Drawing on accounts from over a dozen witnesses, most never before published, the author recounts the life and death of one village. He follows his father, Boghos Kezerian Kaloosdian, and other townspeople from the first int...

Buy Now From Amazon

Drawing on accounts from over a dozen witnesses, most never before published, the author recounts the life and death of one village. He follows his father, Boghos Kezerian Kaloosdian, and other townspeople from the first intimations of violence through deportations, separations, massacres, and escapes, to the establishment of diasporal communities. With striking immediacy, the author presents Tadem as a microcosm of the Genocide and argues that the Turks used the outbreak of World War I as a cover for atrocities motivated by religious hatred and greed.

Similar Products

Operation Nemesis: The Assassination Plot that Avenged the Armenian GenocideTruth Held Hostage: America and the Armenian Genocide - What Then? What Now?Therefore, God Must Be Armenian!Stories My Father Never Finished Telling Me: Living with the Armenian legacy of loss and silenceGoodbye, Antoura: A Memoir of the Armenian GenocideMy Grandmother: An Armenian-Turkish MemoirRecovering Armenia: The Limits of Belonging in Post-Genocide Turkey