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Drastamat Kanayan

Drastamat Kanayan (Armenian: Դրաստամատ Կանայեան; 31 May 1884 – 8 March 1956), better known as Dro (Դրո), was an Armenian military commander and politician. He was a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation. He briefly served as Defence Minister of the First Republic of Armenia in 1920, during the country's brief independence. During World War II, he led the Armenian Legion, which consisted of Armenian POWs who opted to fight for Nazi Germany rather than face the brutal conditions of the Nazis' camps.[1]

Drastamat Kanayan
Դրաստամատ Կանայեան
Defense Minister of Armenia
In office
24 November 1920 – 2 December 1920
Preceded byRuben Ter-Minasian
Succeeded byposition abolished
Civil Commissioner of Van
In office
December 1917 – 7 April 1918
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byposition abolished
Personal details
Born(1884-05-31)31 May 1884
Igdyr (Iğdır), Surmalu uezd, Erivan Governorate, Russian Empire
Died8 March 1956(1956-03-08) (aged 71)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
NationalityArmenian
Political partyArmenian Revolutionary Federation
NicknameGeneral Dro
Military service
Allegiance Dashnaktsutyun
 Russian Empire (1914–1917)
Republic of Armenia (1918–1920)
Years of service1914–1920
1941–1945
Commands2nd Battalion Volunteer Corps
Armed Forces of Yerevan
812th Armenian Battalion
Battles/warsWorld War I

Armenian National Liberation Movement

Armenian–Azerbaijani war
Muslim uprisings in Kars and Sharur–Nakhichevan
Aras War
Armeno-Georgian War
Turkish-Armenian War

World War II

Early life edit

Drastamat Kanayan was born in Igdyr (present-day Iğdır, Turkey) in the Surmalu uezd of the Russian Empire in 1884. He was the son of Martiros Kanayan, the head of the Kanayan clan in Igdir, and his wife, Horom. At an early age, Martiros enrolled his son to the parish school of Igdir. Drastamat would skip school, preferring to visit the military barracks of Igdir because of his interest in its military exercises. Igdir at the time was an important military post where between 8,000 and 10,000 Russian troops were stationed (including infantry, Cossacks, cavalry and border guards). Most of the inhabitants of the village thrived by trading with the soldiers. Noticing that his son had no interest in books and learning, Martiros pulled him out of the village school and enrolled him to the Yerevan Gymnasium school.[2]

Drastamat was no better in the Gymnasium school as the grades he achieved were barely enough for a promotion. Like all government schools in the provinces of Russia, there was a policy of Russification that limited education in the Armenian language to religion only. Inspired by stories of General Andranik's triumphs in the Ottoman Empire and the spread of nationalism by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), Drastamat joined a secret youth movement in his school that opposed the tsar's government and promoted Armenian nationalism.[3]

Edict on Armenian church property and Armenian-Tatar clashes edit

On 12 June 1903, the tsarist authorities passed an edict to bring all Armenian Church property under imperial control. This was faced by strong Armenian opposition because it perceived the tsarist edict as a threat to the Armenian national existence. As a result, the Armenian leadership decided to actively defend Armenian churches by dispatching militiamen who acted as guards and holding mass demonstrations.[4] This prompted Drastamat to join the ranks of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation in order to defend churches from confiscation through public demonstrations and guard duty.[3] In May 1905, using a bomb he carried out the assassination of the governor of Baku, Prince Mikhail Nakashidze,[5] whom the ARF blamed for inciting Tatar attacks against Armenians in Baku.[6] During the Armenian–Tatar clashes of 1905–1907, Dro participated in the organization of Armenian defense militias in the regions of Kotayk, Nakhijevan, and Zangezur.[7] In 1907, Dro assassinated Tsarist general Maksud Alikhanov in Alexandropol.[6] Prior to the Russian Revolution, Dro had killed more than one Russian official.[5]

World War I edit

 
Staff of Armenian volunteers; Khetcho, Drastamat Kanayan, and Karekin Pastermadjian, 1914

He served as detachment commander in the Russian Caucasus Army during World War I. He was one of the commanders of the Armenian volunteer units and was decorated by the Tsar.[8][better source needed]

