Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AWOL (Armenian Weekly On-Line): A Tribute to James Tashjian

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

  • AWOL (Armenian Weekly On-Line): A Tribute to James Tashjian

    The Armenian Weekly On-Line: AWOL
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown MA 02472 USA
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]
    http://www.ar menianweekly.com

    * * *

    AWOL (Armenian Weekly On-Line): A Tribute to James Tashjian
    "The Armenian Weekly", Volume 72, No. 51, December 23-30, 2006 pp. 17-20

    1. Obituary: James Tashjian (1922-2006)

    2. Remembering Jimmy Tashjian
    By Antranig Kasbarian

    3. Jimmy Tashjian Personified Armenian Journalism
    By Tom Vartabedian

    4. James H. Tashjian: Assorted Reminiscences
    By C.K. Garabed

    5. James H. Tashjian: A Reflection on a Literary Legend
    By Christian Garbis

    6. A Tribute to James Tashjian
    By Dorothy Esperian

    7. Remembrances of Unger James H. Tashjian
    By Joseph Dagdigian

    8. A Farewell To James H. Tashjian
    By Betty Apigian Kessel
    ------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------
    -----

    1. James Tashjian (1922-2006)

    WATERTOWN, Mass.-James Harutune Tashjian (b. 1922), the chief editor of the
    Hairenik/Armenian Weekly for more than 3 decades, passed away on Nov. 29.

    Tashjian studied at Boston and Cambridge schools, receiving degrees in
    history before serving for four years in the U.S. Army during World War II.
    His tour included stops in Persia and Europe, for which he won the Etousa
    Award for distinguished service.

    In 1946, he married Virginia Agababian. In the following years, he became
    chief editor of The Armenian Weekly. He was also an editor of The Armenian
    Review.

    At an early age, he entered the fledgling Armenian Youth Federation and
    served that organization as chairman of its Central Executive through eight
    terms and advisor for 20 additional years. He was honored as an AYF National
    Honorary Member by the organization.

    He was the first Armenian-American to receive the Church's "Prince of
    Cilicia" Award, awarded to him by Catholicos Zareh I of the Great House of
    Cilicia.

    He was the author of The Armenian American in World War II and My Name is
    Saroyan and also published numerous pamphlets and articles in the Armenian
    field.

    He is survived by his wife Virginia and son, Douglas Sevan.

    ------------------------------------------ ----------------------------------
    ---

    2. Remembering Jimmy Tashjian
    By Antranig Kasbarian


    It's truly an honor and a pleasure to offer these words in memory of James
    Tashjian, or "Jimmy," as we all knew him.

    It's an honor, first of all, because of Jimmy's lion-like stature and
    impressive accomplishments on behalf of our community. He was a charter
    member of the AYF and leader of its Central Executive for many years; editor
    of the Hairenik Weekly, then the Armenian Review, for a total of 37 years;
    and author of numerous books and pamphlets that had a significant impact
    from both literary and historical standpoints. Through these involvements,
    Jimmy's career covered and indeed reflected many significant chapters in our
    national development on these shores.

    But Jimmy's true significance lies in something more. For amidst the
    accomplishments, his essence came through in the difficult, often uphill
    battles he fought for the sake of our national ideals. During the Cold War
    years, Jimmy fought tirelessly to uphold Armenian nationalism, especially
    the ideal of a free, independent and united Armenia. He argued that despite
    all forms of repression and domination, Armenians would rise from the ashes
    and one day transcend their predicament. For a people who had only recently
    experienced genocide and brutal Sovietization-exiled and scattered on one
    hand, occupied and shackled on the other-such idealism had tremendous
    affirmative value: It emphasized hope, perseverance and a stand for liberty
    at a time when naysayers derided this as hopeless romanticism. Where are
    these naysayers today, I wonder?

