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・ Shahadat Hossain
・ Shahadat Hossain Khan
・ Shahadat Hussain
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・ Shahaji II
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・ Shahak Industrial Park
・ Shahal Khan Khoso
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Shahan Natalie
・ Shahan Shahnour
・ Shahan Shar
・ Shahan, West Virginia
・ Shahan-e Garmab
・ Shahana
・ Shahana Goswami
・ Shahandasht
・ Shahankuh
・ Shahanoor Dam
・ Shahanpan Dega Deva
・ Shahanshah (disambiguation)
・ Shahanshah (Shirvanshah)
・ Shahanshah ibn Mahmud
・ Shahanshah, Lorestan


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Shahan Natalie : ウィキペディア英語版
Shahan Natalie

Shahan Natalie ((アルメニア語:Շահան Նաթալի)) (1884–1983) was a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation's Bureau and the principal organizer of Operation Nemesis wherein the Turkish masterminds of the Armenian Genocide were assassinated.〔An Eye for an Eye, by Tessa Hofmann, in ''Portraits of hope: Armenians in the contemporary world'', by Huberta von Voss, p. 296〕 He later became a writer on Armenian national philosophy, and notable for his essay, ''The Turks and Us.''〔Looking backward, moving forward: confronting the Armenian Genocide, by Richard G. Hovannisian, 2003, p 165〕
==Early life==
Shahan Natalie was born Hagop Der Hagopian on July 14, 1884, in the village of Huseinig, in the Kharberd province (modern day Elazığ Province) of the Ottoman Empire. He was the only son of a seven-member family, along with four sisters.
He received his primary education in the local Armenian school. His father, maternal uncle, and numerous other relatives were killed at the beginning of the 1895 Hamidian massacres. Separated from his family, Hagop, then 11, was taken in by a neighboring Greek family, who hid him for three days. He was later reunited with the surviving members of his family. He found his mother mourning over his father's lifeless body, which they dragged together and buried under a walnut tree. The scene of his mother, prostrate on her husband's body, left a deep and indelible impression on the young boy.
He studied for a year at the Euphrates College in Kharberd. Along with other orphans, he was then sent to the St. James Orphanage in Constantinople, where a wealthy Armenian rug merchant living in New York sponsored him. The following year he was admitted to the famed Berberian Academy, where he studied until 1900.

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