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Bedros Hadjian Dies In Argentina

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  • Bedros Hadjian Dies In Argentina

    BEDROS HADJIAN DIES IN ARGENTINA

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2012/09/06/bedros-hadjian-dies-in-argentina/
    Obituary | September 6, 2012 9:40 am

    BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Bedros Hadjian, the last old-school Armenian
    educator, writer and journalist of that community, died on Monday,
    September 3, following complications due to heart surgery.

    Born January 24, 1933, in Jarabulus, Syria, Hadjian became in 1954 the
    principal of the Armenian school of Deir el Zor, in northern Syria,
    one of the destination points of Armenians marched off by Ottoman
    authorities during the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

    After teaching Armenian history and literature at the Haigazian
    Armenian School of Aleppo from the mid-1960s, Hadjian in 1970 was
    named principal of the Karen Jeppe High School, one of the biggest
    Armenian secondary schools in Aleppo and one of the most prominent
    in the Armenian Diaspora.

    In 1970, Hadjian moved to Buenos Aires as the editor of Diario Armenia,
    an Armenian-language daily newspaper that became a weekly in the late
    1980s, as well as the principal of Instituto Educativo San Gregario
    El Iluminador, one of many Armenian schools in South America.

    He remained the editor of Diario Armenia until

    1986 and retired as the headmaster of San Gregorio El Iluminador.

    After 1986, he devoted himself to writing fiction and non-fiction
    books, published in Buenos Aires, Aleppo and Yerevan.

    He was a frequent contributor to Armenian newspapers, such as Haratch
    in Paris, Nor Gyank in Los Angeles and Sardarabad in Buenos Aires on
    Armenian and Armenian-Diasporan affairs, Armenian language as well as
    literature and book reviews. The following are books he published:
    Grandes Figuras de la Cultura Armenia, Siglos V- X (Great Figures
    of the Armenian Culture, 5th-10th Centuries, Buenos Aires, 1987, in
    Armenian and Spanish); Grandes Figuras de la Cultura Armenia, Siglos
    XI-XVI (Great Figures of the Armenian Culture 11th to 16th Centuries,
    Buenos Aires, 1989, in

    Armenian and Spanish); Armenian Grammar 1, 2 and 3 (Buenos Aires,
    1991, in Armenian); Hrammetsek Baronner Badmootyun (One Hundred
    Years, One Hundred Stories, Buenos Aires, 2003, in Armenian; English
    translation by Aris Sevag published in 2009); Gargemish (Aleppo,
    2003, in Armenian) and El Cinturon (The Belt, Buenos Aires, 2005, in
    Spanish); Cien Aņos, Cien Historias (Buenos Aires, 2008, in Spanish,
    translated by Vartan Matiossian); Janabarh Tebi Garguemish' (The Road
    to Gargemish, Yerevan, 2008, in Armenian) and Haravë Spyurki Metch
    (The South in the Diaspora, Aleppo, 2008, in Armenian).

    Funeral services were held on Wednesday, September 5, at St. Gregory
    Armenian Church, which he attended for more than 40 years. Internment
    followed at the Armenian Cemetery of Buenos Aires.

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