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Father and son: A cut above watches

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  • Father and son: A cut above watches

    The International Herald Tribune
    December 8, 2007 Saturday


    Father and son;
    A Cut above/ Watches

    by Victoria Gomelsky - The New York Times Media Group


    When Vartkess Knadjian was growing up in Ethiopia in the 1960s,
    during the later years of Haile Selassie's reign, he would sometimes
    accompany his father on formal visits to the Imperial Palace. As
    official watchmaker and supplier to the court, Antranig Knadjian had
    rare access to the emperor, who claimed descent from the biblical
    King Solomon and is still venerated as God incarnate in the Rastafari
    faith.

    ''The emperor had a weakness for watches,'' the younger Knadjian
    recalls. ''Because my father was a procurer of one of his favorite
    things, he was always welcome in the palace.''

    Born to Armenian immigrants in Ethiopia in 1915, the elder Knadjian
    had arrived in Geneva on the eve of World War II and graduated top of
    his class from the École d'Horlogerie in 1941. Determined to return
    to Addis Ababa, he boarded a boat for Djibouti, only to be diverted
    to Madagascar for a wartime two-year stay.

    Soon after he finally arrived home, ''the emperor summoned him to the
    palace and encouraged him'' to nurture his talent, Knadjian says.
    Nearly 30 years of service to the court followed, ending only when
    Selassie was overthrown by a Marxist coup in 1974.

    Then a student at the London School of Economics, Vartkess could not
    return to Ethiopia; the uprising had driven his parents to Canada. On
    a friend's suggestion, he applied to Backes & Strauss, a diamond
    company founded in Germany in 1789 and established in London since
    1814.

    What was planned to be a six-month stint at Backes & Strauss's office
    in Antwerp, hub of the diamond trade, stretched into decades until,
    after his father's death in 2002, Knadjian orchestrated a buyout of
    the company.

    The time had come to combine his dual passions, and bring his
    father's legacy full circle. Knadjian searched for a watchmaking
    partner, and found one in Vartan Sirmakes, a fellow product of the
    Armenian Diaspora and the chief executive of the Franck Muller Group,
    of Geneva. Their collaboration has produced the diamond-studded
    Backes & Strauss watch collection, brought to market in November
    2006.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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