    At a time when Western Armenia had been wiped off the map, and Eastern
    Armenia absorbed into the Soviet Union, Armenian nationhood was greatly
    threatened. Stateless, traumatized and ghettoized, Armenians wondered if
    they had become a mere footnote in history, a people with a past but without
    a present. Jimmy and his colleagues came to the rescue, restoring our pride
    and dignity by emphasizing that Armenians were somebodys-not only on the
    national stage, but on the world stage as well. With accomplishments in the
    fields of science, literature, music, diplomacy and more, Armenians were
    brought to life as vibrant actors, with a culture second to none. We can
    recall, for instance, Jimmy's stories about Armenian communities in India,
    Europe and elsewhere, where Armenians played an integral, often prominent
    role in the development of these societies. This, too, was an enormous
    accomplishment, even if Jimmy did take things too far at times: Who can
    forget his energetic insistence that Christopher Columbus was Armenian? (You
    mean, he wasn't?)

    Jimmy will also be remembered as a skillful community builder. Along with
    peers such as James Mandalian, Arthur Giragosian and K. Merton Bozoian, he
    nurtured and promoted a new generation of Armenian youth who had one foot in
    the Old World and one foot in the New. He saw the Armenian community not in
    narrowly political terms, but as a field for developing our creative talents
    in various spheres. Indeed, many of us-myself included-would probably not be
    here today without the inspiration and encouragement Jimmy provided.

    Jimmy often seemed larger than life. His Weekly headlines ran large,
    trumpeting the latest achievement or controversy with a boldness that
    commanded one's attention. As an editor, he was a tireless promoter,
    shunning the mirage of objectivity in favor of a partisan perspective that
    emphasized advocacy over complacency. And he was an important link to the
    titans of our First Republic-Darbinian, Vratsian, Dro-who served as his
    guideposts and mentors. All of this while ensconced within the Hairenik
    Building at 212 Stuart Street, Boston, whose hallowed halls were as imposing
    as they were cherished.

    Jimmy possessed a wealth of intelligence and erudition. Indeed, many of us
    have seen our vocabularies enriched with the rare, pungent words he brought
    forth so effortlessly. He penned many scholarly articles-I remember one on
    Karabakh written in 1968, before many of us even knew what Karabakh was! But
    even more significant today, in this age of careerism and individualism, is
    that Jimmy shunned the possibilities of a lucrative career in order to place
    his talents at the service of his people. Such sacrifice, made so willingly
    and positively, can only inspire us in this day and age.

    James Tashjian was also an important figure in the history of the Armenian
    Church. He was the first layman to receive the prestigious "Prince of
    Cilicia" order, awarded by His Holiness Catholicos Zareh I. And there are
    good reasons for this distinction. As we know, the Armenian Church has been
    not only a house of God, but our national home. And yet, during the church
    schism of the 1930s, '40s, and '50s, most of our community's nationalistic
    elements were left adrift, having to gather and worship in makeshift or
    rented facilities. Jimmy believed wholeheartedly in an Armenian Church free
    of Soviet manipulations, one in which Armenian nationalism could flourish.
    And so, not surprisingly, Jimmy was vocally at the forefront of our
    community's appeal to the Great House of Cilicia to take us under its
    wing-an effort which finally bore fruit in 1956 and which led to the
    erection of many churches that serve as our homes to this day.

    On a concluding note, let me add a word about Jimmy's life-long partner,
    Virginia, who not only supported him but had a distinguished career of her
    own as a librarian and administrator. Unfortunately, the 1980s and '90s
    became a time of estrangement between Jimmy and his beloved Hairenik
    Association, and with Virginia's help we worked successfully to bridge that
    gap. The year was 1992, and in my final days as editor of the Weekly, I
    thought of approaching Jimmy, just to say hello. Knowing his imposing
    personality, I instead approached Virginia-then head librarian at my local
    public library-and timidly asked if Jimmy might be willing to see me.
    Virginia graciously arranged the meeting, and Jimmy welcomed me with open
    arms. Before too long, a vibrant camaraderie had been reestablished,
    culminating in several Hairenik events in the late 1990s and early 2000s,
    duly honoring Jimmy for his lifetime of achievement.

    Jimmy Tashjian was a national treasure. His vision of an independent Armenia
    not only galvanized an entire generation; it carried a message that today
    has been largely vindicated. If we are to safeguard this treasure and this
    vision, then we must carry on in the same spirit-feisty, patriotic,
    unafraid-that Jimmy displayed to the very end.

