This is an incredibly moving documentary about the real life of four women during the war in Nakorno Karabagh/Artsakh in Sept 2020, which lasted 44 days. The people of Artsakh had lived in a free and democratic state for 30 years and had built a state after the collapse of the Soviet Union. This country had been a part of Armenia for 3500-4000 years but Stalin made it an autonomous region within Azerbaijan in 1923. Nakorno Karabagh, in essence, was never a part of Azerbaijan.
The documentary narrates the lives of four women and their families before and after the war. Their stories are factual, full of family warmth, personal ambitions and love. A demining expert, an athlete, a manager of a women's support group and a want-to-be elected member of local government narrate their daily lives with humor, grace and dignity.
This is a must see documentary. It was shot before, during and after the war. It captures the beauty of Artsakh and the determination of its courageous people to live in freedom, independent of Azeri control, and to build a western style democracy. Unlike the state of Azerbaijan, democracy, human rights and state institutions were the bedrock of the Artsakh Republic.