 
General Dro, third from the right, leading the second battalion in 1915

In November 1914, he commanded the second battalion of the Armenian volunteers. The second battalion of the Armenian volunteers engaged in battle for the first time near Bayazid during the Bergmann Offensive. In the course of a bloody combat which lasted twenty-four hours, Dro, commander of the battalion, was seriously wounded. From that day to March of the following year, he remained in critical condition, but his battalion participated in eleven battles near Alashkert and Tutak, until Dro recovered and returned to resume the command. Kanayan had already become a popular military leader after the victories over the Ottoman Empire at the Caucasus Campaign.[citation needed]

Between March 1918 and April 1918 he was appointed by the Armenian National Council military commissar to the occupation of Turkish Armenia of the Ararat region. He was the commander of the Armenian forces in the Battle of Bash Abaran.[2] The Armenian victories at Bash Abaran, Karakilisa, and Sardarabad stopped the advance of the Ottoman Army and are credited with preventing the destruction of the Armenian nation and allowing the creation of the First Republic of Armenia.[9][10]

First Republic of Armenia edit

 
Kanayan on horseback

Dro was one of the chief military commanders of the First Republic of Armenia. He commanded Armenian forces during the brief Armeno-Georgian War in December 1918 over the disputed Borchaly (Lori) and Akhalkalaki uezds ("counties").[2]

Armenian–Azerbaijani War edit

During much of 1919, Dro and his army fought Ottoman-backed insurrections by Muslims against the First Republic of Armenia, defending the area south of Yerevan in what is now Ararat Province of Armenia.[11] In December 1919, Dro went to Goris with a force of 600 soldiers with the intention of establishing Armenian control over the Syunik and Nagorno-Karabakh regions, which were fiercely disputed between Armenia and Azerbaijan.[12] In a short amount of time, Dro, along with Garegin Nzhdeh and other commanders, drove out the Azerbaijani army and expelled most of the Turkic-speaking Muslims from Syunik, solidifying Armenian control over the region.[12]

On the night from 21–22 March 1920, when the Azerbaijanis were celebrating Novruz Bayram, the Armenians of Artsakh revolted and organized a surprise attack. During these clashes thousands of people from both the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides were killed, with more than 7,000 houses burned and Shushi virtually cleansed of its Armenian population. Dro, who had not expected the Armenian uprising, arrived in Artsakh only in April, when many Armenian villages had already been destroyed by the Azerbaijani army.[13]

On 27 April 1920, the Red Army invaded Azerbaijan and established a Soviet government there. The leadership of the Red Army demanded that Dro and his army leave Artsakh and Syunik. Dro knew that if he did not comply with this demand the Red Army and the armed forces of Azerbaijan would act jointly against Armenia and the Armenians of Artsakh.[14][better source needed] Dro withdrew from Artsakh after he was given assurances by the emissaries of Bolshevik leader Sergo Ordzhonikidze regarding a just solution to the Artsakh conflict.[15] On 26 May 1920, the 10th Congress of the Armenian National Council of Karabakh, which took place in Taghavard village, proclaimed the establishment of Soviet power in Artsakh. The Armenian National Council of Artsakh was replaced with the Revolutionary Committee of Nagorno-Artsakh, headed by Sargis Hambardzumyan. That same day, Kanayan left Artsakh with his units and withdrew to Syunik.[14]

In the July 1920, Dro and Minister of Defence Ruben Ter Minasian led a campaign against Ottoman-backed Muslim rebels supported by Azerbaijan in the Vedibasar and Zangibasar districts (around modern-day Vedi and Masis, respectively), resettling Armenian refugees in the abandoned Muslim villages.[16]

In August 1920, Dro's forces engaged in skirmishes with the Red Army, which made attempts to advance into Syunik. Despite some initial success, Dro was forced to leave Goris to the Red Army and withdraw to Daralayaz (modern-day Vayots Dzor).[17]

Turkish–Armenian War and Sovietization of Armenia edit

On 24 September 1920, Kâzım Karabekir's army invaded Armenia. Dro commanded the defence of his native district Surmalu. Although Dro successfully defended Surmalu, the fall of Kars and the further advance of Karabekir's army forced Dro's army to retreat to the other side of the Arax River into modern-day Armenia on November 12.[18]

