Zahrad Explained

Zahrad
Birth Name:Zareh Yaldizciyan
Birth Date:1924 5, df=yes
Occupation:Poet
Language:Armenian
Birth Place:Constantinople, Turkey
Death Place:Istanbul, Turkey

Zareh Yaldizciyan (10 May 192420 February 2007), Զարէհ Եալտըզճեան, better known by his pen name Zahrad (Armenian: Զահրատ), was a poet who lived in Turkey and wrote poems in the Armenian language.[1] [2]

Biography

Of Armenian descent, Zahrad was born in the Nişantaşı district of Istanbul, Turkey.[3] His father, Movses, had been a jurist, adviser, and translator for the Ottoman Foreign Ministry. However, he had lost his father at the age of three.[4] His mother, Ankine, was from the district of Samatya. Zahrad grew up with his maternal grandfather Levon Vartanyan.

In 1942 he graduated from Özel Pangaltı Ermeni Lisesi, the local Mechitarist Armenian lyceum.[5] He attended the Faculty University of Medicine in Istanbul but left in order to work. Due to the fear that his family wouldn't appreciate the fact that he wanted to be a poet, he changed his pen name to "Zahrad". In November 1963, he married Anayis Antreasian.

Legacy

Levon Ananyan, the president of the Writers Union of Armenia, characterized Zahrad as "the huge oak tree of diasporan poetry, whose literary heritage had a deep and stable influence upon modern poetry of not only the diaspora, but also Armenia."[6] [7] Writer and journalist Rober Haddeciyan is quoted as saying, "all the roads taken by our poems don't lead to Rome, but to Zahrad". His poetry has been translated into 22 languages.[8]

President of Armenia Robert Kocharian has awarded Zahrad with the Movses Khorenatsi medal for his contribution to Armenian literature and culture.[9]

Works

Notes and References

  1. http://www.hairenik.com/armenianweekly/fea02240702.htm Zahrad (1924-2007)
  2. News: Poet Zahrad Passes Away. 19 January 2013. Asbarez. February 22, 2007.
  3. Web site: Saskal. Ohannes. Zahrad: Şiirdeki 'Yaşam Tadı'. Acik Radyo. 20 January 2013. tr. 7 March 2003.
  4. Web site: Zahrad. Aras Yayincilik. 20 January 2013. tr. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130115125943/http://www.arasyayincilik.com/tr/yazarlar/zahrad/82. 15 January 2013.
  5. Book: Contemporary Literature in Translation, Issues 13-22. 1972. 20 January 2013. 38.
  6. http://www.armeniadiaspora.com/ADC/news.asp?id=2062 Zahrat Was One Of Great Figures Of Armenian Poetry, Literary Critic Suren Danielian Says
  7. Book: Kaminsky. Ilya. Harris . Susan . The Ecco anthology of international poetry. 2010. Ecco. New York. 9780061583247. 1st. 19 January 2013. 472.
  8. News: Mouradian. Khatchig. Zahrad. The Armenian Weekly. February 24, 2007.
  9. AIM: Armenian International Magazine . 1999 . 10 . Zahrad . 20 January 2013 . 22 . Glendale, California.