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  • George Nersessian; ex-store owner had passion for writing

    The Boston Globe

    George Nersessian; ex-store owner had passion for writing

    By Casey Farrar, Globe Correspondent
    4/5/2004

    For nearly four decades, George Nersessian of Chestnut Hill owned five local
    retail stores. When he retired in the late 1980s, he pursued an interest in
    writing and wrote two books -- one in English and one in Armenian.

    Mr. Nersessian, former owner of The Plaza Men's Stores and author of "For
    Love and Honor," a story of his parents' survival during the Armenian
    genocide in 1915 and his experience in a German labor camp during World War
    II, died Friday at Boston Medical Center of congestive heart failure. He was
    85.

    Born in Orestias, Greece, to Armenian parents, Mr. Nersessian spoke Armenian
    and Greek. A standout soccer player, he joined the Greek national soccer
    team and had planned to go to the Olympics when Greece was invaded by
    Germany during World War II.

    With his Olympic dreams dashed, Mr. Nersessian remained in Nazi-occupied
    Greece until he was captured and taken to Stuttgart, Germany, to work in a
    factory.

    "The Germans were on the streets in these open two-seater cars . . .
    patrolling the streets of Salonik, gathering the youth to take them to
    Germany," his wife, B. Betty (Maranjian), said yesterday. "George had a lot
    of Jewish friends, and he went looking for them because he was devastated,
    but he was grabbed up and put in a line to go to work in a factory with many
    other Greek youth."

    Mr. Nersessian went to a factory called Salamander in Germany, where he
    stitched boots for German officers until his release after the war, his wife
    said.

    In 1950, Mr. Nersessian, along with his sister, mother, and two brothers,
    moved to the United States. He learned English -- his fifth language after
    picking up German and Turkish during World War II -- while running a small
    dry cleaning business in Dorchester, his daughter Sonya said.

    He met his wife at a picnic in Massachusetts on Independence Day in 1953,
    and the two married five months later.

    They had two daughters, Sonya and Seta, and opened their first of five
    retail stores in Dedham in 1959. The company expanded to three branches in
    Dedham, one in Hanover, and one in Watertown.

    After a heart attack in the late 1980s, Mr. Nersessian decided to retire
    from the retail industry. He had his first short story published shortly
    afterward, in the Navasart Literary Journal, a monthly magazine out of
    California that was printed in Armenian.

    "He had wanted to continue his education in Greece after high school, but
    the war and all these events happened, so he never got to go," Sonya said
    yesterday.

    Mr. Nersessian eventually began writing fictional short stories for the
    monthly journal, and in 1991 published his family memoir in English. Four
    years later, he released a book of collected short stories written in
    Armenian.

    Mr. Nersessian made frequent trips to Armenia with his wife. In 1998, he
    funded the renovation of the only Armenian Apostolic Church in the city of
    Ichevan, about 60 miles from the capital city of Yerevan. The Nersessian
    family attended the church's consecration ceremony. Former president of the
    Dedham Rotary Club, Mr. Nersessian was honored as a Paul Harris Fellow by
    Rotary International, and in 1998 he was named Man of the Year of the
    Knights of Vartan.

    In addition to his wife and two daughters, Mr. Nersessian leaves a sister,
    Sarui; and four grandchildren.

    Funeral services are private.

    © Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
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