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Goodbye, Antoura: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide
by Karnig Panian (Author) Format: Kindle Edition★★★★★
★★★★★
4.7|161 ratings
In Stock
What customers say
Customers find the book well-written and compelling, describing it as a wonderful story of survival that provides perspective on the Armenian Genocide. One customer notes how the author's determination to remain grounded in faith and family adds depth to the narrative. The book receives positive feedback for its readability, with one customer emphasizing its importance for scholarly humanitarians. The emotional content receives mixed reactions, with customers describing it as heartrending and hard to read.
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"This searing account of a little boy wrenched from family and innocence" during the Armenian genocide "is a literary gem" (Financial Times).
When World War I began, Karnig Panian was only five years old, living among his fellow Armenians in the Anatolian village of Gurin. Four years later, American aid workers found him at an orphanage in Antoura, Lebanon. He was among nearly a thousand Armenian and four hundred Kurdish children who had been abandoned by the Turkish administrators, left to survive at the orphanage without adult care.
This memoir offers the extraordinary story of what he endured in those years—as his people were deported from their Armenian community, as his family died in a refugee camp in the deserts of Syria, as he survived hunger and mistreatment in the orphanage. The Antoura orphanage was another project of the Armenian genocide: Its administrators, some benign and some cruel, sought to transform the children into Turks by changing their Armenian names, forcing them to speak Turkish, and erasing their history.
Panian's memoir is a full-throated story of loss, resistance, and survival, but told without bitterness or sentimentality. His story shows us how even young children recognize injustice and can organize against it, how they can form a sense of identity that they will fight to maintain. He paints a painfully rich and detailed picture of the lives and agency of Armenian orphans during the darkest days of World War I. Ultimately, Karnig Panian survived the Armenian genocide and the deprivations that followed. Goodbye, Antoura assures us of how humanity, once denied, can be again reclaimed. Read more
Product Information
ASIN | B00UOR7ECQ |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Accessibility | Learn more |
Publication date | May 25, 2023 |
Edition | 1st |
Language | English |
File size | 7.5 MB |
Screen Reader | Supported |
Enhanced typesetting | Enabled |
X-Ray | Not Enabled |
Word Wise | Enabled |
Print length | 239 pages |
ISBN-13 | 978-0804796347 |
Page Flip | Enabled |
Best Sellers Rank | #731,843 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store) #523 in Historical Middle East Biographies #571 in Survival Biographies & Memoirs #1,208 in 20th Century World History |
Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 161 ratings |