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Starting from the bottom, Armenian man always reached for very top

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  • Starting from the bottom, Armenian man always reached for very top

    The Toronto Star
    August 15, 2004 Sunday

    Starting from the bottom, Armenian man always reached for very top


    You know what would be nice? Having a big building named after you.

    Imagine it: The (Your Name Here) Building.

    Sounds good, eh? But how do you get there? What path can you follow
    to someday see your name carved over the door?

    Well, it helps to be war hero, prominent politician or arts icon.

    But there is another road. A long, hard route paved with ingenuity,
    perseverance and generosity. You might call it the Kololian Way.
    Here's how it goes ...

    We begin in a North York factory office in the summer of 1963, where
    Kev Kololian is cooling his heels in the waiting room.

    For two months now, he's been knocking on 10 doors a day, trying to
    persuade manufacturers to give him work for the small precision tool
    shop he's set up in a vacant Weston garage.

    But, even when he manages to get an audience with the boss, it's
    always the same story. "Nothing right now," they say. "But we'll keep
    you in mind. We'll call you ..."

    Frustrating. But if there's one thing Kev has learned in his 34
    years, it's to never give up.

    Even as a kid in Cairo, this child of refugees from the 1915 Armenian
    genocide in Turkey was developing a will to succeed, to reach for the
    good things in life.

    "I looked around at successful people," he recalls, "and I asked
    myself: 'Why shouldn't I do well, too?'"

    Bold words for a dollar-a-day shop assistant forced to quit school at
    14 to help support his parents, sister and extended family.

    But it wasn't just talk. When the store closed for the day, Kev's
    work continued. Seven hours a night he laboured over his
    correspondence school books, hoping to become a radio engineer.

    Not that he was a total goody-goody. Like any hot-blooded teen, he'd
    get into scraps, try to settle disputes with his fists. Seeing the
    wounds and bruises, his father, a school caretaker, had a suggestion:

    "Kevork," he said. "This is not the way. Better you should persuade
    people with your words. Win them over with love, patience and
    forgiveness." Kev never forgot that advice.

    But he forgot about radio engineering when he took a trip to Germany
    at age 20. There, he saw something they didn't have in Egypt: an
    automatic lathe that could transform blocks of metal into precision
    machine parts.

    Which got him thinking ... about his parents' kitchen cooker. Like
    nearly everyone in that part of the world, they had a Swedish-made
    Primus gas stove.

    And, like everyone else, they needed to replace the burned-out fuel
    jet every two or three weeks.

    What if Kev could get his own lathe, learn to manufacture the jets at
    home and sell them far more cheaply than the imported parts?

    Starting with his meagre $1,000 in savings, many 12-hour days and an
    overload of enthusiasm, that's just what he did. By the mid-1950s, he
    was happily married, living well and employing 28 staff to operate 20
    precision lathes.

    A dream fulfilled. What could possibly go wrong?

    Remember the Suez crises? Political revolution, coupled with street
    riots and overt hostility to Christian Armenians in Cairo forcefully
    reminded Kev of the 1915 terrors that had claimed the lives of both
    his grandfathers and perhaps 1.5 million of his people.

    Which explains how, after giving up his Egyptian home and business at
    sacrifice prices, the ex-tycoon finds himself trying to make ends
    meet in the summer of 1962 in a $115-per-month apartment at Lawrence
    and Dufferin in North York. Pretty rough, eh?

    "Not at all," he laughs. "It was a wonderful time. No money, but no
    worries. We were just so happy to be here, to be secure and free.
    'God has blessed this country,' I said. 'And we are going to share in
    these blessings.'"

    Alas, not everyone was willing to share.

    Making the rounds to sell his services, Kev got the brush-off from
    many secretaries put off by his "foreign" looks and accent.

    Buzzing the boss, they'd say: "There's a guy with a funny name here,
    says he makes machine parts." Which brings us to that waiting room at
    Motorola Canada Ltd., where the receptionist is telling Kev: "Mr.
    King, our purchasing agent, will see you now."

    So here we go, same old story. Mr. King listens patiently, nods
    sympathetically then begins to deliver a familiar message: "We'll
    keep you in mind ..."