    -------------------------------------------- --------------------------------
    -

    3. Jimmy Tashjian Personified Armenian Journalism
    By Tom Vartabedian

    When it came to the integrity of news, the clarity of language and the
    dedication to getting at the truth, James H. Tashjian had no superiors in
    the newspaper world.

    He was a scholar, youth advisor, friend, mentor, and AYF trailblazer rolled
    into one. He was the man who plucked me out of obscurity and pointed me to
    maturity.

    As a result, I owe him not just my job as a newsman but my life as a
    conscientious Armenian. He made all that possible.

    It is with a heavy heart and fond recollection that I mourn his death. The
    Armenian community has lost a dedicated servant who embodied every nuance of
    journalism.

    My association with him dates back 45 years when I was a scribe for the
    Somerville Nejdeh AYF Chapter. I had reported on a basketball game and my
    writing was crude.

    I remember climbing the endless steps of that old Hairenik building at 212
    Stuart Street in Boston to the third floor where Jimmy's office was located.
    It was a vantage point for young aspiring journalists like myself - a
    pedestal which produced such great writers as the prodigious William
    Saroyan.

    The place was bustling with such venerable folks as Jimmy Mandalian and
    Roupen Darpinian, a community of tapping typewriter keys, glue pots, cigar
    smoke and organizations that whirred with activity.

    As dingy and outdated as the institution was, it was rock solid and it was
    home. He glanced over that basketball write-up and threw a compliment my
    way. One by-line led to another and a career was launched.

    Many more trips followed to that sacred office of his. Jimmy's desk always
    drew a curious glance, packed to the rafters with books and papers. I would
    comment on that "clutter."

    "The sign of a busy mind is a busy desk," he told me. "An empty desk belongs
    to an empty mind."

    Jimmy was a master of platitudes, recognized for his quips and casual
    one-liners, spicing the humor with a dash of satire.

    He would sit at that congested desk, sleeves rolled up halfway to his
    elbows, chain-smoking cigars, laboring over other people's copy, mine
    included, for better or worse.

    Then, finished, he would sit and talk-a conversation that hopped and skipped
    like a Mexican jumping bean, from the thick deli sandwiches at Jacob Werth's
    to the sanctified Harvard-Yale football game, the grave situation in Armenia
    and the grim political climate in America.

    What set him apart from most of his contemporaries was his ability to laugh
    at himself. Jimmy Tashjian was a crusader who lived and worked to entertain
    and inform his readers. He was good company with his incredibly broad
    knowledge.

    At age 16, he entered his pantheon as sports editor of the Hairenik Weekly.
    After returning from service with the U.S. Armed Forces following the
    turbulent years of World War II, he accepted an editorship with The Armenian
    Review, then in short order, joint editorship with James Mandalian of the
    Hairenik Weekly-a job he held for more than three decades, longer than any
    predecessor or successor.

    To this day, I don't know what the "H" stood for in his middle name but I
    suspect it's for Hell-bent-one who remained stubbornly determined and going
    full speed. That was Jimmy's trademark.

    The good old days wouldn't be so old if more people lived them. Anyone
    gazing at the Hairenik during those halcyon years of the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s
    and 1970s discovered an inimitable face to the journal, one that gave the
    Armenian communities direction and identity.

    Because space was at a premium and correspondence heavy, he spent half his
    time putting articles into the paper and the other half keeping things out.

    His tutelage was mightier than the pen, striving to teach young Armenians
    like myself not to make a living at journalism per se, but to make a life.
    My professor taught me well.

    "Newspapers," he often agreed, "are nothing more than circulating libraries
    with high blood pressure."

    How well we both found that out.

    Lo the ubiquitous Armenian. Who could ever forget his time-honored Bostonian
    columns written with a true Harvardian flare? The fact he was a Harvard
    graduate never gave him a superiority complex. The doctorate he had received
    was seldom mentioned in a prefix. He preferred to be "one of the guys."

    Jimmy didn't establish priorities. He didn't have time. His face was his
    numerous columns and editorials, always setting out to do 10 times as good
    by doing 10 times as much.

    He was fueled by a heady mixture of ambition and an insatiable appetite for
    the powers of language. His pieces jolted the reader, honest and heartfelt.
    Jimmy gave the Hairenik a pulse.

