mmmmmmm I want a remake of this movie, it looks hot on black and white.It is a still from the film 'Ravished Armenia', based on the book 'Auction of Souls' by Aurora Mardiganian.
It isn't, and doesn't claim to be, a photo of an actual event, but does claim to be a re-enactment of one.
another still: View attachment 59230
This mass crucifixion of Armenian women occurred around April, 1915. It was only a small part of a "Young Turk" government's genocide committed from 1915 to 1917 against the Armenians, with further crimes being committed by the Turks in 1922/23. The genocide is remembered, by Armenians, on 24 April, commemorating the start of the atrocities and is also known as the "White Genocide". Estimates of victims (men, women and children) murdered by the Turks figure around 1,500,000 and does not include Greeks, Assyrians and other minorites exterminated under the Ottoman policy of "Turkification". The future Nazis must have been taking notes furiously. Officially, the Turkish government continues to deny the genocide ever happened, even to this day.genuine photo unknown date .Mass crucifiction of Armenian womenView attachment 59221
http://www.cruxforums.com/xf/attachments/mass_crucification_of_armenian-females_01-jpg.59221/The picture is a modified version of an original frame from "Ravished Armenia". The image has been reversed & the women in the foreground replaced by more "attractive" modern women with shorter hair. (See original below).
Mardiganian did not describe a scene like this but did descrive women & children being impaled by the Turks.
don't know but it is a manipulationhttp://www.cruxforums.com/xf/attachments/mass_crucification_of_armenian-females_01-jpg.59221/
I was wondering where the blonde in the middle came from?
The picture is a modified version of an original frame from "Ravished Armenia". The image has been reversed & the women in the foreground replaced by more "attractive" modern women with shorter hair. (See original below).
Mardiganian did not describe a scene like this but did descrive women & children being impaled by the Turks.
I sure looks real enough to me.It is a still from the film 'Ravished Armenia', based on the book 'Auction of Souls' by Aurora Mardiganian.
It isn't, and doesn't claim to be, a photo of an actual event, but does claim to be a re-enactment of one.
I agree absolutely ... as far as i know there exists not any original photo of reported crucifixion.'Some of the women were saved - as the picture shows - by Bedouin Arabs who took them down from the crosses.'
Again, I emphasise, this is a still from a film
which was a re-enactment of reported events,
it is not a photo of an actual incident.