Garegin Njdeh

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Garegin Njdeh (Armenian National Hero)
Garegin Njdeh (Armenian National Hero)

Garegin Njdeh or Garegin Ter-Harutiunian (Armenian: Գարեգին Նժդեհ) (1 January 1886, Nakhijevan21 December 1955, Siberia) was an Armenian statesman, fedayee, and political thinker. An ex-member of the Dashnak party, he was involved in revolutionary activities in Armenia, Bulgaria and Russia.

Garegin Njdeh was born on January 1, 1886 in the village of Kznut, Nakhichevan. He was the youngest of four children born to a local village priest. Njdeh got his early education at a Russian school in Nakhichevan City. He continued his higher education at the Tiflis Russian Gymnasium school. In 1912, together with General Andranik Ozanian, he formed an Armenian battalion within the Bulgarian Army to fight against the Ottoman Empire in the Balkan war. Later, moving back to Armenia, Njdeh commanded different military units. He played a key role in organizing the defense of Karakilisa in 1918. A convinced Anti-Bolshevik, he led the defense of Zangezur in 1921 against the rising Bolshevik movement in the Democratic Republic of Armenia. The movement was marked with the expulsion of the region's local Azeri minority.[1]

Garegin Njdeh
Garegin Njdeh

Following the declaration of independence of the Republic of the Mountainous Armenia from Soviet Armenia, he was proclaimed Prime Minister and Minister of Defense. He fled Armenia after the triumph of Bolsheviks and Red Army, and was involved in revolutionary activities in Iran, Turkey, Bulgaria and United States.

He visited the United States and Canada, encouraging Armenian communities that had established themselves there, and founding an Armenian Youth movement called Tseghakron (Armenian: Ցեղակրոն). In 1933, this movement led to the foundation of the Armenian Youth Federation, the youth organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, in Boston, Massachusetts.

In 1944, Garegin Njdeh was arrested by the soldiers of Stalin's "SMERSH" special brigade in Bulgaria. He died in a Soviet prison in Vladimir, Soviet Union.

A metro station in Yerevan is named after him.

  • "My speach - Why I fought against the Soviet army", 1923
  • "Some pages from my diary", 1924
  • "Open letters to the Armenian intelligentsia", 1926
  • "My answer", 1937

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