    In that moment, something snaps in Kev. Before he can stop himself,
    he demands: "Whazza matter, Mr. King? You don't have the guts to give
    a man like me a chance?"

    Gord King looks ready to explode. "Sit down!" he growls, and stomps
    from the room.

    Minutes later, he's back with specifications for appliance
    components. "Make me 100 of these, 200 of these. We'll see if you're
    as good as you say you are."

    Kev dashes to his Pellatt Ave. shop and works through the night. Next
    day, he's back at Motorola with the cadmium-plated components. King
    can hardly believe it, especially after his quality inspectors
    declare the parts perfect.

    "Mr. Kololian," he smiles. "I believe we can do some business."

    Weeks later, Kev tries a new wrinkle. Instead of going hat-in-hand to
    the purchasing agent's office at de Havilland Aircraft, he calls
    company president Phil Garrett directly.

    Though friendly and courteous, Garrett suggests Kev really should see
    one of his mid-management people.

    "Okay if I tell him you referred me?" asks Kev.

    "Of course," replies Garrett.

    The executive in question, thinking this cheery, energetic fellow is
    somehow connected with the boss, gives him an opportunity that leads
    to a lucrative contract.

    Boom! Kev is on his way.

    Over the next decade, as his business and family expand, he leaves
    that Dufferin-Lawrence apartment and tiny workshop far behind. Still,
    he feels things are not quite right.

    Sure, he's delighted with his financial success.

    But what about some payback to this wonderful country that made it
    possible?

    For starters, he'd like to employ more Canadians in his growing
    business.

    But where are the home-grown tool-and-die makers and machinists? Why
    must so much skilled labour be imported from Europe?

    Just as he did at de Havilland, he goes right to the top. Overtures
    are made in the 1970s to provincial and federal leaders, including
    federal Labour Minister Robert Andras and Ontario Premier Bill Davis.

    In time, the seeds Kev plants with the politicians blossom into an
    extensive apprenticeship program, which he helps set up in community
    colleges such as Seneca, George Brown and Humber, sending hundreds of
    skilled, well-paid machinists into the workforce.

    Yes, creating jobs is a nice way to salute your country. But after
    impulsively buying a handmade Armenian wall rug embroidered with the
    lyrics to "O Canada," Kev finds another.

    Why not give it to the nation as a symbolic gift from his people, he
    wonders. But who should receive it? Why not go to the top?

    Sure enough, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau agrees to meet with Kev
    and a delegation from Toronto's Armenian community. Their
    get-together, scheduled for 10 minutes, stretches to nearly an hour.
    Long way from that dollar-a-day job in Cairo.

    Today, from his handsome home bordering the 11th hole of a
    prestigious golf course, the one-time shop assistant oversees a
    thriving family and 125 employees supplying sophisticated components
    to the aerospace industry.

    Still, when you get to be 76, wealth is no longer a goal. "I'd like
    to be remembered," he muses. "Not as a businessman, but as a
    humanitarian."

    But who will remember? For more than a quarter-century now, thousands
    of children have passed through the portals of a building at the
    Armenian Community Centre, which was envisioned, substantially funded
    and inspired by a never-say-die guy forced to quit school in Grade 6.

    As long as they live, wherever they go, and whatever they do, those
    generations will never forget their first school. And the name is
    right up there on the wall for all to see:

    KOLOLIAN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.

    No! It can't be. But it IS: 50 years since Marilyn Bell, Toronto's
    swimming sweetheart, conquered Lake Ontario.

    What was happening in your life on Sept. 9, 1954? And how did
    Marilyn's feat touch you? Send your stories to MARILYN, c/o
    Gamester's People, George Gamester, Toronto Star, One Yonge St.,
    Toronto, Ont. M5E 1E6. Fax: 869-4322. E-mail: ggamest @ thestar.ca,
    or call 416-869-4874 anytime.

    'God has blessed this country. And we are going to share

    in these blessings.'

    GRAPHIC: Refugee Kev Kolonian, far left, rose from dollar-a-day shop
    assistant to a great businessman and leader in T.O.'s Armenian
    community. He presents former prime minister Pierre Trudeau with a
    handmade Armenian wall rug embroidered with the lyrics to "O Canada."
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