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Author Shares Her 'Story Of Exile'

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  • Author Shares Her 'Story Of Exile'

    AUTHOR SHARES HER 'STORY OF EXILE'

    The Daily News
    Oct 2 2013

    The Daily News
    Posted on October 2, 2013
    by Carrie McDermott

    A girl's idyllic life in the seaside city of Baku, in the Soviet
    Republic of Azerbaijan, was turned upside down by ethnic cleansing in
    the 1980s. After witnessing her Christian neighbors brutally attacked
    and killed by the majority Muslim Azeri population, her Armenian family
    fled to Yorovan, the Capitol city of Armenia. The family stayed with
    relatives in their tiny, cold stone cellar for three years, living
    with no heat and no running water. They suffered prejudice there and
    didn't speak the language. They were finally given refugee status and
    allowed to leave from Moscow to the United States, where they ended
    up in Wahpeton.

    Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte shared her family's experiences and escape
    from their beloved hometown to their new country, the United States,
    in her book, "Nowhere: A Story of Exile," at a special engagement
    at the Stern Cultural Center at the North Dakota State College of
    Science campus in Wahpeton.

    Turcotte, who is now married with two children, said her book began as
    the diary she wrote as a teenager, after the family came to Wahpeton.

    She wanted to remember her life in Baku and the atrocities she
    experienced so her future children would understand what their family
    went through, and know their Armenian heritage. She showed her father
    her writings, and he wanted her to move on - to forget the horrible
    past they survived.

    "I kept it tucked away for 20 years, until I was persuaded to publish
    it," she said.

    She recalls the family getting off the plane in Fargo, where her
    7-year-old brother was disappointed there were no skyscrapers.

    "This is America, after all," she said, as the audience laughed.

    She said her father joked, "We've been sentenced to America's Siberia."

    The community of Wahpeton embraced the family, she said, and provided
    transportation for their necessary English classes.

    "There were no ESL (English as a Second Language) programs in Wahpeton
    when we came here," she said.

    Turcotte said she's glad those programs are now in abundance in
    the region.

    "I remember our first visit to Econofoods," she said. "I had never seen
    apples that were so perfect. I'd never seen so much food in my life."

    She went on to describe the help her teacher at Wahpeton High School,
    Rep. John Wall, gave her - a shy, bright girl in a new land, trying
    to learn the language and customs of the United States.

    "He wasn't just a teacher. He was my rock outside of home, to drive
    me and push me forward," she said.

    She grew up, graduated from the University of North Dakota with
    degrees in English, philosophy and religion, and earned a degree from
    the University of Maine School of law.

    She was urged to transform her childhood diary into a book, which
    was published last year.

    Turcotte said she hopes to raise awareness of the conflict still
    occurring in Nagorno-Karabakh, that their Armenian citizens are not
    free, and she hopes her book will memorialize Armenian refugees and
    start conversations about the area.

    Turcotte was recently awarded the Mkhitar Gosh Medal, the Armenian
    government's highest civilian honor awarded for notable state, public
    and political activities as well as significant services in the areas
    of diplomacy, law and political science.

    She will speak at Wahpeton High School and Bethel Lutheran Church
    Wednesday, and has engagements in Fargo, Moorhead, Grand Forks and
    Mayville the remainder of the week.

    http://www.wahpetondailynews.com/news/article_bb9f5a42-2b75-11e3-81af-0019bb2963f4.html

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