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Ann M. Morrison (born April 17, 1964) is an American documentary producer from Saint Louis, Missouri. Her latest completed work, Millions Cried… No One Listened was released in June 2012. Her first work, The Forgotten Genocide was published in February of 2010. It received the Donauschwaben Landesverband Culture Award. Articles on The Forgotten Genocide have been mentioned in The Montage and Trentoner Donauschwaben Nachrichten. Morrison has received a Certificate of Appreciation on behalf of the Danube Swabians for speaking at the Danube Swabian Conference 2010 at Mt. Angel, Oregon. Morrison also received Certificates of Excellence in May of 2009 and May of 2010, from Saint Louis Community College- Meramec for her services to the community.

Getting Started
Ann M. Morrison frequently volunteered to work for the Saint Louis German Cultural Society. She often worked in kitchens and with craft groups. While volunteering she often heard stories of Eastern European Germans. Morrison also became curious about the origin of the dirndl. The dirndl is worn by the young female members of the German Cultural Society dance group. After researching the dirndl, Morrison discovered the dirndl came from places other than Germany and she began to ask questions. Members of the German Cultural Society referred several books to her, including Barefoot in the Rubble by Elizabeth Walter and A Terrible Revenge by Alfred de Zayas.

While attending St. Louis Community College-Meramec in the spring semester of 2010, Morrison was required to complete a service learning project for a communications class. The German Expulsions were the central theme of her project.

The Forgotten Genocide
The Forgotten Genocide was the first full length English film created about the Flight and expulsion of Germans. It is best described as an overview of the atrocities committed against the ethnic Germans of central and Eastern Europe after World War II. After the completion of the film Dr. Steven Peterson, Dr. Pam Garvey, Mrs. Donna Halsband requested that Morrison hold an event presenting her film in the Meramec Theatre at Saint Louis Community College. The week of the film presentation, the school newspaper The Montage featured an article about The Forgotten Genocide. Morrison was also given an art gallery display at the school for artifacts, photographs and paintings of the time period. The event held to present The Forgotten Genocide was originally planned to commence with two guest speakers, but quickly escalated to include fifteen guest speakers. The presentation of The Forgotten Genocide became a conference which is now annually hosted by different organizations of German descendants across the United States. Many of the viewers felt that The Forgotten Genocide presented several new questions. Morrison felt compelled to continue spreading the rare knowledge of the German Expulsions as well as answer the questions The Forgotten Genocide aroused, by creating the film series Millions Cried… No One Listened.

Millions Cried…No One Listened
The film series Millions Cried… No One Listened explains how ethnic Germans came to the central and eastern European countries. The film series also sheds light on the magnitude at which the ethnic Germans were expelled from their homes. Survivors interviewed in Millions Cried… No One Listened provide vivid accounts of the nefarious treatment of the ethnic Germans that so many people ignored. The United States as well as several other European governments were aware of the Ukrainian and Russian labor camps, the death and starvation camps, and the rape and torture the ethnic Germans were experiencing. In Yugoslavia alone there were 56,736 civilian victims as a result of intense cruelty. Millions Cried… No One Listened quotes Victor Gollancz in regards to the violent expulsions, “This is in direct defiance of the Potsdam Declaration, which urged that the transfers of population must be carried out ‘in an orderly and human manner.’” The series also included explanations of the difficult situations the people of Europe faced after the implements of governmental guidelines as discussed in Crimes and Mercies by James Bacque. Morrison traveled to seven countries (excluding the United States) to collect research and data for the film series. While traveling she interviewed over 200 individuals whose lives were touched by the expulsions. Morrison also visited several museums for research, some of which are owned by organizations made of groups of surviving immigrants. Maps and other documents were donated to be used as research for Millions Cried… No One Listened.