    My professor had guts, wisdom and integrity. He didn't have patience for
    elitism, bigotry, hypocrisy or undue flattery. His vision was always for the
    common good.

    People of all persuasions were his confidants and sought his good judgment
    and wise counsel. He slept with the news, lived with the news and stayed on
    top of the news.

    When Jimmy left the Hairenik in 1976, the cadence stopped. You can take the
    newsman out of the newsroom but you can never take the soul out of
    journalism. That part of it remained steadfast to his dying day.

    He laid out the foundation. Others built upon it. His spirit will continue
    to dominate what he often called the Armenian Valhalla.

    We last met this past summer at Café Anoush in Watertown. He was seated at a
    table with his wife Virginia and I joined him. But I couldn't get a word in
    edgewise. Others repeatedly intervened to say hello and wish him well.

    I finally broke the news about my pending retirement-a career that also
    spanned 40 years. He looked at me and laughed. Retirement?

    "Anyone who looks forward to retirement soon finds himself doing dishes
    three times a day and all those other household obligations instead of
    fishing seven times a week."

    A point well taken, my friend.

    "Maybe I'll just retire and not tell my wife," I said kiddingly.

    He smiled and took my hand.

    "Well done," he replied. "Just one piece of advice. Don't just sit around
    and look bored. Keep busy."

    I thank you Jimmy. The Hairenik thanks you. The boys from Lowell thank you.
    We all thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

    May God bless you and keep you in his own Valhalla.

    --------------------------------------- -------------------------------------
    ------------

    4. James H. Tashjian: Assorted Reminiscences
    By C.K. Garabed

    Whether it was sports and politics, arts and science, music and literature,
    you name it, nothing was inscrutable to the mind of Jimmy Tashjian. What's
    more, he always got to the core of the subject. My own travels with the mind
    of J.T. was an intellectual journey of the highest order.

    If I ran by members of my family something intended for my column and they
    cautioned about its possible obscurity to our readers, I would point out
    that it would be perfectly understood by Jimmy, and that was good enough for
    me. Jimmy, on occasion, would send me some witty material, knowing I would
    perceive their aptness for use in The Armenian weekly.

    Words to Jimmy were like jewels, to be used judiciously for adornment but
    not ostentatiously, which is the mark of a good writer and editor.

    When, during one of our conversations, I quoted the Russian nationalist
    composer Moussorgsky who called Beethoven "The Thinker" and Berlioz "The
    Super-Thinker," Jimmy took umbrage and let me know so. To him, Beethoven was
    the Apex, the Summit, the Zenith of classical composers. When I persisted in
    my defense of Berlioz, he very graciously consented to a Mexican stand-off.

    When I related to him how my fellow Armenians would pass on to me their
    parents' books in the Armenian language because they felt that they would be
    placed where they would do the most public good, and how one book, The Human
    Comedy by Saroyan, that was translated into Armenian by James Mandalian,
    Jimmy's predecessor and mentor at the Hairenik, I had sent to the Hairenik
    for their archives, being published by them - Jimmy let out a sigh and said
    that that book was the only one of Mandalian's translations that was missing
    from his library. At that moment, I wished that I had held on to it long
    enough to have been able to complete Jimmy's collection.

    I am indebted to him for stimulating my interest in the career and
    activities of attorney Vahan Cardashian, the organizer of the American
    Committee for an Independent Armenia during the World War I years and after.

    He was one of the few people I met who knew of the activities of John T.
    Flynn of the Chicago Tribune, who not only was active with Charles Lindbergh
    on the America First Committee that tried to keep the U.S. out of the
    European conflict that became known as WW II, but who published a series of
    articles in the Tribune under the title of The Smear terror. It was in these
    articles, later printed as a booklet at his own expense, that Flynn exposed
    the nefarious activities of Avedis Derounian, alias John Roy Carlson, as
    well as the background of the 1933 assassination of Archbishop Levon
    Tourian, whom he dubbed The Red Bishop. I asked Jimmy if it was time to
    disseminate Flynn's work to the Armenian community at large. He proposed
    holding off on such a venture. He gave me the feeling that there were some
    poisons brewing to which Flynn's work would be an antidote.

    Ah, Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy - who is there like unto thee?

