Her husband was massacred in the first days of the Armenian deportation. She with her mother in law was exiled. On the road to Shoch-Khan they were passing a river. A gendarm who escorted the caravan shot her (mother-in-law) and she was thrown by him into the river and perished.
In Shoch-Khan she was working in different Kourdish-houses and earned her daily bread. After the British Armistice she went to Urfa and remained there until Armenians emigrated to Syria. With a caravan of emigrants she left Urfa and came to Ain-Arous, a small village not far from the Turkish frontier. Having no money she remained there and married afterwards an Islam French soldier. However, as Muhammedans are, her husband ill-treated her. Once she went to Rakka one of our employes saw her there and persuaded her to follow him to Aleppo, she agreed and came with him to our Reception-house.
Has no relatives.
Left our care: March 15, 1925. Relatives.