Gurgen Mahari
Gurgen Mahari (Gurgen Grigori Ajemian, August 1, 1903, Van – June 17, 1969, Yerevan) was an Armenian writer and poet.
Biography
In 1915 during the Armenian genocide Gurgen's family emigrated to Russia. His first book, Titanic was published in 1924. Then he wrote his autobiographical trilogy (first part, "Childhood" was published in 1929, and the third part was finished in 1955) which tells his story of survivor and the tragedy experienced by Armenians in Western Armenia.
He was arrested by Soviet secret police at the period of Stalinism and released after Joseph Stalin's death (Mahari was sentenced to 10 years' confinement in 1937, returned in 1947 and one year later exiled again).
He is also the author of the novel Burning Orchards (1966) and Charents-name (1968), memoires about Armenian poet Yeghishe Charents.
Works in translation
- Mahari, G. (2007) Burning Orchards, translated by D. Tahta, H. Tahta and H Ghazarian, Black Apollo Press, Germinal Productions, Cambridge, U.K. ISBN 978-1-900355-57-5
|
External links
- Mahari in Great Soviet Encyclopedia (Russian)
- ГУРГЕН МААРИ (1903-1969) (Russian)