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  • A Formidable Advocate At Work, In Community

    A FORMIDABLE ADVOCATE AT WORK, IN COMMUNITY
    BY: Bart Barnes

    The Washington Post
    July 15, 2012 Sunday
    Met 2 Edition

    For 40 years, Dora Johnson helped feed the hungry and homeless of
    Washington in the soup kitchens of Martha's Table and St. Stephen
    and the Incarnation Episcopal Church. She insisted meat be added to
    the basic meal of beans and rice.

    "Why?" she was asked. "It already has plenty of protein."

    "These people want meat," she replied. "Put some meat in it."

    Meat was added.

    When she first moved to Mount Pleasant in the mid-1960s, the Northwest
    Washington neighborhood was scruffy and down at the heels, and it
    remained so for several years. It was a common occurrence for Metrobus
    drivers to leave the bus stop with passengers still waiting to board.

    Their buses were too full, the drivers said. Often those left waiting
    at the stop were schoolchildren, including two who were Mrs.
    Johnson's.

    "After the kids could not get on for two or three mornings, Dora showed
    up," a neighbor, Doug Huron, wrote in an e-mail. "When the bus arrived,
    she stood in front of it - and would not move until the driver had
    told the passengers [to] move to the back, so the kids could get on."

    Mrs. Johnson could be formidable, to be sure. But she also
    made popcorn, which for decades she distributed annually to
    trick-or-treaters on Halloween. "She was known to all the neighborhood
    children as 'The Popcorn Lady,' " said a friend, Dunstan Hayden.

    Dora Johnson, 74, died of pancreatic cancer June 26 at her home. The
    death was confirmed by her daughter, Alicia Koundakjian.

    In her professional life, Mrs. Johnson was a program associate at the
    Center for Applied Linguistics, a private, nonprofit organization
    that supports and encourages the teaching of less commonly taught
    languages, such as Pashto, Hindi, Urdu, Turkish and Arabic.

    Her work included the development of learning standards and
    establishment of a support network for the teaching of Arabic in U.S.
    elementary and high schools. It was her dream, she once said, that
    Arabic would become "an accepted language to be taught" in the public
    schools of the United States.

    Mrs. Johnson spoke English with no discernible traces of a Middle
    Eastern accent. "I had known her for 10 years before I realized that
    English was not her first language," said Meg Malone, a colleague at
    the Center for Applied Linguistics.

    Dora Esther Koundakjian was born Oct. 13, 1937, in Beirut. She was
    named for Dora Spenlow, the "child-wife" of David Copperfield in the
    Charles Dickens novel, which her mother was reading at the time. Her
    native language was Armenian, but she also quickly learned Arabic,
    Turkish, French and English.

    In 1957, she received an associate's degree at Beirut College for
    Women (now Lebanese American University) and then came to the United
    States to study linguistics. In 1960, she graduated from Transylvania
    University in Lexington, Ky.

    Years later, when her children were growing up, her son, Martin,
    would tease his younger sister, Alicia, that the Transylvania diploma
    was "proof" that their mother was a vampire, linking her to Count
    Dracula, whose castle was said to have been in the Transylvania region
    of Romania.

    In 1964, Mrs. Johnson received a master's degree in linguistics at
    the Hartford Seminary Foundation in Connecticut. She then came to
    Washington and began her career at the Center for Applied Linguistics.

    At the center, she conducted and published surveys on materials and
    needs, developed language learning materials and worked on literacy
    issues for adults whose first language was not English. She helped
    write survival phrase books for refugees, edited language policy papers
    for the U.S. Agency for International Development and participated in
    surveys of teaching materials for less commonly taught languages. She
    retired in 2009.

    Her marriage to real estate investor R. Bruce Johnson ended in divorce.

    Survivors include two children, Martin Johnson of St. Paul, Minn.,
    and Alicia Koundakjian of Washington, who took her mother's maiden
    name; a brother, Philip Koundakjian of Des Moines; and a granddaughter.

    Mrs. Johnson was a vivid presence in her community. She served on
    the board of the Stoddard Baptist Nursing Home in Washington, and
    she played piano at the Sunday services of the Community of Christ
    fellowship in Mount Pleasant, a lay-led ecumenical congregation. For
    several years, she participated in the Christmas Eve pageant at
    Washington National Cathedral, dressed as a clown.

    On Christmas and Thanksgiving, there was always a place at her dinner
    table and plenty of food for anyone having nowhere else to go, said
    a friend, Dorothy Pohlman.

    In an effort to spruce up her neighborhood, Mrs. Johnson regularly
    patrolled the blocks near her home with a pair of long-handled pincers,
    picking up trash.

    Not long after moving to Mount Pleasant, she planted a flower garden
    in her yard. As soon as the flowers bloomed, neighborhood children
    picked them and ran off. This enraged her family.

    "Dora would tell us to calm down, that they were picking for their
    mothers," Philip Koundakjian said. "She felt that if she kept the
    yard clean and pretty, neighbors would start doing the same."




    From: A. Papazian
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