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He left, Janger left

Jader Janger Jader, a Peshmerga and companion of Barzani to the Soviet Union, died in 1953 in the Soviet Union as a result of a traffic accident and was buried there.


the biography

He left, Janger left He was born in 1924 in the village of Mirozi, in the Shirwan Mazin district of the Mergasur region of Erbil Governorate. He married in the Soviet Union. He was fluent in Kurdish, Arabic, Turkish, and Russian. He died in 1953 in the Soviet Union as a result of a traffic accident and was buried there.


pages of struggle

In 1943, he joined the ranks of the Second Barzan Revolt, participating in the battles of Nehili and the capture of the Nehili artillery unit and police stations in the Barzan region. On August 19, 1945, all his movable and immovable property was confiscated by order of the Iraqi Military Court. On October 11, 1945, following the setback of the Barzan Revolt, he crossed into Eastern Kurdistan with Mustafa Barzani and his comrades. After the establishment of the Democratic Republic of Kurdistan in Mahabad on March 31, 1946, he defended the republic as part of the Barzan forces.

 

After the collapse of the Republic of Kurdistan in Mahabad and Barzani’s return from eastern Kurdistan to southern Kurdistan, he participated in the battles of Naghdeh and Shino in eastern Kurdistan, and he was among his Peshmerga comrades, as he returned on 19/4/1947 via (Khakurk and the Barazgara Plain) through the lands of northern Kurdistan to the Shirwan and Mazuri regions.
Upon their return, General Mustafa Barzani held a meeting with his comrades in the village of Arkush on May 15, 1947, and gave them the choice of staying or going to the Soviet Union. There, all his comrades decided to continue and head to the Soviet Union. On May 23, 1947, they accompanied General Mustafa Barzani to the Soviet Union, participating in the battles of Qatur and the Maku Bridge. After great hardship and exhaustion, they crossed the Aras River on June 18, 1947, which lies on the border between Iran and the Soviet Union.

Upon their arrival in the Soviet Union on June 19, 1947, he and all his comrades were detained in the city of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan, for forty days in an open compound surrounded by barbed wire and guarded by soldiers. They were treated as prisoners of war in terms of food, clothing, and transportation. By order of the Soviet government, they were later distributed to the Aghdam, Lachin, Ayulakh, and Kalbajar regions of Azerbaijan. On December 10, 1947, they were transferred to a camp on the Caspian Sea in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. On December 23, they received military uniforms and underwent eight hours of daily military training under the supervision of Azerbaijani officers. Simultaneously, they received four hours of daily Kurdish language instruction from some of their more educated comrades.

After Jafar Bakirov's mistreatment of his comrades, Barzani decided to move his military assembly from Azerbaijan on August 29, 1948, to the Girjuk complex near the Uzbek capital, Tashkent, where they continued their military training.

In March 1949, he and his comrades were distributed in groups by train to cooperative villages in the Soviet Union and worked on kolkhoz farms (land that people rented from the government and then paid a share of to the government).

After great efforts and sending several letters from General Barzani to Stalin, Stalin finally received a letter in which Barzani spoke about the suffering of his comrades, and he immediately decided to form a committee to investigate the situation of Barzani’s comrades. The committee’s final decision was that they should be gathered in the city of Frivsky, so in November 1951 he went to the Soviet city of Frivsky.


Sources

- Hamid Ghaherdi, the name of God, the name of God, (Holler - Dehzghai Chap and the name of Aras) - Chapkhana and Hazara of Iran - 2004g).

- Haider Farouk Al-Samarrai, Diaa Jaafar and his political and economic role in Iraq, (London - Dar Al-Hikma - 2016).

- Zarar Suleiman Baghdad, Iran, 1943-1977 AD, (Suleiman - Shah Khaneh - 2002 AD).

- Shah'aban Ali Shah'aban, this is a political and religious harlot, a handsome man, (Hol. 2013g).

- Abdullah Haman Mahla Habib Habubakar, a prominent member of my clan who lived in November 1931-1991, his father, (Hauler - Chapkhana and Hazara Rishnabiri - 2001g).

Karwan Mohamed Mohamed Mohjid, Barzaniyah, had a career in the Soviet Union, his name, (Solemani - Chap Khaneh) India - 2011g).

- Masoud Barzani, Barzani and his wife, Rezagarikhwazi Kurd 1931-1958, (Dehek - Chapkhaneh Khabat - 1998g).

- Archive of the Encyclopedia Authority of the Kurdistan Democratic Party.

 


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