    ------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------
    ---

    5. James H. Tashjian: A Reflection on a Literary Legend
    By Christian Garbis

    It appears that most of the great literary figures of our generation have
    already left us, the latest being James H. Tashjian, the editor of the
    Armenian Weekly for a time span of four decades, while simultaneously the
    long-time editor of the quarterly Armenian Review and one of the most
    prolific writers the Armenian-American community has ever produced.

    Tashjian started his career at the Hairenik Association as a young writer in
    his late teens on behalf of the then-newly founded AYF, contributing to an
    English-language column featured in the Hairenik Daily at the time. When the
    Hairenik Weekly (later renamed the Armenian Weekly) was established in 1934
    he was almost immediately instilled as a long-standing fixture in the
    paper's progression as a voice not only of the Armenian community at large
    in the United States but also for the ideals propagated by the
    ARF-Dashnaktsutiun, of which he became a long-time staunchly dedicated
    member. Under the initial tutelage of fellow great Weekly and Armenian
    Review editor James Mandalian, and having served alongside master
    Armenian-language writers/editors of the Hairenik Daily, notably Rouben
    Darbinian and Minas Tölölyan, he was unwaveringly encouraged to fine-tune
    his craft.

    His love for the classics of literature, as well as the inspiration he
    fostered from romantic writers such as Herman Melville, was unmistakably
    evident in his writings. Countless social or political commentaries were
    churned out during his tenure. These were apart from frequent written calls
    to activate the youth in tackling issues that were most pertinent to them as
    young Armenians living in their actual homeland, America. For the Armenian
    Review he printed thousands of texts regarding literature, culture and
    history, revealing to the publication's readers information about their
    deep-rooted ancestry that would otherwise have been unabsorbed. The editor
    also had a mental encyclopedic database at his immediate disposal, which he
    accessed seemingly spontaneously when putting pen to paper or purportedly
    lecturing to a crowd numbering in the hundreds. Even in his later years,
    despite having suffered from a stroke, Tashjian maintained his wit and
    sharpness, able to recall details of his literary and activist past.

    He was also known for his direct, perhaps considered strong-willed or
    intense persona as well as occasional obstinacy. In my few encounters with
    Tashjian, I only saw a person who was compassionate while simultaneously
    playfully argumentative and harmlessly inquisitive. The demonstration of
    knowledge that he shared with me, although briefly, was by all means
    astounding to the point of sheer intimidation.

    The sincere relationship between William Saroyan and Tashjian was not
    unknown to the community, and the two of them maintained their friendship
    until Mr. Saroyan's untimely death in 1981. Both writers emerged during the
    same period of pre-World War II as contemporaries, although they would for
    the most part cater to varying, mainly unrelated audiences. Fellow
    intellectual and documenter of the early Armenian-American community, Sarkis
    Atamian, also shared his camaraderie. Mr. Tashjian was also a promoter of
    other fledgling writers emerging from the maturity of the AYF, for instance
    the late activist Leo Sarkisian as well as Tom Vartabedian, who to this day
    provides invaluable contributions to the Weekly, partly in honor to his
    mentor.

    On November 29, the Armenian-American readership lost one of the greatest
    literary legends it has known and will ever know. Tashjian's dedication to
    the community, especially the youth, was substantial beyond measure. In
    respect for his devotion he was bestowed the honorary title of Prince of
    Cilicia. He also enjoyed the admiration of thousands of his readers from his
    generation as well as subsequent ones.

    So long as the community exists it must always remember and understand the
    substantial contributions that Tashjian left behind. It is rather
    inconceivable that an anthology of his most notable writings for the Weekly
    and Armenian Review has not been issued thus far; it is a tragic blow to the
    entire Armenian English-language literary world. His legacy deserves the
    recognition that it has unquestionably earned.

    ----------------------------------------- -----------------------------------
    --

    6. A Tribute to James Tashjian
    By Dorothy Esperian

    It was with great sadness that I read of James "Jimmy" Tashjian's passing on
    November 29, 2006. Once again, Armenians have lost a dedicated, hard-working
    person who had a vast knowledge of history, the Dashnaktsutiun, and all
    those individuals who struggled during very difficult times to keep the
    Armenian identity and spirit alive.