From 24 November to 2 December 1920, Kanayan was the Defence Minister of Armenia. On 30 November 1920, Soviet Russia issued an ultimatum to the leadership of Armenia to peacefully hand over power to a Soviet government. Dro was authorized to negotiate with Soviet representative Boris Legran about the conditions of the transfer of power.[19] Dro ordered the Armenian army not to show resistance against the Red Army if it advanced into Armenia.[19] He was one of the signatories of the declaration of the transfer of power to a Soviet government made by the government of Armenia on 2 December 1920, which also declared Dro de facto leader of Armenia pending the arrival of the Revolutionary Committee of Armenia to Yerevan.[20]

Dro remained in the country and remained commander of Soviet Armenia's army until January 1921, when he was exiled to Russia along with 1,200 Armenian officers. He stayed in Moscow until 1923, and traveled in Europe before finally settling in Bucharest, Romania in 1925.[2] Dro's second wife, Arpenik (whom he married in 1915), and their two children were sent into internal exile in Siberia and remained separated from him for the rest of his life.[7]

World War II edit

During World War II, Dro was one of several members of the ARF who, without approval from the party leadership, entered negotiations with Nazi Germany with the hope of freeing Armenia of Soviet control in the event of Germany's victory over the Soviet Union.[21] The Armenian Legion was formed from Armenian POWs in the Nazi POW camps who opted to fight for Germany rather than face the brutal conditions of the camps. The Legion was placed under Dro's command. The Legion was trained by Wehrmacht officers and participated in the occupation of the Crimean Peninsula and the Caucasus.[22]

With the end of World War II, Drastamat Kanayan was arrested by American forces in Heidelberg, but soon released. After World War II, Kanayan emigrated to the United States and continued his political activities. In 1947, at the World Congress of the ARF, he was forgiven for his collaboration with Nazis and was again elected a member of the party.[23]

Death, burial, and legacy edit

Dro settled with the large Armenian community in Beirut, where he lived for several years with the former prime minister of the First Republic of Armenia, Simon Vratsian.[7] He returned to the United States several times for medical treatment.[7] Dro died in Boston, Massachusetts while there for medical treatment on 8 March 1956 and was buried there. He was survived by his third wife Gayane (whom he married in Bucharest in 1935), their son Mardiros (Martin) and Dro's stepdaughter Olga. His remains were taken to Armenia for final burial in Aparan, on 28 May 2000, coinciding with the commemoration of the 82nd anniversary of the First Republic of Armenia.[24]

In 2001, the Ministry of Defence of Armenia established the Drastamat Kanayan medal, which is awarded to military personnel and civilians who excel in military instruction.[25] In 2005, the government of Armenia founded the Drastamat Kanayan Institute for National Strategic Studies, which in 2016 became a part of the National Institute of Strategic Studies under the Ministry of Defence.[26][25] A street in the Kanaker-Zeytun District of Yerevan is named after Dro.[citation needed]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ De Waal, Thomas (2015). Great Catastrophe: Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide. Oxford University Press. p. 112.
  2. ^ a b c d Chalabian, Antranig (2009). Dro (Drastamat Kanayan): Armenia's First Defense Minister of the Modern Era. Los Angeles: Indo-European Publishing. ISBN 978-1604440782.
  3. ^ a b Vratsian, Simon (2000). Tempest-Born Dro. Translated by Tamar Der-Ohannesian. New York: Armenian Prelacy. pp. 13–22.
  4. ^ Geifman, Anna (31 December 1995). Thou Shalt Kill: Revolutionary Terrorism in Russia, 1894-1917. Princeton University Press. pp. 21–22. ISBN 0-691-02549-5.
  5. ^ a b Bechhofer Roberts, Carl Eric (1921). In Denikin's Russia and The Caucasus, 1919-1920: Being a Record of a Journey to South Russia, the Crimea, Armenia, Georgia, and Baku in 1919 and 1920. p. 271.
  6. ^ a b "Dro [1884–1956]". Hairenik. 16 June 2016. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d Vratsian, Simon (1996). Mrrkatsin Dron [Tempest-born Dro] (PDF). Beirut: Vahe Setian Publishing House. pp. 34–47, 173–178.
  8. ^ Minasyan, Smbat (2 August 2005). "Drastamat Kanayan – Dro". Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  9. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1997). "Armenia's Road to Independence". In Hovannisian, Richard G. (ed.). The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times. Vol. 2. New York: Macmillan. p. 299.
  10. ^ Walker, Christopher J. (1990). Armenia: The Survival of a Nation. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 254.
  11. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1971). The Republic of Armenia, Vol. II: From Versailles to London, 1919-1920. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 77.
  12. ^ a b Gevorgyan, Hamlet (2000). Dro (PDF) (in Armenian). Yerevan: Hayastan. pp. 356–364. ISBN 5540017501.
  13. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1996). The Republic of Armenia, Vol. III: From London to Sèvres, February–August 1920. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 158. ISBN 978-0520088030. OCLC 238471.
  14. ^ a b . Ministry of Foreign Affairs NKR, 2001. Archived from the original on 11 December 2006. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  15. ^ Richard G. Hovannisian, "Historical Memory and Armenian-Azerbaijani Relations", The Armenian Perspective, 14 September 2000
  16. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1974). "Dimensions of Democracy and Authority in Caucasian Armenia, 1917-1920". The Russian Review. 33 (1): 37–49. doi:10.2307/127620. JSTOR 127620. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  17. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1996). The Republic of Armenia, Vol. IV: Between Crescent and Sickle. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 84–89.
  18. ^ Hovannisian, The Republic of Armenia, Vol. IV, p. 284.
  19. ^ a b Hovannisian, The Republic of Armenia, Vol. IV, p. 384.
  20. ^ Hovannisian, The Republic of Armenia, Vol. IV, pp 387–388
  21. ^ Walker, Armenia, p. 357
  22. ^ Auron, Yair. The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide. p. 238. ISBN 978-0765808349.
  23. ^ Drastamat Kanayan profile February 8, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, membres.lycos.fr/armenianlegion
  24. ^ "General Dro Reburied in Armenia". Armenian International Magazine. June 2000. p. 26.
  25. ^ a b "Birth of Tro (May 31, 1884)". Milwaukee Armenian Community. 1 June 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  26. ^ Harutyunyan, Garik (28 January 2016). Բացվել է ՀՀ ՊՆ Պաշտպանական ազգային հետազոտական համալսարանը [The national research university of the RA Ministry of Defense has opened]. Razm.info (in Armenian).

