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Oxford's first female selectman lost family in Armenian genocide

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  • Oxford's first female selectman lost family in Armenian genocide

    Worcester Telegram, MA
    June 1 2014

    Oxford's first female selectman lost family in Armenian genocide

    By Ellie Oleson CORRESPONDENT


    James and Alice Walker of Oxford. Mrs. Walker's parents escaped from
    Armenia, but other family members were killed by the Turks.

    OXFORD -- Two of the 1.5 million Armenian Christians slaughtered by
    Turkish Muslims between 1915 and 1922 were grandparents of local
    resident Alice Kulungian Walker, 85, the town's first female member of
    the Board of Selectmen. Others lost were uncles, aunts and cousins.

    "I'm first-generation American. My parents escaped from Armenia. Their
    families didn't survive," Mrs. Walker said.

    When she was honored with flowers at this year's annual town meeting
    for her years of service to this community, the town was recognizing
    the value of each individual, which was not recognized in Armenia a
    century ago, she said.

    Mrs. Walker and her husband of 63 years, James H. Walker, 93, live at
    568 Main St., where they raised their four sons and multiple foster
    children and supplied the community with flowers and plants grown on
    their home farm, which came to be known as Walkers' Greenery.

    Mrs. Walker also worked for a time at State Mutual Insurance Co. in
    Worcester. Mr. Walker worked many years for Sheppard Envelope in the
    city.

    Mrs. Walker's grandparents were in Armenia when the Muslim Turkish
    army began the slaughter of Christian men, women and children in 1915.

    "My mother lost her parents and siblings. My father's uncle escaped to
    America. My father's mother was afraid to cross the ocean on a ship.
    Instead, she was forced to walk across the desert with the Turks and
    died there," Mrs. Walker said.

    "My grandfather was a respected leader in his community. The Turks
    told him that if he would give up Jesus, they would let him live. He
    wouldn't, so they shot him. He could have survived if he'd renounced
    his Christian religion."

    Her parents, David and Zevart Kulungian, were teenagers at the time.
    They were not slain, but were forced to work as slaves for the Turkish
    army. When Mr. Kulungian asked young Zevart to escape with him, she
    said it would be wrong to run away with a boy.

    One rainy night, Mr. Kulungian found some nearby encamped English and
    French soldiers.

    "My father went to the soldiers and asked them to free the slaves.
    They did. My mother was put in a Red Cross orphanage in the mountains
    of Lebanon. There, the older children taught the younger children
    crafts and how to speak English," Mrs. Walker said.

    Mrs. Kulungian already spoke her native Armenian and the Kurdish she'd
    learned while working as a slave, and eventually became fluent in five
    languages.

    Young Zevart went to Marseilles, France with one of the older girls.
    There, she learned French from her foster family. Mr. Kulungian came
    to the United States.

    Zevart remained in France until her future husband sent her money to
    join him in America.

    "To save money, she traveled in third class steerage and contracted an
    eye disease. When she got to Ellis Island, they wouldn't let her in
    and sent her back to France," Mrs. Walker said.

    The same thing happened during her next attempt to immigrate, but on
    her third try, Mr. Kulungian finally convinced his fiancée to travel
    first class, and she was welcomed at Ellis Island. The couple joined a
    thriving Armenian community in Indian Orchard, near Springfield, where
    the couple finally married and had two sons and two daughters.

    "Massachusetts was a manufacturing center, especially Worcester," Mrs.
    Walker said.

    The family moved to Worcester, where the marriage foundered.

    "My father never had a childhood and didn't know how to treat
    children. He was very strong and didn't realize his own strength. It
    was hard for my older brother," Mrs. Walker said.

    Her parents separated. Her father moved to Buffalo, New York and her
    mother remained in Worcester.

    There, she continued a family tradition of reading fortunes in Turkish
    coffee grounds for friends. One English friend, Mary Alice Richardson
    of Oxford, was shocked when the coffee grounds predicted she would
    raise Mrs. Kulungian's children.

    When Mrs. Kulungian became ill with tuberculosis and depression,
    12-year-old Alice went to visit her in Worcester State Hospital.

