Bazèeth Mirzael Chartres
Founder of HYGEN
Under Q.Q – Quantic Qantra

Bazèeth Mirzael Chartres is a Kurdish founder shaped by growing up in the Middle East a region marked not only by historical complexity, but by prolonged instability, unresolved conflicts, and deep structural challenges.
We Carry deep gratitude toward the United States and Canada for the moments in history when they stood in support of justice and stability alongside Kurdish communities.
As part of a people who have often struggled for recognition, cultural continuity, and political voice, he developed an early awareness of what it means to exist without full representation. He witnessed how minorities can be marginalized, how narratives can be dominated by larger powers, and how global perception often simplifies realities that are far more complex.
He has also observed how certain communities including Kurds and Jews have frequently experienced disproportionate scrutiny, criticism, and isolation within global discourse. In regions where geopolitical dynamics are layered and contested, minority voices can struggle to be heard with nuance or fairness.
Growing up within this context created a sharp awareness of how easily moral clarity can be replaced by strategic alignment, and how discussions of right and wrong can become entangled in interest and influence. These realities did not push him toward resentment, but toward discipline. Toward building rather than blaming. Toward creating systems grounded in transparency and measurable truth.
HYGEN emerged from this mindset.
The project represents a commitment to disciplined innovation controlled optics, verification layers, and structured development processes designed to reduce assumption and increase informed awareness.
Coming from a background where identity and narrative can be contested, the belief behind HYGEN is simple: clarity is power. When visibility increases, distortion decreases.
Bazèeth holds deep respect for innovation ecosystems that prioritize research, enterprise, and technological advancement. For this reason, the long-term manufacturing vision for HYGEN aims toward North American production whenever feasible.
HYGEN is not built as a political instrument. It is built as a technological response a quiet but deliberate statement that disciplined creation is stronger than reactive rhetoric.
In environments where voices can be overshadowed, innovation becomes a form of presence.