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Bedros Hadjian

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Bedros Hadjian
Bedrós and Sossie Hadjian
Bedrós and Sossie Hadjian
BornJanuary 24, 1933
Jarabulus,Syria
Died3 September 2012(2012-09-03)(aged 79)
Buenos Aires,Argentina

Bedrós Hadjian(Armenian:Պետրոս Հաճեան;January 24, 1933 inJarabulus,Syria– September 3, 2012 inBuenos Aires,Argentina) was aBuenos Aires–basedSyrian Armenianwriter, educator and journalist.[1]In 1954 he became the headteacher of the Armenian school ofDeir el Zor,in northern Syria, one of the destination points of Armenians marched off byOttomanauthorities during the 1915Armenian genocide.

After teaching Armenian History and Literature at the Haygazian Armenian School ofAleppofrom the mid-1960s, Hadjian was named in 1968 principal of the Karen Jeppe Gemaran, the biggest Armenian secondary school of Aleppo and one of the most prominent in the Armenian diaspora.

In 1970 Hadjian moved to Buenos Aires as the headmaster of the Instituto Educativo San Gregorio El Iluminador, one of the biggest Armenian schools inSouth America.He also became the editor ofArmenia,an Armenian-language daily newspaper that became a weekly in the late 1980s, from 1971–1986. He retired as the headmaster of San Gregorio El Iluminador in 2003.[2] Since 1986, he devoted himself to writing fiction and non-fiction books, published in Buenos Aires, Aleppo andYerevan. He was a frequent contributor to Armenian newspapers such asHaratchin Paris,Nor Gyankin Los Angeles andSardarabadin Buenos Aires on Armenian affairs, as well as literature and book reviews.

Books[edit]

  • «Պարզ քերականութիւն» (Simple Grammar), vols. 1, 2 and 3 (Buenos Aires, 1986-1987).
  • «Հայ մտքի մշակներ / Grandes Figuras de la Cultura Armenia», siglos V-X (Great Figures of the Armenian Culture, 5th to 10th Centuries) (Buenos Aires, 1987, translated byVartan Matiossian).
  • «Հայ մտքի մշակներ / Grandes Figuras de la Cultura Armenia», siglos XI-XIV (Great Figures of the Armenian Culture, 11th to 14th Centuries) (Buenos Aires, 1990, translated byVartan Matiossian).
  • «Հրամմեցէք պարոններ» (Help Yourself, Gentlemen) (Buenos Aires, 1995, in Armenian).
  • La palabra silenciada: las victimas intelectuales del Genocidio Armenio(Buenos Aires, 2000, translated byVartan Matiossian).
  • «100 տարի, 100 պատմութիւն» (One Hundred Years, One Hundred Stories) (Buenos Aires, 2001).
  • «Կար ու չկար» (Once Upon a Time) (Buenos Aires, 2003).
  • «Կարկեմիշ» (Karkemish) (Aleppo, 2005).
  • El Cinturón(The Belt) (Buenos Aires, 2005, translated by Berg Agemian).
  • Cien Años, Cien Historias(Buenos Aires, 2007, translated byVartan Matiossian).
  • «Ճանապարհ դէպի Կարկեմիշ» (The Road to Karkemish) (Yerevan, 2008).
  • «Հարաւը Սփիւռքի մէջ» (The South in the Diaspora) (Aleppo, 2008).
  • One Hundred Years, One Hundred Stories(Aleppo, 2009, translated byAris Sevag).

References[edit]

  1. ^"Bedros Hadjian Dies in Argentina".The Armenian Mirror-Spectator. September 6, 2012.Retrieved2 July2015.
  2. ^"Visit of Bedros & Sossie Hadjian to AGBU Central Office (Photo) | AGBU Blog".Agbublog.wordpress.com.2009-06-02.Retrieved2016-10-20.

External links[edit]