TARZANA (SBWire) – “Armenia, My Love” is a feature film about the Armenian Genocide that is set to Premiere on April 15th, 2015, at Laemmle Theatres, in Los Angeles. 101 years have passed since the Turkish Government started the mass extermination of the first Christian Nation: the Armenians, and nor the Republic of Turkey and the United States have recognized any of the events that took place in 1915.
“Armenia, My Love” is a film about hope, love and faith. It is not a story of an Armenian family, but the story of the entire Armenian people ripped from its homeland, raped, killed, revived and strengthened.
Diana Angelson, a Romanian American actress, writer and director brings “Armenia, My Love” to theaters, in April 2016. She was chosen by Ruben Vardanyan’s 100 Lives Foundation, whose co-chair is George Clooney, as one of the people that commemorated the Genocide in a special way. George Clooney’s wife, Amal Clooney presented Armenia’s case in front of The European Court of Human Rights.
The film’s Premiere will be on April 15th, 2016, at Laemmle Theatres in Los Angeles, one week before the 101st commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.
“Armenia, My Love” is a feature film, written and directed by Diana Angelson. The destiny of a happy Armenian family, living in Turkey, in 1915, whose beautiful dreams will become memories in the eyes of the most famous Armenian American artist, who lives to paint the story of his shattered childhood.
The following is the trailer to the film:
it is ti9me for the US to acknowledge this GENOCIDE! Are we afraid of Turkey?
It is overdue for the US Government to officially acknowledge this GENOCIDE! What are we waiting for?
I have just spent a most delightful Easter afternoon with a Greek neighbor and his family. His lovely daughter Maria proudly showed me a segment of Armenia My Love she had acted in, portraying the nurse who had come upon the boy kneeling beside his mother who had been murdered. As she washed his mother’s blood from the boy’s hands I reflected upon this historic travesty and now, hours later, ponder why, after 101 years this has not been addressed on a Global scale. By the way, I am not Armenian; nor am I Greek. I am Polish, on my paternal side 1,000 years; Norwegian before that and, apparently, Mongolian along the way. God knows ancestral blood has been spilt a plenty; but here I am empathizing. Won’t you join me? Przastek! (Any others out there? MY Grandpapa changed our name at Ellis Island, late 19th century.)
from the b