    "My mother told me not to come back. She didn't want us there with all
    the illness. I think she lived there a couple more years. I never saw
    her again. Zevart means 'happy' in Armenian. She was anything but,"
    Mrs. Walker said.

    Their father paid the children's room and board so they would not be
    wards of the state. Mrs. Richardson, whose own children were raised
    and gone, took in the four Kulungian children, as their mother had
    foretold, and raised them for 10 years.

    "She was an angel. I'm fond of her granddaughters, who came to visit
    and became our friends," Mrs. Walker said.

    She attended Oxford's public schools, where a junior high school
    civics class changed her life.

    "I wanted to be involved, to return the favor to this wonderful
    country, which is still saving people around the world," Mrs. Walker
    said.

    When she graduated from Oxford High School in 1946, her father said he
    would not help fund a college education, since "girls are meant to
    marry."

    Then Oxford High Principal Frank Sannalla, a coach at WPI, suggested
    she get a job at State Mutual.

    "He said in five years I could be where a college graduate would be,
    but State Mutual did not hire Armenian girls who had not been to a
    finishing school like Salter's. I called and called, and the third
    time I applied they hired me. I was persistent," Mrs. Walker said.

    She met Mr. Walker at Sunday school at the First Congregational
    Church, where he was the program head and she was a teacher.

    "We had four boys, animals, fowl and ducks," Mrs. Walker said. The
    couple also took in 14 foster children, from infants to teens, "who
    were the hardest."

    "It was painful economically. We only were given $1 per day per child.
    I understood, from eighth grade civics, that I had a right to speak
    up, and I did."

    Her strongly worded letter was read on the floor of the Statehouse and
    funding for the foster care system was restructured.

    In 1968, the family was struck by tragedy, when the couple's
    16-year-old son, James H. Walker Jr., died in an industrial accident
    in an elevator.

    The Walkers' other three boys survived and thrived, giving the couple
    four grandchildren.

    Mrs. Walker and friend Grace Rutter later fought for better public
    transportation in town, where riders faced inconsistent schedules and
    missing buses.

    She served on the Economic Development and Industrial Commission, and
    often stayed at Town Hall for selectmen's meetings, where she took
    notes and shared information with the Telegram & Gazette reporter,
    sometimes being mistaken for a newspaper stenographer.

    She attended training sessions for the commission, which taught her
    "courage and made sense."

    This led to a run for a selectman's seat.

    "I ran three times before I won. They didn't want a woman selectman," she said.

    She served as the town's first selectwoman from 1983 to 1998. She also
    served as the town's representative and sole woman on the Central
    Massachusetts Regional Planning Commission and was an election worker,
    library trustee, and member of various other committees and boards.
    She also became a 4-H Club leader and local activist.

    She and her husband sold flowers and plants for many years, and also
    donated flowers to others. Many were planted around the Clara Barton
    School by a family friend and former custodian there, Stephen C.
    Anderson.

    "He's a good boy," Mrs. Walker said.

    When Mr. Anderson ran for and won a seat on the School Committee three
    years ago, it was decided that was a conflict of interest, since he
    was a school employee. He resigned, and Mrs. Walker volunteered to run
    for election to serve out his remaining two-year term.

    Brenda A. Ennis, chairman of the School Committee, said, "Alice is an
    amazing woman. She stepped up when no one else would. She showed up at
    all school events. Whenever she gave advice, we listened. We knew we
    were hearing knowledge and wisdom."

    When Mrs. Walker chose not to run for re-election this year, she was
    honored at town meeting by the committee with flowers and a pottery
    vase created by OHS art teacher Jamie Taborda.

    Mrs. Walker said she was happy to have served her community, and hopes
    people will remember the value of each and every individual.

    "When Hitler began the Jewish holocaust, he said, 'Who remembers the
    Armenians?' when cautions were raised. If the slaughter of Armenians
    had been recognized, the Jewish holocaust wouldn't have happened. It
    should be remembered, so it never happens again."

    http://www.telegram.com/article/20140601/NEWS/306019917/1116




    From: A. Papazian
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