External links edit

  • Gayane Kanayan, Wife of Armenian Hero General Dro, Honored by Defense Ministry


drastamat, kanayan, armenian, Դրաստամատ, Կանայեան, 1884, march, 1956, better, known, Դրո, armenian, military, commander, politician, member, armenian, revolutionary, federation, briefly, served, defence, minister, first, republic, armenia, 1920, during, countr. Drastamat Kanayan Armenian Դրաստամատ Կանայեան 31 May 1884 8 March 1956 better known as Dro Դրո was an Armenian military commander and politician He was a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation He briefly served as Defence Minister of the First Republic of Armenia in 1920 during the country s brief independence During World War II he led the Armenian Legion which consisted of Armenian POWs who opted to fight for Nazi Germany rather than face the brutal conditions of the Nazis camps 1 Drastamat Kanayan Դրաստամատ ԿանայեանDefense Minister of ArmeniaIn office 24 November 1920 2 December 1920Preceded byRuben Ter MinasianSucceeded byposition abolishedCivil Commissioner of VanIn office December 1917 7 April 1918Preceded byposition establishedSucceeded byposition abolishedPersonal detailsBorn 1884 05 31 31 May 1884Igdyr Igdir Surmalu uezd Erivan Governorate Russian EmpireDied8 March 1956 1956 03 08 aged 71 Boston Massachusetts United States of AmericaNationalityArmenianPolitical partyArmenian Revolutionary FederationNicknameGeneral DroMilitary serviceAllegianceDashnaktsutyun Russian Empire 1914 1917 Republic of Armenia 1918 1920 Years of service1914 19201941 1945Commands2nd Battalion Volunteer CorpsArmed Forces of Yerevan812th Armenian BattalionBattles warsWorld War I Caucasus Campaign Armenian National Liberation Movement Battle of AbaranBattle of Mastara Armenian Azerbaijani warMuslim uprisings in Kars and Sharur NakhichevanAras WarArmeno Georgian WarTurkish Armenian War World War II Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Edict on Armenian church property and Armenian Tatar clashes 2 World War I 3 First Republic of Armenia 3 1 Armenian Azerbaijani War 3 2 Turkish Armenian War and Sovietization of Armenia 4 World War II 5 Death burial and legacy 6 Gallery 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editDrastamat Kanayan was born in Igdyr present day Igdir Turkey in the Surmalu uezd of the Russian Empire in 1884 He was the son of Martiros Kanayan the head of the Kanayan clan in Igdir and his wife Horom At an early age Martiros enrolled his son to the parish school of Igdir Drastamat would skip school preferring to visit the military barracks of Igdir because of his interest in its military exercises Igdir at the time was an important military post where between 8 000 and 10 000 Russian troops were stationed including infantry Cossacks cavalry and border guards Most of the inhabitants of the village thrived by trading with the soldiers Noticing that his son had no interest in books and learning Martiros pulled him out of the village school and enrolled him to the Yerevan Gymnasium school 2 Drastamat was no better in the Gymnasium school as the grades he achieved were barely enough for a promotion Like all government schools in the provinces of Russia there was a policy of Russification that limited education in the Armenian language to religion only Inspired by stories of General Andranik s triumphs in the Ottoman Empire and the spread of nationalism by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation ARF Drastamat joined a secret youth movement in his school that opposed the tsar s government and promoted Armenian nationalism 3 Edict on Armenian church property and Armenian Tatar clashes edit On 12 June 1903 the tsarist authorities passed an edict to bring all Armenian Church property under imperial control This was faced by strong Armenian opposition because it perceived the tsarist edict as a threat to the Armenian national existence As a result the Armenian leadership decided to actively defend Armenian churches by dispatching militiamen who acted as guards and holding mass demonstrations 4 This prompted Drastamat to join the ranks