Mother's Voice: A Genocide Survivor's Story

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  • My Mother's Voice: A Genocide Survivor's Story

    MY MOTHER'S VOICE: A GENOCIDE SURVIVOR'S STORY

    asbarez
    Thursday, October 11th, 2012

    Elise Kalfayan
    Premiering at Toronto's Pomegranate Film Festival October 14

    BY ELISE KALFAYAN

    My Mother's Voice, a genocide survivor documentary based on the novel
    A Gift in the Sunlight, premiers this weekend at the Pomegranate
    Film Festival in Toronto. Kay Mouradian presented the book, based on
    her mother Flora Munushian's story, at the Glendale Public Library
    back in 2009. I first met Mouradian there, then found opportunities
    to talk with her when we saw each other at civic, literary, and
    networking events. Her family and her extensive "community links"
    gave her resources, determination and encouragement to write the
    book, as well as professional contacts to help her translate it into
    a historical documentary.

    "I am my mother's voice," Mouradian says in the film, echoing the
    prediction in her book's preface: "she told me in no uncertain terms
    that I was going to write a book about her life." This hadn't been
    her goal or even a thought until her mother's last years. Although
    she was the author of two professional books, she had never written
    fiction before. Presenting the story of her mother's teenage years
    as a novel was an excellent decision. The 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 is more of a history of the genocide's
    impact on Flora and her family. Among its visuals: a copy and
    translation of the deportation order posted in Hadjin, where the
    family lived before their march toward Der Zor; 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.

    Mouradian's cousin, ABGU benefactor Jack Munushian, was an important
    family link to sources she needed for the story. He gave her an uncle's
    letter describing a mass slaughter along the Euphrates where Hadjin
    deportees perished. "Jack's parents had kept a lot of materials I
    was able to use," Mouradian said.

    A local writers' group was another community link cheering Mouradian
    on to reach her goal. After meeting her at the library, I talked with
    her at these writers' meetings. Each time she had important progress
    to report about her book's impact and the documentary. Besides myself
    and Catherine Yesayan, no one else in that group had an Armenian
    background or was familiar with personal accounts of the Armenian
    genocide, so Mouradian's story had a great impact.

    At subsequent library events, and at other professional events in the
    community, I would see Mouradian and catch up on her latest news. One
    of her South Pasadena neighbors had introduced her to his colleague,
    award-winning filmmaker Mark Friedman. Friedman agreed to produce
    the film with her. "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 distills 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."

    Mouradian's South Pasadena community links not only got her introduced
    to a top-notch film collaborator, they have also supported and
    recognized her educational and civic endeavors. While serving as LA
    Community College Professor of Health and Physical Education, she
    published guidebooks and studies on yoga. She was honored for her
    professional and literary achievements by Congressman Adam Schiff,
    who named her 2012 Woman of the Year for South Pasadena. She is one
    of the original members of Women in South Pasadena Political Action
    (WISPPA) http://www.wisppa.org, a group that encourages well-qualified
    women to become active in city government and civic organizations.

    WISPPA's 2012 annual meeting in September drew close to 50 people,
    women and men. Some fellow writers and I were invited as guests,
    because a private screening of My Mother's Voice was scheduled
    right after the organization's business concluded. This audience
    also (except for perhaps four Armenian-Americans) was unfamiliar
    with personal genocide stories, and it was clear the whole room 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."

    In furthering her mission to tell her mother's story, Mouradian
    reached out to and beyond her higher education community, our mutual
    library and literary connections, and her civic advocacy contacts. She
    established links with the Ararat-Eskijian Museum, the Armenian
    Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan, The Genocide Education Project,
    the Near East Archive, and many individuals who have collected and
    published original research. She has published a wonderful book and
    produced a moving documentary. See it in Toronto if you are there
    this weekend! Read more about Kay Mouradian's work on her website,
    KayMouradian.com.

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