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  • Bond of 'brothers' can't be broken

    Framingham Metro West Daily News, MA
    June 29 2004

    Bond of 'brothers' can't be broken
    By Jeff Adair / News Staff Writer


    Dr. H. Martin Deranian can't help but compliment Cameron Fersch.

    "He's done very well in his life," he says.

    "Martin has always said that," replies Fersch, as if he's heard
    it a million times before.

    "It's true. I really believe that," said Deranian, 81. "His life
    could have gone any way. It could have been the people..."

    "Breaking into people's homes," said Fersch, finishing the
    sentence with a chuckle.

    Talking to the pair, it's obvious they have a mutual respect for
    one another. They sound like best buddies. They sound like old
    childhood friends.

    That's not exactly right.

    For 39 years, Deranian, a Shrewsbury dentist, and Fersch, owner
    of Cameron Tile Co. in Holliston, have maintained a friendship.

    They talk on the telephone or get together on a monthly basis
    for lunch.

    They first met in Worcester when Fersch was an angry
    11-year-old. He grew up poor in a broken home. His father, who was
    physically violent and psychologically abusive, deserted Fersch's
    mother and four children. His mother suffered from depression and
    several years later, when Fersch was in his late teens, he stopped
    her from committing suicide. She succeeded on a second attempt.

    "There was no love. There was no real sense of intrinsic
    self-worth provided by either parent," he said.

    Deranian and his wife were unable to have children, so he signed
    up to be a big brother with the then-newly launched Big Brothers Big
    Sisters of Worcester County.

    The two were matched. It was Fersch's second. He bombed out on
    his first match when his mentor got angry on a bowling outing when
    Fersch purposefully threw the ball when the changer was down.

    "We immediately seemed to strike it off," Deranian recalled. "I
    took you for ice cream."

    Looking over a bunch of notes he has kept on Fersch over the
    years, Deranian recalled the lad as bright but with a very negative
    attitude. He never spoke of his father. He was cynical, he said.

    "I did't trust people," said Fersch. "It took me a long time to
    get over that."

    The two went camping, to the movies, to the airport and the
    science museum, and they often ate out.

    Ben Ticho, longtime executive director of Big Brothers Big
    Sisters of Worcester County, which is merging with the MetroWest
    office, has known the two friends for years.

    "It's an amazing relationship," he said, noting that while it's
    the oldest ongoing match in the area, he heard of a man in New York
    whose friendship with his mentor goes back to before World War II.

    Fersch describes his relationship with Martin as a lifeline.

    "One of the things about Martin that made him so important in my
    life, you can probably see, he was not judgmental," he said. "He
    always saw how things could have been."

    Two years ago, Fersch signed up to be a big brother and now
    mentors Malakahai Pearson, 9, of Framingham.

    "I really have no experience with children. I've learned about
    setting limits," he said.

    Deranian, who still works in dentistry and recently wrote a book
    on Armenians in Worcester, glowed from ear to ear like a proud
    grandfather as Fersch talked about his relationship with Pearson.

    "Isn't this what we're supposed to do in life?" said Fersch.
    "Isn't this what it's all about?"
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