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Hratch Toufayan will be honored by the Eastern Diocese

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  • Hratch Toufayan will be honored by the Eastern Diocese

    PRESS OFFICE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Karine Abalyan
    Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.net

    April 13, 2010
    ___________________


    Hratch Toufayan will be honored by the Eastern Diocese as its "Member of the
    Year," on April 30 in Chicago

    Award presentation will be part of the annual Diocesan Assembly gala banquet



    "Church is so important to my dad," says Karen Toufayan Nargizian of this
    year's Armenian Church Member of the Year. "I know how much it meant for
    him to be sitting in the front pew at the cathedral on Easter Sunday,
    serving as this year's godfather of the dove ceremony."



    "During badarak he was teaching my son how to make the sign of the cross. I
    know how much that meant to him-and to us."



    For Hratch "Harry" Toufayan, this intergenerational aspect of the Armenian
    Church is one of his deepest inspirations, and a motivation for his years of
    service.



    The seeds of his dedication were planted by his late parents, Harout and
    Siranoush: survivors of the Genocide who were living exemplars of Armenian
    Christian piety. They taught Hratch and his three siblings about the
    importance of nurturing the Armenian way of life, in the home and in the
    wider community.



    Toufayan carried those family values with him when he immigrated to the
    United States from Egypt. He became actively involved in church life, and
    every Sunday, with his wife of four decades, Suzanne, beside him, Harry
    takes part in the badarak at his home parish, the St. Mary Church of
    Livingston, N.J.-surrounded by further generations of Toufayan children and
    grandchildren.



    "For my dad, it was very important to take us and my grandparents to church
    every Sunday, to thank God for everything He had bestowed on our family,"
    recalls his daughter, Kristine Toufayan Casali.



    Harry and Suzanne remain pillars of their local parish, where the church
    hall is named after Harry's parents, and where the family is the major
    benefactor of a planned expansion.



    But over the years, the Toufayans' legacy of good works has grown to leave
    its mark on the Eastern Diocese and on the worldwide center of the Armenian
    Church.





    A gift to the children of Armenia



    As great admirers and supporters of His Holiness Karekin II, the Supreme
    Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, the Toufayans were eager to lend
    their help to Vehapar's efforts on behalf of Armenia's younger generation.
    The result was the "Hratch and Suzanne Toufayan Youth Center," which opened
    its doors in the summer of 2007, in the city of Etchmiadzin. His Holiness
    presided over the opening ceremonies of the center, which provides creative
    after-school programs for hundreds of students.



    Surrounded by church and state dignitaries, cheering children, and the
    entire Toufayan clan (who flew to the homeland for the occasion), Harry was
    characteristically humble in his remarks. "This is a very proud moment for
    me and my family," he said. "I have always wanted to give something to the
    children of Armenia."



    Indeed, it was a proud moment for the entire Toufayan family, whose members
    were touched by the opening of the "Harry and Suzanne Toufayan Center,"
    where a new on-premises soup kitchen is being dedicated this month.



    "It was an unbelievable experience," recalls Kristine Casali of the 2007
    opening. "I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw what my parents had done,
    and how the children in the Youth Center were so grateful. My children took
    away so much from it and are always asking me when we are going back."



    A few months later, Catholicos Karekin asked Harry to serve as godfather for
    the Blessing of Water ceremony on Armenian Christmas, January 6, 2008. "It
    was like a dream," he later recalled. "I was very honored to be
    godfather-to be holding the cross at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin."



    Out of Egypt



    >From his parents, the young Hratch Toufayan learned to value the Armenian
    heritage. Born and raised in Egypt, Mr. Toufayan and his siblings attended
    Armenian school. He immigrated to the U.S. with his parents in 1963, and
    with his father's encouragement he continued the family's baking
    business-which his father had started in Egypt in 1926-by opening up his
    first baking plant in 1968. The business flourished over the ensuing
    decades, with Toufayan Bakeries undergoing several expansions and moves.
    The current plant in Ridgefield, N.J., employs 250 people, and plants in
    Orlando and Plant City, Fla., together employ over 500.



    Harry met his wife, Suzanne, while she worked as a registered nurse at New
    York's Mount Sinai Hospital. They were married in 1969 at the Holy Martyrs
    Church in Bayside, N.Y., and they have been true partners in all their
    achievements.



    "The first thing Harry said to me when we met was, 'I am Harry, and I am
    Armenian,'" remembers Suzanne Toufayan, who has embraced Armenian culture
    and traditions throughout their four decades of marriage. "I like the feel
    of the Armenian Church and the involvement and strong feelings of Armenian
    people, and how religion and culture are one."



    Harry and Suzanne have been blessed with three children, Karen, Kristine,
    and Gregory-all of whom are now involved in the family business-and seven
    grandchildren. Family is very important to Harry and Suzanne and they speak
    with great pride about their children and grandchildren. The family
    traveled to Armenia together for the first time in 1983, an experience that
    left deep impressions on everyone.



    The Toufayan children look up to their father and appreciate his
    achievements in the business world and in the Armenian community.



    "My father's very generous and giving, and is an inspiration to us all,"
    says Kristine Casali, who traces her father's motivation back to her
    grandparents-particularly her grandfather who worked until he was 94 years
    old. "My father passed that motivation onto us, and we all try to follow in
    his footsteps."



    "My father has been the pillar of our home. You can't put his work ethic
    into words," adds Karen Nargizian.



    The feeling of love and support is mutual, as Harry is the first to admit.
    "My wife and children have always supported me," he says. "We're very
    fortunate to have such a nice family."



    Recently, Mr. Toufayan agreed to be the benefactor of a new Armenian Church
    in Orlando, Fla. The St. Haroutiun Church-named in honor of Mr. Toufayan's
    father-will be consecrated this summer.



    His major contributions to the Eastern Diocese culminated this past Easter,
    when Harry, at the behest of Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, served as
    godfather during the "Release of Doves" ceremony at St. Vartan Armenian
    Cathedral in New York. Once more, the multi-generational Toufayan family
    shared in the occasion, releasing twelve doves as a symbol of the Apostolic
    mission to the world.



    The ceremony neatly summed up a lifetime of exemplary activity by Harry
    Toufayan, whereby the light of the church is spread through the family, to
    illuminate the world.



    "My children grew up in the Armenian Church," he says. "It's been important
    for us to stay religious, and to be good Armenians."



    It's a sentiment echoed by his wife, Suzanne. "From the day I met him until
    now, Harry has been a hard-working man, a very good husband, and very
    religious," she says. "He has made a lot of sacrifices and continues to
    work hard for his family."



    The Eastern Diocese is proud to name this exemplary man as its 2010
    "Armenian Church Member of the Year." Hratch Toufayan will be presented
    with the Diocese's "Armenian of the Year" award at the 108th Diocesan
    Assembly, in Chicago, Ill. The presentation will be made during the
    assembly's gala banquet on Friday evening, April 30, starting at 6:30 p.m.,
    at the Marriott Chicago O'Hare Hotel. For information on the banquet and
    this year's Diocesan Assembly, log onto the host parish's website,
    www.2010diocesanassembly.org.



    ###



    PHOTO CAPTION:

    Hratch and Suzanne Toufayan, of New Jersey. Mr. Toufyan will be honored as
    the Eastern Diocese's "Armenian Church Member of the Year," at the gala
    banquet of this year's Diocesan Assembly in Chicago, on Friday, April 30.
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