Ajemian was born in
Manbij, near
Aleppo,
Syria, into a family of survivors of the
Armenian genocide, originally from
Sasun. He studied in Aleppo, then in 1952 he moved to
Beirut. Ajemian graduated from the
American University of Beirut in 1958. He taught Armenian and English language and literature in some Armenian schools of Beirut and Cyprus for a few years. He was the editor of
The Daily Star in Beirut, contributed to
Shirak and
Graser Armenian literary magazines. He was a regular contributor to
Spurk, which he edited for a short time in 1965 and then from 1975 to 1978. He later published three issues as a yearbook from 1985 to 1998. A representative of the new generation of
Armenian Diasporan writers of the 1960s, Ajemian wrote both in Armenian and in English, and his books were published in
Lebanon,
Soviet Armenia and the United States. Ajemian "has been acclaimed as a powerful intellectual voice in Armenian freedom movements as his works express the longing, rootlessness, and despair of diasporan peoples everywhere". As a novelist he experimented with modern forms and postsurrealist techniques. According to "The Book Buyer's Guide" (1969), in his first English novel
Symphony in Discord, Ajemian, "a well-known Armenian author takes a look and a laugh at life in an unusually provocative study". His
Ruling over the Ruins novel is a love story of a bright young Irish journalist and an aging Armenian lawyer marooned together in war-ravaged Beirut. According to Kari S. Neely, Ajemian's writings in both Armenian and English are more like philosophical tracks than fiction and his "writing style, perhaps like his lifestyle, is aggressive and direct, never mincing words". They overtly deal with themes of diaspora's identity. In his
A Perpetual Path novel Ajemian points the finger "inwardly to the Armenian people, blaming them for their past calamities". Even the violence is necessary to assert your rights, because no one is going to give them to you willingly. Ajemian was one of the founders of
ASALA and developed the policy of the organization. One of the most famous novels of Ajemian,
The Descendants of Milky Way ("
Hartkoghi zharankortnere"), is dedicated to the life of the Armenian youth in
Lebanon of the 1970s. In another novel by Ajemian, "A Time for Terror" (1997), the story concerns an attempt to assassinate the head of the Armenian Liberation Army in 1980s Beirut. In 1997 the book was discussed at
New York City radio. In 1979 Ajemian took part in the First Armenian Congress Organizing Committee (
Paris). He died in
Lyon, France, aged 66. In 1999, a collection of the best journalistic works of Ajemian was published by ASALA. ==Selected bibliography==