    His passing made me think back to the years when I first became a member of
    the AYF in the Newton Zeitoun Chapter, then the Somerville Nejdeh Chapter,
    and finally the Watertown Gaidzags.

    Jimmy, as we respectfully called him, had placed me in the Watertown chapter
    when the Somerville chapter was no longer active, because he knew the AYF
    was the best method for Armenian youth to learn Armenian history, and to
    help our people achieve their organizational goals. He was always concerned
    about the vitality and strength of the AYF, and never wanted to see one
    member lost.

    In June 1966, I was elected as an alternate to the AYF Central Executive,
    and was called to serve in January 1967 when Berge Gregian could no longer
    remain on the CE. We held meetings and many activities at the old Hairenik
    Building on 212 Stuart St., Boston, Mass. Each time the Central Executive
    members arrived at the Hairenik, we'd always visit Jimmy's office first,
    which was next to the Central office; since Jimmy was the AYF executive
    secretary, he could give us an update on the mail and recent chapter events.

    It seemed as if Jimmy was always at the Hairenik, working on the Armenian
    Weekly, writing for an AYF Educational Blue Book, or just greeting visitors
    when they arrived. Jimmy knew everyone, and it seems everyone knew Jimmy.
    Even my parents, both charter member Tzeghagarons, spoke highly of him.

    When the Central Executive members decided to take a lunch or dinner break,
    Jimmy accompanied us, and educated us on history, the current geopolitical
    situation, and most of all respect for the ARF.

    I remember a group of us accompanying Jimmy to Whitinsville, Mass., to
    reorganize the AYF chapter there and administer the AYF oath to new members.
    Those two tasks of organizing new chapters and membership were a joy to
    Jimmy. Whatever there was to be done, Jimmy had the knowledge and capability
    to complete the task, and impart that same knowledge and capability to the
    Central Executive members.

    Jimmy emphasized education for AYF chapters by speaking on many topics, and
    often writing and encouraging the use of the AYF Educational Blue Books. He
    would always strive to create well-rounded AYF members by encouraging and
    emphasizing participation in all AYF programs and events.

    Jimmy was delighted to have the first AYF Winter Olympics held in the main
    hall of the old Hairenik building. Whether it was the Winter or Summer
    Olympics, Jimmy was there, either speaking at the opening ceremonies or
    watching the events.

    During those years, the AYF was a magnet organization with over 3,000
    members, including many from California and Canada. Jimmy was very proud of
    it. In essence, we were all his "children." There weren't any members left
    uninfluenced by him somehow. He taught us good leadership, pride and respect
    for the ARF.


    He was never separate from us. He was, and always will be, with us.

    Dorothy Esperian served on the AYF Central Executive from January 1967 to
    June 1973.
    -------------------------------------------- --------------------------------
    ---

    7. Remembrances of Unger James H. Tashjian
    By Joseph Dagdigian


    HARVARD, Mass.-It is with great sadness that I learned of the passing away
    of James H. Tashjian. Jimmy, as he was know to his friends, was a Harvard
    University educated historian and past editor of the Hairenik Weekly (later
    the Armenian Weekly) and the Armenian Review. He was a dear friend and
    mentor.
    In the early 1960s many of us from the Lowell community, myself included,
    became members of the AYF Central Executive (CE) and various CE committees.
    While Jimmy knew my uncles and my mother, and thus me, I did not know him
    except as the editor of the Hairenik Weekly until I became a member of the
    AYF CE. Jimmy was an enormous help to the CE and I shudder to think how we
    would have proceeded without his council and advice. Later, while serving as
    CE chairman for a number of years, I realized even more the valuable
    assistance, advice, and counsel he offered. Jimmy, from his editor's office
    next to the Central Executive office in the old Hairenik Building in Boston,
    took care of many of the CE's administrative tasks-like answering the phone
    and fulfilling requests for AYF materials such as stationary and other items
    available from the CE office.
    Most importantly, however, Jimmy was an educator, friend and mentor. Jimmy,
    a professional historian, imparted valuable and interesting insights into
    current world events, Armenian history, and the various Armenian communities
    throughout the United States and Canada.
    His advice on AYF matters was invaluable, never insisting that we take a
    particular decision, but simply giving us his informed opinion on the
    issues. Most important, he was a mentor and a friend. His advice was not
    limited to AYF or Armenian affairs; he frequently advised us on personal
    issues as we, in our early 20s, were stepping out into the real world. He
    set an example with his selfless dedication to the cause of Armenian justice
    and liberty. In a memorable conversation I had with him in the 1960s or
    early 1970s about Armenia's future, he assured me that in our lifetime we
    would see a free Armenia. When I questioned him if this would come about as
    a result of a nuclear war with the Soviet Union, he again assured me that
    this would not be the case, that it would result from the collapse of the
    Soviet Union as a result of internal inconsistencies and problems. His
    answer was comforting but to this date I do not know if I believed him
    because I really thought this was true, or because I simply wanted this to
    be true. He was right, even though this was not the conventional wisdom of
    the time.
    Jimmy had an immense formative effect on me and, I think, many of my Lowell
    AYF ungers and ungerouhis, including my wife. I can say that I would not be
    the same person I am now were it not for Jimmy's example and mentoring. Even
    though it has been many decades since I graduated from the AYF and the AYF
    Central Executive, not a day passes when I am not thankful for his
    assistance, mentoring and friendship. We did get together a few times each
    year since those days, and his insight into events and his sense of humor
    never diminished. Each time we met he asked about "the Lowell boys," listing
    them individually and asking about them and their families. Jimmy, of
    course, could not have done what he did without the support of his wonderful
    wife Virginia, with whom we became equally close. Right from the start of
    our relationship with Jimmy, Virginia always welcomed us at their home.
    Jimmy was an avid stamp collector. Each time Jimmy learned that my wife and
    I were traveling to Armenia he would ask that I bring back some Armenian
    stamps for him, which I was pleased to do. Each trip (except one, I think,
    in which I shamelessly forgot) I would stop at a post office and get a few
    of each stamp that they had on sale. I always felt that this was too little
    to do for someone who had helped me and had contributed so much to the
    Armenian community and to Hye Tad. Yet, he would respond with such
    enthusiasm to a new set of stamps that I knew that this was something that
    meant a lot to him.
    I will miss Jimmy enormously. Yet in a way I won't, because in a very real
    sense I am constantly aware of the wonderful friendship he, with Virginia,
    have shown us and his lasting presence. God bless him, Virginia, and his
    family. While he may be gone, his beneficial influence, contributions and
    example are constantly with us.

    --------------------------------------------- -------------------------------
    ---

    8. A Farewell To James H. Tashjian
    By Betty Apigian Kessel

    How do I bid farewell to a very good friend I have known for most of my
    lifetime? To write about it is to relive again the dreadful news I received
    two days after his passing and it is almost too much to bear. I feel a
    tremendous loss, a loss that lives inside me that says I will never know
    Jim's kind of greatness ever again in my lifetime. My immediate response was
    to phone his beloved wife of almost 60 years, Virginia, to express my and
    Bob's condolence. It is to her also that Armenians of Jim's following owe a
    debt of gratitude.

    My heroes have all passed on to the other side. My heroes were real men-men
    of uncompromising integrity and honor They were men deserving to be looked
    up to, solid leaders and fighters for the noble Armenian Cause. Their ideals
    made you an idealist. That too was our Jim. Can future generations turn out
    stewardship such as this?

    These men are the ones who while standing on silvery white clouds greeted my
    dear friend upon his arrival to his just reward in Heaven. With smiles on
    their faces and hands reaching outward to him they called, "Paree yeh-gar,
    Unger Tashjian, welcome," and Jim grabbed the hands of Hagop Mouradian,
    Arthur Giragosian, Gobernik Tandourjian and Reuben Darbinian. Which one will
    yield the microphone to the other is what I wonder, and the thought puts a
    much needed smile on my face.

