The Auction of Souls: the Story of Aurora Mardiganian ... Formerly Printed ... as "Ravished Armenia."

The Auction of Souls: the Story of Aurora Mardiganian ... Formerly Printed ... as
Title The Auction of Souls: the Story of Aurora Mardiganian ... Formerly Printed ... as "Ravished Armenia." PDF eBook
Author Henry Leyford GATES
Publisher
Pages 272
Release 1920
Genre
ISBN

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Ravished Armenia and the Story of Aurora Mardiganian

Ravished Armenia and the Story of Aurora Mardiganian
Title Ravished Armenia and the Story of Aurora Mardiganian PDF eBook
Author Anthony Slide
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2014
Genre BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY
ISBN 9781617038488

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A reminder of the pivotal role one woman played in our early apprehension of the Armenian genocide

Prior to the "Auction of Souls"

Prior to the
Title Prior to the "Auction of Souls" PDF eBook
Author Aurora Mardiganian
Publisher
Pages 88
Release 2008
Genre Armenian Genocide, 1915-1923
ISBN

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This book tells Aurora Mardiganian's life story as she relays it to a movie director and screen writer prior to the making of the movie, "Auction of souls." It is written as a cartoon, with color sequences displaying her life story from the past, interspersed with black and white sequences displaying her dialogue with the movie director and screen writer.

Ravished Armenia

Ravished Armenia
Title Ravished Armenia PDF eBook
Author Aurora Mardiganian
Publisher Ravenio Books
Pages 220
Release 1918
Genre History
ISBN

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She stood beside me—a slight little girl with glossy black hair. Until I spoke to her and she lifted her eyes in which were written the indelible story of her suffering, I could not believe that she was Aurora Mardiganian whom I had been expecting. She could not speak English, but in Armenian she spoke a few words of greeting. It was our first meeting and in the spring of last year. Several weeks earlier a letter had come to me telling me about this little Armenian girl who was to be expected, asking me to help her upon her arrival. The year before an Armenian boy had come from our relief station in the Caucasus and kind friends had made it possible to send him to boarding school. I had formed a similar plan to send Aurora to the same school when she should arrive. We talked about education that afternoon, through her interpreter, but she shook her head sadly. She would like to go to school, and study music as her father had planned she should before the massacres, but now she had a message to deliver—a message from her suffering nation to the mothers and fathers of the United States. The determination in the child’s eyes made me ask her her age and she answered “Seventeen.” Tired, and worn out nervously, as she was, Aurora insisted upon telling us of the scenes she had left behind her—massacres, families driven out across the desert, girls sold into Turkish harems, women ravished by the roadside, little children dying of starvation. She begged us to help her to help her people. “My father said America was the friend of the oppressed. General Andranik sent me here because he trusted you to help me,” she pleaded. And so her story was translated. Sometimes there had to be intervals of rest of several days, because her suffering had so unnerved her. She wanted to keep at it during all the heat of the summer, but by using the argument that she would learn English, we persuaded her to go to a camp off the coast of Connecticut for three weeks. You who read the story of Aurora Mardiganian’s last three years, will find it hard to believe that in our day and generation such things are possible. Your emotions will doubtless be similar to mine when I first heard of the suffering of her people. I remember very distinctly my feelings, when, early in October of 1917, I attended a luncheon given by the Executive Committee of the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief, to a group of seventeen American Consuls and missionaries who had just returned from Turkey after witnessing two years of massacre and deportation. I listened to persons, the truthfulness of whose statements I could not doubt, tell how a church had been filled with Christian Armenians, women and children, saturated with oil and set on fire, of refined, educated girls, from homes as good as yours or mine, sold in the slave markets of the East, of little children starving to death, and then to the plea for help for the pitiful survivors who have been gathered into temporary relief stations.

Ravished Armenia

Ravished Armenia
Title Ravished Armenia PDF eBook
Author Aurora Mardiganian
Publisher
Pages 324
Release 1919
Genre Armenian Genocide, 1915-1923
ISBN

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The Auction of Souls: the Story of Aurora Mardiganian, Etc

The Auction of Souls: the Story of Aurora Mardiganian, Etc
Title The Auction of Souls: the Story of Aurora Mardiganian, Etc PDF eBook
Author Henry Leyford GATES
Publisher
Pages 251
Release 1934
Genre
ISBN

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Ravished Armenia; Or, "The Auction of Souls."

Ravished Armenia; Or,
Title Ravished Armenia; Or, "The Auction of Souls." PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages
Release 1919
Genre Electronic book
ISBN

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