Abstract

Adolf Hitler, on August 22, 1939 stated, “I have given orders to my Death Units to exterminate without mercy or pity men, women, and children belonging to the Polish-speaking race. It is only in this manner that we can acquire the vital territory which we need. After all, who remembers today the extermination of the Armenians?” (Kherdian, 1979).Armenia is a land which has been ravaged by war on far too many occasions. Other nations keep turning it into a battlefield and tearing it apart. Armenian people have survived for many generations and their stories are told and retold during the hard winters. Armenians’ survived just as Armenia and Armenian culture have survived (Downing, 1972). Therefore, diverse life experience, traditions, histories, values, world views, and perspectives of the diverse cultural groups make up a society and preserve culture (Mendoza and Reese, 2001).In this study, two Armenian books “The Road from Home” and “The Knock at the Door” were analyzed. These books are organized as personal stories and experiences about Armenian female genocide survivors and are supplemented by background information on Armenian people before and after the genocide of their culture, including a brief history, discussion of traditions, recipes, music and religion. These stories are a great resource for educators, historians, students, and anyone interested in Armenian culture. That is culture is an historical process of humanity that preserves identity and ties the people together. Additionally, culture is the link between people and their value systems. Therefore, Norms and values addressed in stories are important factors that give continuity to cultures (Stephens, 1992).

Highlights

  • ArmeniaThere is the Armenia of the Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR), and the Armenian Diaspora, with colonies all over the world (Surmelian, 1968, p.23-24)

  • Armenia is a land which has been ravaged by war on far too many occasions

  • Two Armenian books “The Road from Home” and “The Knock at the Door” were analyzed. These books are organized as personal stories and experiences about Armenian female genocide survivors and are supplemented by background information on Armenian people before and after the genocide of their culture, including a brief history, discussion of traditions, recipes, music and religion

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Summary

Armenia

There is the Armenia of the Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR), and the Armenian Diaspora, with colonies all over the world (Surmelian, 1968, p.23-24). Surmelian (1968) p.23-24 stated, There is no other country like her. Armenia lies in the highlands surrounding the Biblical mountains of Ararat, upon which, according to the Bible, Noah’s Ark came to rest after the flood (The Armenian General Benevolent Union [AGBU], 2010). In the period 1915 Armenians were exposed to systematic and deliberate extermination. This is a turning point in the Armenian history (The Armenian General Benevolent Union [AGBU], 2010); To Armenians, especially for the senior members of the community, April 24 is a day of mourning and remembrance. It is a day to openly profess their Armenian heritage, express themselves as Armenians and demand justice for their ancestral loss to remind the world about the first genocide of the 20th century

Research Questions
Methodology
The Knock at the Door
The Road from Home
Interviewing Second Generation Armenian Women from the Middle East
Other Ethnic Groups and Their Opinion about the Genocide
Because of My Name: Ani
Conclusion

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