Noura Kevorkian is a documentary filmmaker (writer, director, editor, and cinematographer). She has won numerous awards including a 2023 Peabody Award[1] for her 2022 film Batata, which is submitted for consideration to the 2024 Oscars in the Documentary Feature Category.
Noura Kevorkian is a Lebanese Canadian Armenian filmmaker. Her Lebanese father, Barkev Kevorkian, was a machinist. Her Syrian mother, Dzaghig Kevorkian, is a homemaker. Kevorkian was born in Aleppo, Syria and raised in Lebanon until her emigration to Canada in her late teens. Kevorkian's upbringing has resulted in her being multi-lingual (Armenian, Arabic, English) and multi-cultural.
Kevorkian's father, Barkev, was the son of refugees, born in the Karantina refugee camp outside Beirut, Lebanon.[2] The son of Armenian genocide survivors who had been displaced from their ancestral home in Marash, Turkey, during the Armenian genocide (1915-1923), Barkev was forced to work at the age of nine. He self-learned to read English and soon mastered engineering and science books. He became a successful machine maker and supplied machine parts to various factories in Beirut, especially during the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990).
Kevorkian's family history and upbringing greatly influenced her work, resulting in a documentary about the Armenian genocide and the Lebanese Civil War entitled Anjar: Flowers, Goats and Heroes[3] as well as a hybrid documentary-drama film about her father's late-age Parkinson's-like disease entitled 23 Kilometres.[4]
Kevorkian's family moved from Aleppo to Beirut when she was one year old. A few years later her family moved permanently to the small Armenian village of Anjar (Aanjar) in the fertile Bekaa Valley (Beqqa) region of eastern Lebanon. Here, Kevorkian grew up with her parents and four sisters. The five Kevorkian girls attended the Armenian Evangelical Secondary School in Anjar, established by German missionaries - Hillsbund - after the resettlement of the Musa Dagh Armenians in 1939. Kevorkian's film Anjar: Flowers, Goats and Heroes depicts this idyllic time of her youth.
Kevorkian's films focus on women, social issues and human rights.[5] She is the granddaughter of survivors of the Armenian genocide. This inter-generational trauma has been well-established by medical/sociological research, and has informed her sense of identity, cultural pride, humanitarianism, and documentary storytelling / filmmaking.
Kevorkian's childhood was infused with the stories of her family, her relatives, and the countless elders of Anjar. She has personal experience of war violence and trauma, having lived through the Lebanese Civil War. Kevorkian went into self-exile to leave this violence and sought, in her late-teens, a new life as an immigrant to Canada. She graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce (B.Com.) in economics and finance, with minor studies in Middle East history and cinema studies from the University of Toronto. Kevorkian continued her filmmaking journey with training at the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), the Summer Institute of Film and Television (SIFT),[6] the Canadian Film Centre, Directors Guild of Canada, and other industry courses, programs and education.
Kevorkian produces many of her films under her company Saaren Films.[7]
Winner: Peabody Award (2023)[8]
Official entry: Academy Awards (2024) for Best Feature Documentary Film[9]
Winner: Best Feature Documentary Film Tanit d'Or – Carthage Filmfest (2022), Tunisia[10]
Top 10 Audience Award: HotDocs (2022), International Documentary Filmfest, Canada[11] [12] [13]
Winner: Amnesty Human Rights Award (2022) – Durban International Filmfest, South Africa[14]
Winner: Human Rights Award 'Tanit D'Or' (2022) – Carthage Filmfest, Tunisia[15]
Winner: Vanguard Award (2023) – Documentary Organization of Canada (DOC)[16]
Winner: Special Jury Prize (2023) - Malmo Arab Filmfest, Norway[17]
Winner: Best Pitch Award (2012) - Dubai International Filmfest, UAE
Winner: Amnesty Award (2023) Durban International Filmfest, South Africa[18] [19]
Honourable mention: Special Jury Prize (2023) - Directors Guild of Canada (Allan King Award for Excellence in Documentary), Canada[20]
Nomination: Canadian Screen Award (2022) - Best Documentary Feature, Canada[21] [22]
Nomination: Amnesty International Award (Human Rights) (2022), Thessaloniki, Greece[23]
Kevorkian won a 2022 Peabody Award for her film Batata,[24] and received three Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 11th Canadian Screen Awards in 2023, for Best Feature Length Documentary, Best Cinematography in a Documentary and Best Editing in a Documentary (with Mike Munn).[25]
She previously directed the documentary films Veils Uncovered (2002), Anjar: The Heroes of Musa Dagh (2007), Anjar: Flowers, Goats and Heroes (2009) and 23 Kilometres (2015).[26]