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  • 'American Dream'

    Richmond Times Dispatch, VA
    Sept 21 2005

    'American Dream'
    Lebanese immigrant runs shoe-repair shop, says, 'I have everything I
    want'

    BY MELODIE N. MARTIN
    TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER Sep 21, 2005


    Holding a bulging plastic sack, a woman walked into Gary's Shoe
    Repair and placed five pairs of high-heel shoes on a scratched
    countertop.

    "Are you Gary?" she asked a smiling, gray-haired man behind the
    counter.

    "I'm the only one!" he replied.

    As Gary Akseraylian inspected the shoes, the woman had second
    thoughts about repairing a pair of strappy blue pumps.

    "You know, I don't care for these," she began.

    "These are good shoes," Akseraylian said.

    Akseraylian offered the woman a discount to repair all five pairs and
    went on to explain the value of repairing shoes vs. buying new ones.

    She agreed to pick them up the next Saturday.

    Since he opened his business in 1989, Akseraylian, 63, a native of
    Lebanon, has worked alone in the small shop near Lee-Davis High
    School in Mechanicsville, where he repairs leather goods ranging from
    shoes to handbags to jackets.

    Growth in the area and a loyal clientele from around the state have
    helped his business remain steady.

    "When I came to the country, I only had $30 in my pocket, two
    children and a wife," he said. "Now I have everything I want. It's
    the American dream. I have a beautiful home, I have a good business,
    two brand new cars, a good family."

    A tidy workspace in the back of the shop is lined with shelves of
    shoes some wrapped in paper bags stapled to manila claim tickets --
    and piles of rich-smelling leather pieces.

    A worn path on the floor leads to machines with rotating brushes and
    polishing wheels, and a blackened table with vise grips, hand tools
    and metal jacks.

    Nearly every shoe has a story, Akseraylian said. He points to a
    Winchester man's $400 pair of cowboy boots that have been overhauled
    several times.

    "When you work on something like this, you have to know exactly what
    to do," he said. "You can't take someone's shoe like that and ruin
    it."

    For a motorcycle rider, he will replace the leather soles with rubber
    ones on an expensive pair of boots. Another pair, belonging to a
    ballroom dancer, will have rubber soles replaced with leather because
    the owner "wants to slip and slide."

    While growing up in Lebanon, Akseraylian learned to craft shoes at
    the urging of his Armenian parents. He immigrated to the United
    States in 1973 as fighting in his homeland escalated.

    After settling in Richmond, he held a variety of part-time jobs and
    worked as a shoe-department salesman at Thalhimers' Westmoreland
    store for 16 years before he opened his own business.

    "Hanover County has been so nice and good to me over the years,"
    Akseraylian said, noting that sheriff's deputies and police officers
    often bring in shoes for repair.

    In front of the store, shoes that go unclaimed after months and even
    years are sold along with new shoes and like-colored cans of polish
    in black, brown, oxblood, tan and cordovan. A box holds several
    hundred other abandoned shoes that will be donated to charity.

    While dropping off shoes for repair, Fred Skaggs, a church pastor
    from Mechanicsville, removed the dark brown wingtips he was wearing
    at Akseraylian's insistence. Within minutes, the 5-year-old pair of
    Allen-Edmonds shoes returned with a like-new shine.

    "I've been coming to him for years, and he is the best. If you got a
    problem, he can heal it," Skaggs said. "If he can't fix it, you might
    as well throw the shoe away."

    Akseraylian also attributes his success to hard work and honesty.

    "It's a beautiful country we live in. You can make as much as you
    want. You can be a millionaire," he said.

    "Just be honest and good to your fellow man, and that's all it takes.
    You can do anything you want."


    Sept 21 2005

    Melkonian issue tops Armenian MP by-election

    THE small Armenian community goes to the polls in a by-election on
    Sunday, October 9, to choose a new Representative for Parliament
    after Bedros Kalaydjian, who held the seat for two terms, died on
    September 1.

    Two candidates have already come forward, both young doctors, who are
    already campaigning for the support of the 2,600-member community.

    Dr. Vahak Atamyan is a graduate of the Melkonian Educational
    Institute and Chairman of the governing board of the Nareg Armenian
    elementary schools, and his main rival, Dr. Antranik Ashdjian, chairs
    the Armenian National Committee in Cyprus that lobbies for Armenian
    issues in Europe and on international fora.

    In the eyes of the voters, however, the main issue is the struggle to
    save the Melkonian school that was shut in June, depriving the local
    community, as well as Armenians of Europe and the Middle East, of the
    only boarding high-school with a history of 80 years.

    `We need to know if either of the candidates will come clear and
    declare their unconditional support for the struggle,' that is
    spearheaded by the local and worldwide alumni, a parent told the
    Cyprus Mail.

    Community members argue that the survival and subsequent reopening of
    the Melkonian is vital for the future of the religious group, as
    defined by the Constitution of the Republic of Cyprus.

    The Armenians, Maronites and Latins have a Representative each who
    can only vote in the parliamentary committees on education, culture
    and religion. They sit as observers in the plenary of the 56-seat
    House.

    Other issues, such as the Armenian monastery and churches in the
    Turkish occupied north, the reconstruction of the 19th century
    cemetery near the Ledra Palace, as well as language and culture
    issues are seen as insignificant if the community loses the Melkonian
    forever.

    `We are currently involved in a court battle to wrest control of the
    school and its property, while the New York-based AGBU is adamant on
    keeping the school shut and disposing of the assets, wiping out a
    vital part of our post-Genocide history and identity,' said an Alumni
    spokesman in Nicosia.

    `The Armenian Patriarch in Constantinople has intervened and claims
    the 125,000 square metre property, the listed historic buildings and
    the protected forest are rightly his and not the AGBU's to dispose of
    as they like. He is suing the AGBU in the District Court of Nicosia
    and in California,' the Alumni official added.
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