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Diran Chrakian
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Diran Chrakian, also known by the pseudonym Indra (Armenian: Ինտրա, 1875, in Constantinople,[1][2] Ottoman Empire – 1921), was an Armenian poet, writer, painter and teacher, and a victim of Armenian genocide.

Biography
Diran Chrakian (alt spelling: Tcharakian) (Armenian: Տիրան Չրաքեան) was educated at Berberian College of Constantinople, then finished the College of Arts, where his works were appreciated by the famous painter Hovhannes Aivazovsky. Indra worked as a teacher, wrote articles, literary researches and notes. He signed his books "Inner World" (Ներաշխարհ, essays, 1906) and "Cypress Wood" (Նոճաստան, sonnets 1908), with the pseudonym Indra (anagram of his first name).[citation needed]
He became a prominent member of the Seventh-day Adventist church in the Ottoman Empire, having joined the church in 1913.[3]
After the genocide of 1915, he was forced on a 1,000 kilometre death march. He died on the banks of the river Tigris at Diyarbakır in 1921.[4]
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