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Westchester Lutheran School rallies to help mother find missing bros

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  • Westchester Lutheran School rallies to help mother find missing bros

    Los Angeles Times, CA

    Westchester Lutheran School rallies to help mother find missing Silah
    brothers

    Authorities believe that the father abducted the children; also
    missing are their cousin and his father.
    By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

    September 21, 2008

    Zarouhi Meguerian's older son started first grade at Westchester
    Lutheran School in 2002 and since then, she's never missed the first
    day of class.

    On Sept. 8, Meguerian continued her ritual, visiting the classrooms of
    sons Alex and Zaven Silah. But the industrial engineer walked alone,
    holding hands with other mothers instead of her boys.

    Authorities say Alex, 12, and Zaven, 8, were abducted in July by
    Meguerian's former husband, George Silah, 46, an Armenian Syrian. The
    same day, Silah's brother John left town with his 8-year-old son Greg.

    Parental abductions are not unheard of in Los Angeles, where freeway
    signs often advertise amber alerts for the missing. But the Silah
    boys' case has had a profound effect on students, teachers and parents
    at Westchester Lutheran, a 58-year-old private school of 400 students
    on busy Sepulveda Boulevard. The school has rallied around Meguerian
    with fundraisers, Internet postings -- and comfort.

    Meguerian, 36, grew up in Philadelphia as a naturalized
    U.S. citizen. She had an arranged marriage in Syria at age 16, then
    returned to Philadelphia, Three years later, they had another wedding
    ceremony in Philadelphia and her husband, who graduated from medical
    school in Armenia but was not licensed to practice in the U.S., moved
    here to live with her. His brother later joined them and married in
    1996; the two men worked for chiropractors, Meguerian said.


    In 2000, the Silahs moved to Los Angeles, and George and John started
    a consulting business in Marina del Rey. John Silah and his wife,
    Christine Jeanbart, divorced in 2003, and Meguerian and George Silah
    divorced in 2006.

    After the divorces, George and John Silah had limited custody of their
    sons. This summer, they initially agreed to take the boys to George's
    time share at the WorldMark Resort in Big Bear for the July 4 weekend,
    Meguerian said. George Silah was then supposed to take his sons to
    South Florida, the start of a weeklong Disney cruise in the
    Caribbean. John and Greg Silah were due to return July 6.

    Soon after the boys left, their mothers say, they stopped answering
    their cellphones. After fathers and sons failed to show up at the
    resort or board the cruise July 5, police declared the boys missing.

    On July 23, a Superior Court judge found that George and John Silah
    had violated conditions of their custody orders and the district
    attorney issued warrants for their arrest on three felony counts of
    child abduction. Los Angeles police are working with agents at the
    local FBI field office but have yet to find the group.

    Meguerian has appeared on Fox News and MSNBC and was interviewed for
    an episode of "America's Most Wanted," set to air soon. Detectives
    hope the publicity will help them find the missing boys.

    Los Angeles police do not keep statistics on parental abductions, but
    Det. Lonya Britton, who handles many of the cases, said that 98% of
    the time, she can return a missing child within a week -- if she finds
    the child within 48 hours.

    "Each day makes it harder and harder," Britton said of the Silah
    boys. "That's why we keep putting it out on TV, hoping somebody has
    seen them."

    George and John Silah's parents, with whom the sons had shared a
    rented house in Playa del Rey, moved back to Aleppo, Syria, shortly
    before the men disappeared, Meguerian said. Britton said police have
    checked the U.S. borders, flagged the fathers' passports and
    identification and found some evidence they may have gone overseas,
    although there is no sign they fled to Syria.

    Shortly after Alex and Zaven disappeared, Westchester Lutheran
    Principal Sandra Masted sent e-mails and letters alerting parents and
    the 300 families at Westchester Lutheran church, where her husband is
    pastor. Masted also posted fliers with the boys' photos in the school
    office and invited Meguerian to speak to her sons' classmates.

    At the start of school, Meguerian watched other mothers at the school
    snap pictures of children in the same new blue-and-white uniforms she
    had at home, waiting for her sons. Near the back of what would have
    been Zaven's third-grade classroom, she found his wooden desk, stacked
    with workbooks, school supplies and his paper name card.

    Students filed into the room, including one of Zaven's best friends,
    Nico Villalobos, who wore a blue-and-white plastic bracelet reading
    "Find Alex and Zaven Silah." Nico and other classmates spent a
    Saturday afternoon with their parents selling the bracelets for $20
    each outside a nearby supermarket. They raised $2,000 for the
    Assn. for the Recovery of Children, a Redondo Beach-based nonprofit
    that is trying to find Alex and Zaven.

    Parents at the school also met with leaders of the local Rotary Club
    and Chamber of Commerce about upcoming fundraisers at the school to
    raise $20,000 for the two mothers and the nonprofit. As of this week,
    they have raised about half the money. They also contacted the Los
    Angeles City Council, which in August voted to offer a $25,000 reward
    for information leading to the Silah boys' return.

    Westchester Lutheran will hold a children's choir concert Thursday, a
    Halloween dance party Oct. 24 and a rummage sale in November, to
    benefit the ARC effort to find Alex and Zaven.

    Chris Maeder, 45, a mechanical engineer who serves on the school
    board, created a blog to help find the boys,
    www.silahboys.blogspot.com. More than 6,000 people have viewed it
    since July.

    After Meguerian left her younger son's classroom, she headed to the
    church to speak with about 40 of her older son's classmates.

    Meguerian asked if any of them had access to Alex's online accounts
    and passwords. She explained that earlier this month, a student who
    had helped Alex set up his MySpace page used a password to access the
    account, alarming police. They spent a day tracking the girl down,
    thinking she was Alex, Meguerian said.

    None of the students said they knew Alex's passwords.


    "Are George and John using fake identities and stuff?" asked Tor
    Larsen, 12, another of Alex's best friends.

    "Unfortunately, that is something we don't know," Meguerian said.

    Tor, who wore one of the blue-and-white bracelets, frowned and slumped
    into the church pew. Well into the first morning of school, he and
    Alex would normally have been in trouble for talking or falling out of
    their seats laughing.


    Instead, Tor was sitting quietly by himself.

    Back in first grade, Tor explained, he and Alex were class "rejects"
    who pooled their lunch money to buy soda, joined the same Boy Scout
    troop and visited each other's houses.

    He last spoke with Alex a few days before he went missing. They made
    plans to see Angelina Jolie in "Wanted," but Alex never followed
    up. Tor left for summer camp and didn't find out Alex was missing
    until he returned.

    He immediately sent Alex messages on YouTube and MySpace asking where
    he was, without luck.

    "One last question I have for you guys," Meguerian said as she
    finished addressing the students, "Has anybody heard from Alex after
    July 2?"

    Tor looked around. Everybody was quiet.

    "Nobody?"

    Silence.

    Meguerian sat in a pew as the children filed out of the church and
    back to class. She was exhausted but glad to be at the school again.

    Just being around the other parents and children gave her hope, she
    said. She pictured herself walking her younger son back to class. She
    could almost feel his hand in hers.

    molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com
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