of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation in order to defend churches from confiscation through public demonstrations and guard duty 3 In May 1905 using a bomb he carried out the assassination of the governor of Baku Prince Mikhail Nakashidze 5 whom the ARF blamed for inciting Tatar attacks against Armenians in Baku 6 During the Armenian Tatar clashes of 1905 1907 Dro participated in the organization of Armenian defense militias in the regions of Kotayk Nakhijevan and Zangezur 7 In 1907 Dro assassinated Tsarist general Maksud Alikhanov in Alexandropol 6 Prior to the Russian Revolution Dro had killed more than one Russian official 5 World War I edit nbsp Staff of Armenian volunteers Khetcho Drastamat Kanayan and Karekin Pastermadjian 1914 He served as detachment commander in the Russian Caucasus Army during World War I He was one of the commanders of the Armenian volunteer units and was decorated by the Tsar 8 better source needed nbsp General Dro third from the right leading the second battalion in 1915 In November 1914 he commanded the second battalion of the Armenian volunteers The second battalion of the Armenian volunteers engaged in battle for the first time near Bayazid during the Bergmann Offensive In the course of a bloody combat which lasted twenty four hours Dro commander of the battalion was seriously wounded From that day to March of the following year he remained in critical condition but his battalion participated in eleven battles near Alashkert and Tutak until Dro recovered and returned to resume the command Kanayan had already become a popular military leader after the victories over the Ottoman Empire at the Caucasus Campaign citation needed Between March 1918 and April 1918 he was appointed by the Armenian National Council military commissar to the occupation of Turkish Armenia of the Ararat region He was the commander of the Armenian forces in the Battle of Bash Abaran 2 The Armenian victories at Bash Abaran Karakilisa and Sardarabad stopped the advance of the Ottoman Army and are credited with preventing the destruction of the Armenian nation and allowing the creation of the First Republic of Armenia 9 10 First Republic of Armenia editSee also First Republic of Armenia nbsp Kanayan on horseback Dro was one of the chief military commanders of the First Republic of Armenia He commanded Armenian forces during the brief Armeno Georgian War in December 1918 over the disputed Borchaly Lori and Akhalkalaki uezds counties 2 Armenian Azerbaijani War edit See also Armenian Azerbaijani war 1918 1920 During much of 1919 Dro and his army fought Ottoman backed insurrections by Muslims against the First Republic of Armenia defending the area south of Yerevan in what is now Ararat Province of Armenia 11 In December 1919 Dro went to Goris with a force of 600 soldiers with the intention of establishing Armenian control over the Syunik and Nagorno Karabakh regions which were fiercely disputed between Armenia and Azerbaijan 12 In a short amount of time Dro along with Garegin Nzhdeh and other commanders drove out the Azerbaijani army and expelled most of the Turkic speaking Muslims from Syunik solidifying Armenian control over the region 12 On the night from 21 22 March 1920 when the Azerbaijanis were celebrating Novruz Bayram the Armenians of Artsakh revolted and organized a surprise attack During these clashes thousands of people from both the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides were killed with more than 7 000 houses burned and Shushi virtually cleansed of its Armenian population Dro who had not expected the Armenian uprising arrived in Artsakh only in April when many Armenian villages had already been destroyed by the Azerbaijani army 13 On 27 April 1920 the Red Army invaded Azerbaijan and established a Soviet government there The leadership of the Red Army demanded that Dro and his army leave Artsakh and Syunik Dro knew that if he did not comply with this demand the Red Army and the armed forces of Azerbaijan would act jointly against Armenia and the Armenians of Artsakh 14 better source needed Dro withdrew from Artsakh after