Paramaz
Paramaz | |
---|---|
Native name | Փարամազ |
Birth name | Matteos Sarkissian |
Born | 1863 Meghri, Elisabethpol Governorate, Russian Empire |
Died | 15 June 1915 (aged 51–52) Constantinople, Ottoman Empire |
Allegiance | Hunchak |
Years of service | 1890's—1915 |
Battles / wars | Armenian National Liberation Movement Armenian–Tatar War |
Paramaz (Template:Lang-hy; 1863 – 1915), born Matteos Sarkissian, was an Armenian fedayee, freedom fighter, writer and political activist.[1]
Biography
Matteos Sarkissian studied at Gevorkian Seminary of Echmiadzin. In 1880s he taught in the schools of Nakhichevan where he met Stepan Sapah-Gulian.
Paramaz became the chief advisor to newly created fedayee groups in Persia. As a Hunchakian activist under the nickname of Paramaz, he promoted the revolutionary ideas in the Armenian villages, in 1903 he organized the assassination attempt of Grigory Golitsin, Russian viceroy of the Caucasus.
Besides working in Cilicia, Van and other regions of Western Armenia, he was also active in the Caucasus where worked to promote friendly interethnic relations.[2]
Paramaz was one of the organizers of self-defense troops during the Armenian-Tatar massacres of 1905-06. In Tatar settlements he tried to promote anti-Tsarist sentiment and the vision that Armenian and Tatars should live together peacefully.
Paramaz's articles were published in different journals, including Hunchak. One of his plays, Easy come, easy go was staged in Tigranakert.
He participates in the 7th Conference of the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party, in Constanţa, 1913 where he represent the idea of assassinating the leaders of the Ittihad ve Terraki, the organizers of Adana massacre. The resolutions of the convention were given to the Young Turk Government by a spy, and Hunchakian leaders including Paramaz were arrested upon their arrival to Constantinople. After spending two years in Turkish jails, Paramaz was sentenced to death along with 20 other Hunchakians.
On 15 June 1915 Paramaz with 19 other his comrades were hanged in the central square of Constantinople. Before his hanging Paramaz declared to his executioners:[3] "You can only hang our bodies, but not our philosophy... You will see tomorrow on the Eastern horizon a Socialist Armenia".
In 2001 the monument of Paramaz was opened in Meghri town, Armenia. His writings were published in a separate book in Yerevan in 1990's. Paramaz Square was opened in the center of Montevideo by the mayor of the city in 2016.