ジョン・スタンメイヤーのインスタグラム(johnstanmeyer) - 4月25日 09時12分
Nektar Alatuzyan, 102, was a year old when the massacres and deportations of Armenians began during the Ottoman Empire in Turkey. Her family, rescued from a coastal mountain in southern Turkey by a French warship, escaped to Egypt; in 1947 she, her husband, and their children settled in Armenia. The last eyewitnesses of what Armenians call Medz Yeghern—the “great catastrophe”—are deemed living treasures in Armenia. A dwindling few remain to tell their families’ stories.
A photograph from my latest story, #GhostLands, in this months issue of @ナショナルジオグラフィック, part V of the @outofedenwalk. To see the entire final edit in the magazine and read the excellent prose by friend and colleague, #PaulSalopek, please visit my IG bio and click on the story link or visit my gallery in West Stockbridge, MA, for signed copies. And of course, stop by any newsstand or supermarket checkout isle.
All my best, @ジョン・スタンメイヤー
@natgeocreative @thephotosociety @National Geographic Travel #armenia #genocidesurvivor #survivor #portrait #genocide #armeniangenocide #peace music composed in #garageband
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