“When it comes to author Anne Rice, it's all about blood. Although Showtime's original mini "The Feast of All Saints" is based on one of the few Rice books that doesn't deal with vampires, the notion of bloodlines and bloodshed are an integral part of this engrossing tale.
“Feast,” a fictional story based in fact, explores the lives of free people of color in pre-Civil War New Orleans. This unique class of citizens was spared the tyranny of slavery and, in fact, enjoyed many social advantages, but was not afforded the same rights as the white middle class.
Caught between privilege and oppression, the “gens de couleur libres” had to overcome classism, sexism and racism within their own community.”
Kim and her family are paying a long-anticipated visit to her father Robert's homeland
People.com article:
They might be multimillionaires and showbiz royalty, but back before the Kardashian family’s forebears moved to the U.S., they lived a much more humble life in their native Armenia.
Visiting the Mother Armenia statue in the capital city of Yerevan, Khloé wrote that the memorial “symbolizes peace through strength,” adding that “it can remind viewers of some of the prominent female figures in Armenian history. Who took up arms to help their husbands in their clashes with Turkish troops and Kurdish irregulars.”
While some of their ancestors might have done just that, a search of their immediate family’s history reveals that the reality stars’ great-great paternal grandparents fled their small Armenian village of Karakale and the town of Erzurum (in what is now Turkey) in the early 20th century, at a time when it was ruled by Tsar Nicholas II – the last ruler of Russia.
Their timely departure meant that they escaped the Armenian Genocide that began in 1915 and decimated their villages, and the Russian Revolution that followed two years later.
Kim’s father, Robert Kardashian – a lawyer who died in 2003 and is best known for defending O.J. Simpson – was the son of Helen and Arthur Kardashian, whose grandparents on both sides left Europe for a better life in America in the early 1900s.
Kim was always close to her grandmother Helen, who had blond hair and light green eyes, which Kim said “was where Khloé gets her coloring from.”
“Nana was seriously so much fun!” Kim wrote in a post on her website in 2008, a few months after Helen died.
“She was your typical Armenian grandmother: always cooking the best Armenian meals, our favorite which was this Armenian breakfast called ‘beeshee!’ ” she remembered, explaining that it was a fried pancake topped with lots of sugar.