Description

Antonina Mahari’s (1923-2018) life represents the triumph of the human spirit over the tragic evils of twentieth century totalitarianism. As a university student in her native Lithuania after World War II, Antonina was arrested, interrogated, and finally exiled to a Siberian labor camp, where she met and fell in love with a fellow prisoner, the Armenian poet Gurgen Mahari (1903-1969), who had been exiled as a result of the Stalinist purges. With the death of Stalin, she was released and moved with Mahari (now her husband) to Yerevan, where Armenia’s complex intellectual atmosphere presented new challenges. This lively memoir is written with a mixture of humor, keen insight into people’s strength weakness, and a firm commitment to human dignity and justice.

Additional information
Weight .87 lbs
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