he was given assurances by the emissaries of Bolshevik leader Sergo Ordzhonikidze regarding a just solution to the Artsakh conflict 15 On 26 May 1920 the 10th Congress of the Armenian National Council of Karabakh which took place in Taghavard village proclaimed the establishment of Soviet power in Artsakh The Armenian National Council of Artsakh was replaced with the Revolutionary Committee of Nagorno Artsakh headed by Sargis Hambardzumyan That same day Kanayan left Artsakh with his units and withdrew to Syunik 14 In the July 1920 Dro and Minister of Defence Ruben Ter Minasian led a campaign against Ottoman backed Muslim rebels supported by Azerbaijan in the Vedibasar and Zangibasar districts around modern day Vedi and Masis respectively resettling Armenian refugees in the abandoned Muslim villages 16 In August 1920 Dro s forces engaged in skirmishes with the Red Army which made attempts to advance into Syunik Despite some initial success Dro was forced to leave Goris to the Red Army and withdraw to Daralayaz modern day Vayots Dzor 17 Turkish Armenian War and Sovietization of Armenia edit See also Turkish Armenian War and Red Army invasion of Armenia On 24 September 1920 Kazim Karabekir s army invaded Armenia Dro commanded the defence of his native district Surmalu Although Dro successfully defended Surmalu the fall of Kars and the further advance of Karabekir s army forced Dro s army to retreat to the other side of the Arax River into modern day Armenia on November 12 18 From 24 November to 2 December 1920 Kanayan was the Defence Minister of Armenia On 30 November 1920 Soviet Russia issued an ultimatum to the leadership of Armenia to peacefully hand over power to a Soviet government Dro was authorized to negotiate with Soviet representative Boris Legran about the conditions of the transfer of power 19 Dro ordered the Armenian army not to show resistance against the Red Army if it advanced into Armenia 19 He was one of the signatories of the declaration of the transfer of power to a Soviet government made by the government of Armenia on 2 December 1920 which also declared Dro de facto leader of Armenia pending the arrival of the Revolutionary Committee of Armenia to Yerevan 20 Dro remained in the country and remained commander of Soviet Armenia s army until January 1921 when he was exiled to Russia along with 1 200 Armenian officers He stayed in Moscow until 1923 and traveled in Europe before finally settling in Bucharest Romania in 1925 2 Dro s second wife Arpenik whom he married in 1915 and their two children were sent into internal exile in Siberia and remained separated from him for the rest of his life 7 World War II editDuring World War II Dro was one of several members of the ARF who without approval from the party leadership entered negotiations with Nazi Germany with the hope of freeing Armenia of Soviet control in the event of Germany s victory over the Soviet Union 21 The Armenian Legion was formed from Armenian POWs in the Nazi POW camps who opted to fight for Germany rather than face the brutal conditions of the camps The Legion was placed under Dro s command The Legion was trained by Wehrmacht officers and participated in the occupation of the Crimean Peninsula and the Caucasus 22 With the end of World War II Drastamat Kanayan was arrested by American forces in Heidelberg but soon released After World War II Kanayan emigrated to the United States and continued his political activities In 1947 at the World Congress of the ARF he was forgiven for his collaboration with Nazis and was again elected a member of the party 23 Death burial and legacy editDro settled with the large Armenian community in Beirut where he lived for several years with the former prime minister of the First Republic of Armenia Simon Vratsian 7 He returned to the United States several times for medical treatment 7 Dro died in Boston Massachusetts while there for medical treatment on 8 March 1956 and was buried there He was survived by his third wife Gayane whom he married in Bucharest in 1935 their son Mardiros Martin and Dro s stepdaughter Olga His remains were taken to