Avetaranian was born in Erzurum, in 1861, to a Muslim family. His mother was deaf, blind, and mute, and died when Avetaranian was only two years old. His father was a dervish.[2] According to his autobiography, he would have been allowed to wear the green turban reserved for sayyids by a mullah after his aunt showed him their family genealogy.[3] It appears that he received a rather good education, allowing him to speak multiple languages. Apart from Turkish, other Turkic languages, and Arabic, he also spoke German, English, and possibly French and Swedish.[2]
Avetaranian initially became a mullah in the Ottoman Empire but gradually turned towards Christianity after reading the Gospels, he was particularly shocked after the drowning execution of twelve Turkish students who had converted to Christianity in the 1880s in Constantinople.[2] He then came into contact with Pastor Amirkhaniantz and some priests of the Armenian Apostolic Church.[2]
He took the Armenian name of Johannes (John) Avetaranian (Avetaran means 'Gospel') and was baptised either in Tiflis, Russia (modern-day Tbilisi, Georgia) or in Tabriz, Iran, on 28 February 1885.[4][5]
He left Kashgar in 1897, thinking that he would soon return, but that did not work out. Instead he worked with the German Orient Mission (DOM) in Bulgaria, where he started a Christian newspaper, Gunesh, in Turkish. The newspaper was circulated in Turkey proper.
Gösta Raquette came to Philipopol, now Plovdiv, Bulgaria, where he worked with Avetaranian on revision of the Bible translation.
^ abcdefElia, Anthony J (2020). An American Novel in Central Asia: The Unfinished Translation of Ben-Hur and the Final Decade of the Swedish Missionary Project in Kashgar, 1928–1938 (Thesis). ProQuest2469087423.[page needed]
^Johannes Avetaranian, Richard Schafer, John Bechard, A Muslim Who Became a Christian, Authors On Line Ltd, 2003, ISBN0-7552-0069-1,Google Print, p. 4.
^John Avetaranian and Richard Schafer. A Muslim Who Became a Christian: An Autobiography. Translated from German by John Bechard. (New Generational Publishing, 2018). p. 54.
^Thomas, David; Chesworth, John; Bennett, Clinton; Pratt, Douglas; Steenbrink, Karel A., eds. (2021). Christian-Muslim relations: a bibliographical history. volume 17: Great Britain, the Netherlands and Scandinavia (1800-1914) / edited by David Thomas and John Chesworth; with Clinton Bennett, Douglas Pratt, Karel Steenbrink. History of Christian-Muslim relations. Leiden Boston: Brill. ISBN978-90-04-44239-9.
^Thomas, David; Chesworth, John; Bennett, Clinton; Pratt, Douglas; Steenbrink, Karel A., eds. (2021). Christian-Muslim relations: a bibliographical history. volume 17: Great Britain, the Netherlands and Scandinavia (1800-1914) / edited by David Thomas and John Chesworth; with Clinton Bennett, Douglas Pratt, Karel Steenbrink. History of Christian-Muslim relations. Leiden Boston: Brill. ISBN978-90-04-44239-9.