Georgy Avetisovich Kechaari (Udi: Jora Avetisiğar Keçaari; Azerbaijani: Georgi Avetis oğlu Keçaari; Russian: Георгий Аветисович Кечаари; 25 July 1930 – 8 September 2006) was an Udi writer, educator, public figure and scientist.
Life
He was born in the settlement of Nic, in the Qəbələ Rayon of the Azerbaijan in 1930. In 1946, he went to Baku to pursue Oriental studies at the Baku State University. After finishing his studies in 1952, he returned to his native village and worked as a school teacher. Throughout his life, along with teaching, he regularly was engaged in creative outlets. Kechaari developed a primer and a program to teach the Udi language to school children.[1] He published a number of original works and translated works into Udi. Moreover, he authored many other articles and books devoted to the Udi people. Kechaari headed Orayin, an Udi cultural-educational society, for many years. He died in 2006 and was buried in Nic.
Works
Nana Oččal (lit. "native earth")[2] — a collection of writings in Udi by various authors on the Udi language
Orayin[3][4] ("Spring") — a collection of Udi folklore (a fairy tale, a legend, a proverb, and jokes) as well as the author's own writings in Udi
Buruxmux[5] ("Mountains") — the author's writings and translation of more than 150 representatives of Azerbaijani literary works
Ocaq başında rəqs ("Dance at a fire")[6] — a collection of Udi folklore in the Azerbaijani language
Udinlərdə ənənəvi toy mərasimləri[7] ("Traditional Udi wedding ceremonies") — also in Azerbaijani
Shnurok (Шнурок, "Lace")[8] — a collection of short Udi anecdotes and stories in Russian
^"The only true dictionary of the language", Schulze, Wolfgang. "The Udi language". Bavarian Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 2012-08-05. Retrieved 2009-04-04.
^Keçaari, Georgi (2003). Buruxmux (in Udi). Agah.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)