Armenia for final burial in Aparan on 28 May 2000 coinciding with the commemoration of the 82nd anniversary of the First Republic of Armenia 24 In 2001 the Ministry of Defence of Armenia established the Drastamat Kanayan medal which is awarded to military personnel and civilians who excel in military instruction 25 In 2005 the government of Armenia founded the Drastamat Kanayan Institute for National Strategic Studies which in 2016 became a part of the National Institute of Strategic Studies under the Ministry of Defence 26 25 A street in the Kanaker Zeytun District of Yerevan is named after Dro citation needed Gallery edit nbsp Dro s mausoleum in Aparan Armenia nbsp Dro s mausoleum at night nbsp Dro s grave in Mount Auburn Cemetery Watertown Massachusetts pre reinterment in Armenia nbsp Dro s bust in GyumriReferences edit De Waal Thomas 2015 Great Catastrophe Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide Oxford University Press p 112 a b c d Chalabian Antranig 2009 Dro Drastamat Kanayan Armenia s First Defense Minister of the Modern Era Los Angeles Indo European Publishing ISBN 978 1604440782 a b Vratsian Simon 2000 Tempest Born Dro Translated by Tamar Der Ohannesian New York Armenian Prelacy pp 13 22 Geifman Anna 31 December 1995 Thou Shalt Kill Revolutionary Terrorism in Russia 1894 1917 Princeton University Press pp 21 22 ISBN 0 691 02549 5 a b Bechhofer Roberts Carl Eric 1921 In Denikin s Russia and The Caucasus 1919 1920 Being a Record of a Journey to South Russia the Crimea Armenia Georgia and Baku in 1919 and 1920 p 271 a b Dro 1884 1956 Hairenik 16 June 2016 Retrieved 30 March 2022 a b c d Vratsian Simon 1996 Mrrkatsin Dron Tempest born Dro PDF Beirut Vahe Setian Publishing House pp 34 47 173 178 Minasyan Smbat 2 August 2005 Drastamat Kanayan Dro Retrieved 16 January 2007 Hovannisian Richard G 1997 Armenia s Road to Independence In Hovannisian Richard G ed The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times Vol 2 New York Macmillan p 299 Walker Christopher J 1990 Armenia The Survival of a Nation New York Palgrave Macmillan p 254 Hovannisian Richard G 1971 The Republic of Armenia Vol II From Versailles to London 1919 1920 Berkeley University of California Press p 77 a b Gevorgyan Hamlet 2000 Dro PDF in Armenian Yerevan Hayastan pp 356 364 ISBN 5540017501 Hovannisian Richard G 1996 The Republic of Armenia Vol III From London to Sevres February August 1920 Berkeley University of California Press p 158 ISBN 978 0520088030 OCLC 238471 a b History of Artsakh Ministry of Foreign Affairs NKR 2001 Archived from the original on 11 December 2006 Retrieved 16 January 2007 Richard G Hovannisian Historical Memory and Armenian Azerbaijani Relations The Armenian Perspective 14 September 2000 Hovannisian Richard G 1974 Dimensions of Democracy and Authority in Caucasian Armenia 1917 1920 The Russian Review 33 1 37 49 doi 10 2307 127620 JSTOR 127620 Retrieved 25 January 2021 Hovannisian Richard G 1996 The Republic of Armenia Vol IV Between Crescent and Sickle Berkeley University of California Press pp 84 89 Hovannisian The Republic of Armenia Vol IV p 284 a b Hovannisian The Republic of Armenia Vol IV p 384 Hovannisian The Republic of Armenia Vol IV pp 387 388 Walker Armenia p 357 Auron Yair The Banality of Denial Israel and the Armenian Genocide p 238 ISBN 978 0765808349 Drastamat Kanayan profile Archived February 8 2009 at the Wayback Machine membres lycos fr armenianlegion General Dro Reburied in Armenia Armenian International Magazine June 2000 p 26 a b Birth of Tro May 31 1884 Milwaukee Armenian Community 1 June 2013 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Harutyunyan Garik 28 January 2016 Բացվել է ՀՀ ՊՆ Պաշտպանական ազգային հետազոտական համալսարանը The national research university of the RA Ministry of Defense has opened Razm info in Armenian External links editGayane Kanayan Wife of Armenian Hero General Dro Honored by Defense Ministry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Drastamat Kanayan amp oldid 1220497710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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