Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Zabelle Goorabian leaves Fresno with a legacy of giving

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Zabelle Goorabian leaves Fresno with a legacy of giving

    Fresno Bee , CA
    Feb 1 2007


    Zabelle Goorabian leaves Fresno with a legacy of giving

    By Jim Steinberg / The Fresno Bee02/01/07 05:10:32

    A family graveside service for longtime Fresno benefactor Zabelle
    Karahadian Goorabian will be held Friday, followed at 11 a.m. by a
    memorial service and luncheon at Pilgrim Armenian Congregational
    Church.

    Mrs. Goorabian gave her energies and financial support for decades to
    Fresno religious, cultural and athletic projects. She died Friday, at
    90, from effects of a stroke she suffered last year.

    She and her late husband, Harry, supported the Fresno Philharmonic,
    the Fresno Metropolitan Museum and Fresno Art Museum. They
    established the Goorabian Family Life Center at Pilgrim Armenian
    Congregational Church.

    Harry "Har" Goorabian died in 1997. The couple founded Mid Valley
    Distributors in Fresno, which became a dominant Central California
    wholesaler of nuts, bolts and fasteners.

    After her husband's death, Mrs. Goorabian saw to it that the city of
    Fresno, Riverpark Little League and young Fresnans in general could
    enjoy Harry Goorabian Park in north Fresno.

    Mrs. Goorabian was born in Fresno. She graduated from Roosevelt High
    School and Fresno State College. She joined the business office of
    the Karahadian family's raisin packing company.

    Mrs. Goorabian became an active supporter of the California Armenian
    Home.

    The Rev. Roger Minassian, former pastor of Pilgrim Armenian
    Congregational Church, worked with Mrs. Goorabian, who had no
    children, to establish the Goorabian Family Life Center there.

    "She was a person of giving," Minassian said. "She had compassion for
    the young."

    Nephew Dr. Edward Karahadian III, a Fresno dentist, called his aunt
    "a very dignified, modern woman for someone born to an ethnic family
    in 1916. She and my uncle had an epic love affair, a wonderful life
    together. She became my second mother and the matriarch of our clan."

    Landscape architect Robert Boro worked with Mrs. Goorabian at the
    California Armenian Home and the Goorabian ballpark.

    "She was fun-loving," Boro said. "She enjoyed all those projects, and
    took a personal interest."

    Niece Allison Karahadian called her aunt a great listener who was
    "easy to love." She taught by example at holiday and Sunday night
    dinners, and around the kitchen sink afterward, that "this is
    family," Karahadian said.

    The family requests that any remembrance be sent to the California
    Armenian Home, Children's Hospital Central California or Hope Now for
    Youth.
Working...
X