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    Categories: 2023

AW: Aurora’s Sunrise shines bright in international film festival circuit

Aurora’s Sunrise, a historical animated documentary based on the true story of Armenian Genocide survivor Aurora Mardiganian has received numerous accolades, awards and recognition from international film festivals, critics and award ceremonies around the world. 

The film, based on Zoryan Institute’s original interview with Aurora Mardiganian, tells the brave story of survival of a young Armenian girl who overcame so much to tell the world about her story.

The Zoryan Institute signed a partnership agreement with Bars Media in 2015 to bring its oral history testimonies to life on the big screen through animation, relay stories of genocide survivors to younger generations, and help empower young women and girls around the world to follow in Mardiganian’s footsteps and represent their own communities in the face of trauma and violence. 

Since entering the international film festival circuit in June 2022, Aurora’s Sunrise has been selected as the Armenian submission for the 2023 Academy Awards and has premiered at 20 different internationally renowned festivals around the world, with more to come. Its latest award was perhaps the most significant yet, winning the grand prize at the International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights (FIFDH) of Switzerland, after 10 days of documentary and fiction film screenings. Some of the other notable awards that the film has received to date includes: 

  • Audience Award: Europa!Europa! Film Festival (Australia)
  • Grand Prize: The International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights (FIFDH) (Switzerland)
  • Best Feature Length Documentary Award: MiradasDoc 2023 (Spain)
  • The Silver Apricot: The Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival 2022 (Armenia)
  • Best Animated Film: The Asia Pacific Screen Awards 2022 (Australia)
  • Best Baltic Producer for Co-Production: The Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival 2022 (Estonia)
  • The Audience Award: Animation is Film Festival 2022 (USA)
  • The Audience Award: Asian World Film Festival 2022 (USA)
  • Second Place for Audience Favorite Film: IDFA 2022 (The Netherlands)

The film is also highly ranked by some of the most influential film critics around the world. It has scored a 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and receiving glowing reviews.

“A convincing story elegantly told, through archives, animation and fiction, about a little-known genocide that sheds light and awareness on today’s political tensions and challenges.” – MiradasDoc Festival 

“It is Aurora herself who, unsurprisingly, provides the most poignant observations as she looks back at her life.” –Amber Wilkinson, Eye for Film

“Aurora’s Sunrise’ is far more than a bricolage documentary. It is a testament to survival. When asked by a journalist what hurt Aurora more, losing her country or losing her family, Aurora’s weary response was “My country is my family.”” – Nadine Whitney, AWFJ.org

While the Zoryan Institute can’t help but to take pride in the film’s international achievements, the real gratification comes from being able to use this animated film as an effective resource to teach the next generation about the phenomenon of genocide.

The Zoryan Institute, through its Promoting Equity, Tolerance, Reconciliation and Awareness Through Genocide Education Program, uses the film for high-school students to visually understand life before, during and after genocide, and the impact that it has on individuals, families and communities. The film also allows students to compare and contrast the common threads, patterns and themes of Mardiganian’s experience as a survivor of the Armenian Genocide to other cases of genocide, to better equip students with the tools to identify patterns of violence and possibly prevent genocides and conflicts of the future. 

The animated film, juxtaposed with clips from Zoryan Institute’s original oral history testimony with Mardiganian, humanizes the experience of genocide and is the perfect medium to deliver such a powerful and heart-wrenching story to a younger audience. Dr. Rouben Adalian, Academic Board Member of the Zoryan Institute and the interviewer of the 1984 Zoryan Institute interview with Mardiganianhad this to say about the film’s impact: 

Dr. Rouben Adalian

“In the case of the oral history project, the stories are unbelievably difficult to hear, but then to see them recreated in film would, I think, just be way too difficult. The method of animation moderates the difficulties and guides us through her life, and all of its many episodes, using a very respectable technique. That’s to be commended, and I think if she is to be appreciated as a symbol of youth triumph, then the animated film technique is probably the very best way of reaching young men, and especially women, that should and can learn from her example.”

Inna Sahakyan

Aurora’s Sunrise is made possible by the academic contribution of the Zoryan Institute and is based on its oral history archives. It is directed by Inna Sahakyan, produced by Bars Media, Gebrueder Beetz Filmproduktion & Artbox Laisvalaikio Klubas, with the financial partnership of Eurimages, the Zoryan Institute & the National Cinema Center of Armenia, and with the contributions of the Lithuanian Film Center, ZDF/ARTE, Public TV Armenia and LRT. 

Zoryan Institute and its subsidiary, the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, is a non-profit organization that serves the cause of scholarship and public awareness relating to issues of universal human rights, genocide, and diaspora-homeland relations. This is done through the systematic continued efforts of scholars and specialists using a comparative and multidisciplinary approach and in accordance with the highest academic standards.


Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS