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A true steward of Armenian Church

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  • A true steward of Armenian Church

    PRESS OFFICE
    Department of Communications
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
    Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 160; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.net

    January 26, 2007
    ___________________

    ARCHBISHOP KHAJAG BARSAMIAN'S EULOGY FOR SARKIS ACOPIAN

    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church
    of America (Eastern), delivered the eulogy Friday, January 26, 2007, in St.
    Vartan Cathedral for the funeral of Sarkis Acopian, a long-time steward of
    the Armenian Church and the community at large. What follows are the
    Primate's remarks.

    * * *

    In the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

    Lord, you have been our refuge in all generations. Before the mountains
    were brought forth, or you had formed the earth and the world, from
    everlasting to everlasting, you are God.

    You return man to the dust, and say, "Turn back, O children of men!" For a
    thousand years in your sight are but as yesterday when it is past, or as a
    watch in the night.

    The years of our life are three-score and ten, or by reason of strength
    four-score; yet their span is but toil and trouble; they are soon gone, and
    we fly away.

    So teach us to number our days, that we may get a heart of wisdom. Satisfy
    us in the morning with thy steadfast love, that we may rejoice and be glad
    all our days.

    Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us, and establish the work of our
    hands upon us. Yes, establish, O Lord, the work of our hands. (Psalm
    90:1-17)

    We are told that these words, from the book of Psalms, were remembered as a
    prayer written by Moses: a man of long and reverend years, who had seen much
    in his lifetime - enough, indeed, for several lifetimes. A man who played
    many roles in his life; who accomplished great works - perhaps the greatest
    of human works - yet who never forgot that even for the greatest of mortals,
    there is One who is greater still. In the scheme of things, Man occupies but
    a moment of time; but God is everlasting.

    That is the God to whom Moses prayed: the Creator of the mountains, and the
    world itself. But most of all, the shepherd of men, who guides them along
    the path to wisdom, dignifies them with His love, and grants them the
    precious gifts of joy and happiness.

    "Let God's blessing be upon us," Moses prayed, "and establish the work of
    our hands": Let our hands do your work, Lord.

    That same sentiment-whether spoken aloud or nurtured silently in the
    heart-has been the prayer of all truly pious people done through the ages.
    "Let my hands do your work, Lord." To be able to offer such a prayer,
    honestly, from the depths of one's heart, is the truest sign of wisdom in a
    person. Not surprisingly, it is also the key to a certain kind of inner
    peace, which itself is one of the foundations of genuine happiness. As the
    Psalm says, no matter how old a man may become, mortal life is all too
    fleeting, and wisdom, happiness, and the knowledge that you have done God's
    work, are the blessings that allow us to depart life, at any age, contented
    and at peace.

    We have gathered to remember such a man today. He, too, was a man of great
    ambitions and astonishing accomplishments; in every way a man of great
    daring and enterprise. But at the same time, Sarkis Acopian was a man who
    never ceased turning his hands to God's work. His profound trust in God
    inspired him to even greater things, and left a lasting mark on his family,
    his friends and colleagues, the Armenian Church and the young Republic of
    Armenia, and this great country of America.

    Sarkis Acopian's life story is remarkable in and of itself. His parents,
    Dr. Grigor and Dr. Arax Acopian, left Russia and Turkey to settle in Tabriz,
    Iran, where Sarkis was born. One can only imagine what their household must
    have been like. In knowing Sarkis and his sisters, Miriam Bradley and the
    late Eleanora Ordjanian-as I have been privileged to do-one gets a glimpse
    of the rare qualities of character Grigor and Arax must have possessed.
    Certainly they raised three remarkable children; and Sarkis's gratitude to
    them, especially to his mother, was extremely touching to behold. He
    honored Arax Acopian in a deeply beautiful way several years ago, when he
    built an Armenian Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, as a memorial to her.
    It stands today as the St. Sarkis Church, and it will continue to serve as
    one of the many enduring legacies of Sarkis Acopian's life and work.

    Sarkis was less then 20 when he left Iran to study engineering in the United
    States. He took up studies in Easton, Pennsylvania, at Lafayette College,
    and that place must have left a deep impression on him, for he made it his
    home thereafter.

    One enforced move away from Easton, however, at the behest of the United
    States Army Air Corps, proved to have a greater meaning for his life. While
    stationed at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, he met his
    future wife, Bobbye. Their marriage endured for 59 years-three-quarters of
    Sarkis's life-and remained in his eyes the accomplishment of which was the
    most proud.

    The other great pride in his life was a direct extension of his marriage to
    Bobbye: their two sons, Greg and Jeff, and the vigorous, beautiful extended
    family that grew up around the Acopian household. Again, it has been a
    great pleasure for me to get to know Greg and Karen, and Jeff and Helen, and
    the six Acopian grandchildren and, lately, two great grandchildren. To see
    the bonds of love and loyalty among them, the pride they feel for their
    parents and for each other's achievements, is a reminder to me of life's
    truest riches, and its greatest purpose.

    Perhaps it is not surprising that a man with such a lively community around
    him would be attracted to solitary pursuits. The life of an inventor is
    itself a solitary occupation; and Sarkis's passions also spoke to that side
    of the human character that relishes being alone with oneself, surrounded by
    an open world. Sarkis loved flying, and was a fine and accomplished pilot.
    He loved the natural world, and conservation. He was very interested in
    birds, and was a major contributor to the study of the birds of Armenia.
    The appeal of one of his passions, sky-diving, remains a mystery to me; but
    it does seem to be in line with that grand, wonderful, daring personality I
    came to know and admire over the course of many years.

    Our personal relationship reaches back nearly a decade, to when Sarkis
    literally burst upon the Armenian-American scene by making a million-dollar
    gift in honor of the centennial anniversary of the Armenian Church's Diocese
    of America. It was the kind of gift that instantly placed him among the
    ranks of our major benefactors; but it was clear to me from our first
    meeting that Sarkis was not interested in fleeting notoriety. As in every
    aspect of his life, so in his philanthropy, Sarkis was a serious man, with
    serious objectives he wanted to accomplish. If he felt strongly about a
    project or cause, his generosity was boundless; but more importantly he
    would master every detail of the project-truly take ownership of it, as they
    say, and make it his own. And I must say that his discipline, his
    questioning, his sense of accountability, made the projects he supported
    better, and more effective, than they would otherwise have been.

    I can only give a brief list of the many institutions of learning and
    benevolence that benefited from Sarkis Acopian's magnanimous heart and
    incisive imagination. These include Lafayette College, Muhlenberg College,
    the Florida Institute of Technology, Columbia University, and the American
    University of Armenia; the State Theatre of Easton, the Easton National
    Canal Museum, and the Children's Home of Easton; Hawk Mountain Sanctuary and
    the Nature Conservancy; The Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, and two churches
    in Armenia, St. Hagop and St. Mesrob; St. Sarkis Armenian Church in
    Charlotte; the Armenian General Benevolent Union; the Armenian Embassy in
    Ottawa, Canada; the Armenian Assembly of America; and the Armenia Fund.

    Inspired by his great love for this country, Sarkis also played a major role
    the construction of the World War II Memorial in Washington, DC. He made
    the largest individual donation to the memorial, a fact which was proudly
    remarked upon by Senator Robert Dole, and proudly noted by countless
    Americans of Armenian descent. In typical fashion, and now with a national
    spotlight upon him, Sarkis humbly dismissed any words of personal praise,
    and instead called his contribution a debt of gratitude, and a role of honor
    for a man who owed his life to the courage, sacrifice, and decency of the
    World War Two generation.

    Now that life has reached its natural conclusion, in peace, and in the
    company of his loved ones. In the scheme of things, even a life of 80 years
    is fleeting; but what remains, and endures, is the work of a man's hands.
    Or rather, the work of God, which mortal hands are permitted to do. Surely
    that will prove to be the case with Sarkis Acopian. From the time of our
    first meeting, there was never any doubt in my mind that he wished above all
    to turn his mortal hands-his talented, nimble hands-to the everlasting work
    of our Lord. In the shadow of his death, it is clear that this same wish,
    this prayer, animated so much of his life and achievement. The rest of us
    can only say that we were privileged to share that work with such a man, if
    even for a fleeting moment; and we are blessed to be able to hold his
    example before us to the end of our own days.

    To his devoted wife Bobbye; his sons Greg and Jeff and their families; to
    his sister Miriam; to countless friends, colleagues, and loved ones, I
    convey my deepest condolences and prayers. May God be with you all at this
    time. And may He bless the soul of Sarkis Acopian, now and forever. Amen.

    END

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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