Nazaret Manogen is a blacksmith who lives in Mardin, which is now a small town on the border between Turkey and Syria. Since the Ottoman Empire entered World War I, he has been separated from his wife Heti Zahra and two young twin children. He, like all Armenians, built roads in the desert, and a large number of workers were supervised by a gang of bandits and mercenaries. A thief stared at Nazaret-he didn't really want Nazaret's life, but just a symbolic stroke on his throat. Nazaret saved his life, but it has changed since then. Become dumb.
Nazaret kept trekking, exhausted, and desperate. After surviving a death, he must conceal his true identity from the Bedouins and the residents of Aleppo in order to seek a job in a soap factory. In 1918, when the First World War ended, angry residents violently expelled the Ottomans from the town. The crowd kept throwing stones. When a young Turkish boy was hit, Nazaret understood the truth. In 1921, Chaplin's classic silent film "Looking for a Child and Meeting the Immortal" had just been released. When Nazaret saw this film, he couldn't help crying-he thought of his lost child. So he traveled across Syria, Lebanon, Havana, Florida, Minneapolis and North Dakota, desperately looking for his daughter. Nazaret knew that his daughter was not dead
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