    Admiration? You bet I admired him. I admired him on many levels. You see, I
    have known this honorable individual since I was 10 years old. He was the
    man at the Hairenik Association at 212 Stuart Street in Boston, Mass., when
    as just a kid I wrote a letter petitioning them to form a junior Armenian
    Youth Federation Chapter in Pontiac, Mich., my hometown. Permission was
    granted and the young Aharonians started off with 5 members, and when I left
    at age 24 to marry I had corresponded with Boston many many times. Jim was
    elated over this small Great Lakes chapter with me now an adult, leading a
    more youthful group of AYFers to win the coveted educational trophy,
    surpassing those top heavy -with- members eastern chapters. We may not have
    been competitors in the AYF Olympics but we sure knew our Blue Book and
    Armenian history! We had zeal.

    James H. Tashjian was a man of letters, a Harvard Ph.D where he played ice
    hockey and baseball. But that never created an egotistic attitude in him
    like it could in others. He was grounded, knowing what an advantage he had
    been given in life. Rather than use his coveted Ivy League education to
    pursue a lucrative professional career, he dedicated himself using every bit
    of his vast knowledge and expertise work as editor at the Hairenik
    Association of the Armenian Weekly and the Armenian Review with Reuben
    Darbinian and James Mandalian. Who amongst us today would make that kind of
    sacrifice? Those Armenian Reviews from the 50's lining my book shelves mean
    more to me now than ever.

    After many years of valued service to his cherished Armenian people, winds
    of change took place at the Hairenik. It was an opportune time for Jim to
    pursue a successful career in book editing, counting several best sellers to
    his credit. This was trite compared to the volumes of classics he was
    assigned to edit. He was a great figure in the literary publishing world and
    he preferred to keep that fact under wraps. That was the caliber of the
    individual who once worked for the Hairenik Association.

    Jim and I were bound by mutual respect and by being Armenian. I was
    fortunate. He called me a warrior, I called him my teacher. He was a father
    figure, a big brother. He saw in me what he called "great potential" and I
    set out to prove to Jim that his faith in me was deserved. I owe my strength
    and interest in writing to his confidence in me. He told me to leap forward
    and I vaulted. He told me to begin a column for the Armenian Weekly and to
    believe in myself as he believed in me and I did so. Jim was very proud of
    that. I consciously dedicated my column to Jim, my other mentor my father,
    and the Martyrs.

    Tashjian became my best friend. I trusted him. We corresponded for a quarter
    of a century. On a cerebral level he was unparalleled. Anyone who received a
    letter from Jim had better have a dictionary alongside as you attempted to
    understand the words he used. It was natural for him, just part of the
    Harvard man who wore beautiful Harris tweeds. He took frequent fishing trips
    with friends to Maine and Canada, and even those expeditions were described
    with such elaborate splendor that you felt you were along as he cast out his
    line. He was my advisor and mentor. He was wise, erudite, urbane and no one
    could describe with as much deep emotion and eloquence what the Ottoman
    Turks had done to the Armenian Nation like Jim did. He shared his politcal
    beliefs with me, and oh how he loved the Armenian people.

    In recent months he lost a great friend in Alaska, Sarkis Atamian, and two
    of his professors at school whom he called his mentors. Jim wrote to me,
    "Their passing left me destitute for their professional and salubrious
    views." Then his sister Betty, too, died leaving him greatly saddened. Now
    Jim Tashjian's passing has created this sadness, emptiness in me and others.

    Jim cheated me. Years ago I asked him to write my eulogy. We were kindred
    souls about the fate of the Martyrs, Genocide recognition, Armenia,
    reparations and present-day leadership. He read my soul and understood its
    depths like my husband does. Jim never complied. It was the one thing he
    wouldn't even address in his letters. Given a choice, I would not trust
    anyone else to do it.

    I received my last letter from Jim in September of this year. Its tardiness
    had already set me to worry about why I had not heard from him and then I
    was notified of his death. It was to be the last correspondence between two
    dedicated and loyal friends. To say I have been greatly enriched by
    association with him is an understatement. While others have plenitude and
    positions of importance, I am rich as Croesus in the knowledge that James H.
    Tashjian believed in the capability of this Armenian woman and that will
    sustain me until I, too, am greeted by him on a silvery cloud floating over
    Ararat and Armenia.

    Can you imagine how saddened I am by his passing? I am so proud he
    considered me worthy.

    ***

    (c) 2006 Armenian Weekly On-Line. All Rights Reserved.

    --Boundary_(ID_JKWQjgZArXniLub1b7B1Ew)- -

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X