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"Nowhere, A Story of Exile" book on Armenian massacres in Baku prese

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  • "Nowhere, A Story of Exile" book on Armenian massacres in Baku prese

    "Nowhere, A Story of Exile" book on Armenian massacres in Baku presented

    Saturday, September 06, 2014


    Novosti international press center in Yerevan yesterday hosted
    "Nowhere, A Story of Exile" book about a family of Armenian refugees
    from Baku. The head of Ordinary Genocide Project Marina Grigoryan said
    at the event that the book was published in the U.S. and is unique in
    the sense that it is the first English-language book about the
    Armenian massacres in Baku.

    According to M. Grigoryan, the book is based on Anna Astvatsaturian
    Turcotte's diary that she kept at age of 10-12 when she lived in Baku.
    Later in the United States where she moved along with her family, Anna
    Astvatsaturian Turcotte published the book that contains her memories
    of the 1988-1992 events. The book also includes recollections from
    witnesses of persecution and atrocities committed against Armenians.

    M. Grigoryan said that because of the records made in the diary, Anna
    Astvatsaturian Turcotte can be compared to Anne Frank, a Jewish girl
    who described the Nazi terror in her wartime diary.

    Ms. Grigoryan informed those present that the creative group of "The
    Baku Tragedy in Eyewitness Accounts" Project that was launched on the
    25th anniversary of the Armenian massacres in the Azerbaijani capital
    went to the U.S. to meet with Armenian refugees residing there. "As a
    result, extensive interesting materials with unique accounts were
    gathered to be used for a new collection and a film," the project head
    said, adding that new forms of presenting the tragedy will be sought.

    "We consider it important to show that not only Armenians, but also
    families in which one of the spouses was of Armenian descent suffered
    from the tragedy," Marina Grigoryan said. She announced that the
    English- and Russian-language premieres of the film are scheduled for
    January 2015.

    Novosti-Armenia news agency reports that Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte
    who is on a visit to Yerevan said for her part that the Americans are
    not familiar with the Karabakh problem and the Baku events, but
    following the book's publication and the meetings held, many of them
    started taking a sincere interest.

    She told those present that in September 1989 when she was 11 her
    family fled Baku and moved to Armenia. The plight of Armenian refugees
    from Baku worsened after the 1988 Spitak earthquake, amid the Karabakh
    war and the disintegration of the USSR.

    "After living in quite difficult conditions in Armenia for two and a
    half years, our family made a decision to move to America. We arrived
    in the U.S. with four suitcases, $180 and refugee status: that was all
    we had. It was the beginning of a new peaceful future," Astvatsaturian
    Turcotte noted.

    In her words, at that time she took a decision to preserve the diary
    for her children and grandchildren so that "they could be aware of
    their roots, their past and imagine those hardships that the people of
    Artsakh have endured," she said.

    "Interest in the Baku events and the Karabakh independence process is
    increasing in American society in recent years. Many members of the
    Armenian Diaspora had no idea of it, and I consider this inadmissible.
    My husband and me worked together to contribute to the adoption of the
    resolution about Karabakh's independence by the State of Maine,"
    Astvatsaturian Turcotte stated.
    In her words, she has repeatedly made speeches, sharing her memories
    not only in various U.S. states, but also in the Congress, and she
    received an invitation to deliver a speech in the European Parliament
    in October.

    "I will speak about the difficult path that Armenians of Baku have
    followed, as well as the Karabakh problem and the work aimed at the
    recognition of Karabakh's independence," said Anna Astvatsaturian
    Turcotte, a lawyer and a mother of two. She was granted U.S.
    citizenship in 1997.

    The Ordinary Genocide Project is implemented the PR and Information
    Center of the Armenian President's Administration. As part of the
    project, a series of documentaries was filmed in five languages about
    the events in Sumgait, Baku, Maraga, the Ring Operation, Karabakh
    records website was launched, and a number of books were published,
    republished, and translated.

    http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2014/09/06/armenian-anna-frank/

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