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Los Angeles To Host An Event In Commemoration Of Shahan Natalie's 12

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  • Los Angeles To Host An Event In Commemoration Of Shahan Natalie's 12

    LOS ANGELES TO HOST AN EVENT IN COMMEMORATION OF SHAHAN NATALIE'S 125TH ANNIVERSARY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    18.03.2010 19:42 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ In commemoration of the 125th anniversary of Shahan
    Natalie's birth, the Shahan Natalie Family Foundation invites the
    public to attend a tribute to the living memory of the internationally
    known intrepid Armenian thinker, writer, orator, and activist. The
    event will take place on Saturday, April 10, 2010, in the Los Angeles
    Public Library's Mark Taper Auditorium. Preceding the afternoon
    program, Sylva Natalie Manoogian will lead a Hye (Armenian) Treasures
    tour of the Central Library's resources, Asbarez.com reported.

    Born in the village of Husenik, province of Kharberd, Historic Armenia,
    Shahan Natalie (born Hagop Der Hagopian) was orphaned at the age
    of 11, during the 1895 Hamidian massacres of the Armenians. He was
    sent to Istanbul and was accepted by the famed Berberian Academy,
    where his literary career and community activism were launched. At
    the age of 16, he returned to his native village to join the teaching
    staff of the school at the Church of St. Varvara. Four years later,
    in 1904, he immigrated to the United States. Fated to be spared from
    the atrocities of the 1915-1923 Armenian Genocide by order of the
    Turkish government, he fulfilled his boyhood vow to devote his entire
    life to defending the rights of his people world-wide.

    Over a period of more than six decades, he wrote under the nom de
    plume Shahan Natalie, published numerous Armenian language newspapers
    and books, and traveled to his homeland and Armenian communities
    throughout the Diaspora. Shahan Natalie's literary legacy embodies
    his love, devotion, and pride in the Armenian culture, language and
    literature, as well as his admiration and respect for the languages and
    literatures of the world. He transmitted these feelings to his family
    and others whose lives he touched. In December 1998, the Los Angeles
    Public Library's International Languages Department Armenian Language &
    Literature collection was dedicated in Shahan Natalie's name.
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