Name: Qachagh
Surname: Qachag hMirad
Father's Name: Mirad
Year of Birth: 1914
Year of Death: 1992
Place of Birth: Kars
Place of Death: Yerevan
He was a Caucasian Kurdish poet who influenced the development of modern Kurdish literature. Qachagh, son of Mirad, son of Shabab, was born in 1914 in Ottoman Kurdistan. He was 14 years old when the Ottoman army launched a brutal attack on the Kurds of Kars in 1918. His father's family moved to Armenia and settled in the Alagaz region. They then were moved to Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia. He completed his primary and secondary education at the Russian School No. 47 in Tbilisi, then moved to Yerevan and studied for three years at the Russian Language and Literature Institute, and then at the Kurdish Language Teacher Training Institute in Armenia. At the beginning of World War II, he served as a Soviet soldier until the liberation of Berlin from the Nazis. He served in the Russian Red Army until 1958. He worked in the Kurdish section of Radio Yerevan for a year and a half He became a member of the editorial board and occasionally became the editor. Qachagh was wounded twice in the war and received six medals. After a life full of cultural service and literary innovation, Qachagh left a beautiful and useful wealth for the Kurds. He died in 1992 in #Yerevan# . Qachagh played an important role in the development of the newly born Kurdish literature of the Caucasus. His poetry follows the new poetry constitution, i.e. many colorful rhymes. Smuggled poetry is a subject of lyricism and poetry. Mirza Mahmood's stories 1936. Leyla Klama Agri Dagh1962. Gali Ali Bag 1965. In terms of content, Qajagh's poetry covers every aspect of Kurdish life in that country. In general, it all stems from a breath of optimism, preserves Kurdish traditions and morals, and is addicted to the beauty of Kurdish girls.:
The assassination of the poet and writer Wazir Nadri in 1946 by the Soviet authorities was a painful and important event among the Kurds of the Russian Caucasus, it affected the hearts and emotions of the Kurdish people back then. Achagh was a loyal friend of the minister. In this sad poem, he tells the minister about his brotherly love.
In a poem called Kalama Igridaghe, was written as a lamentation for the loss of his friend.[1]