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  • Pergrouhi Javizian: Gave time to Armenian church

    Setroit Free Press

    Pergrouhi Javizian: Gave time to Armenian church

    September 4, 2004

    BY JEANNE MAY
    FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

    Pergrouhi Terzian Javizian, who spent her early life in a Turkish orphanage
    and came to this country to become a pillar of St. John's Armenian Orthodox
    Church, died of pneumonia Wednesday at Regency Health Care Centre, Taylor.

    She was a week short of her 97th birthday and lived in Dearborn. Her
    American friends called her Pearl.

    Mrs. Javizian was born in Kourtbelen, a little village outside Istanbul, and
    when she was 3, her father was killed in a massacre that eventually left 1.5
    million Armenians dead.

    Her mother became a servant in the home of a wealthy family, and she was put
    in an orphanage.

    When she was 16, a friend from her village who had come to the United States
    went to Barkev Javizian, a Ford Motor Co. worker, and said, "Why don't you
    save these two?'

    Armenians in America helping Armenians from the old country was not unusual
    in those days, but there was a hitch: a young woman would be required to
    marry a man who sponsored her.

    "But my dad said, 'I will consider them to be my mother and my sister, and I
    will take care of them until they get on their feet,' " her son Simon said
    Friday.

    Then Mrs. Javizian arrived, and she had blonde hair and blue eyes and her
    savior was oh-so-handsome.

    "When I saw your father, he looked just like Robert Taylor," Mrs. Javizian
    told her son.

    And they were married.

    Children came along at a fairly rapid clip, and Mrs. Javizian took care of
    them and her home.

    "After I was born, she would go to night school, and many times she would
    take me with her," her son said. "She never did graduate, but she went to
    night school at Southwestern High School."

    When her children were old enough not to need her constant attention, she
    threw herself into the life of the Armenian-American community.

    She'd always attended St. John's Armenian Church, Southfield, and she became
    chairwoman of its Ladies Auxiliary. She also was secretary of the Detroit
    Chapter of the Armenian General Benevolent Union.

    But she was most famous for her hours in the church kitchen.

    "She was a great, great cook," her son said. "She would man the ovens. She
    would be standing there, and the sweat would be pouring off her, and the
    more she sweated, the better she liked it.

    "She was always cooking. It gave her the greatest pleasure to present her
    food and eat, eat, eat. The more we ate, the more she smiled."

    She also performed in her church's stage presentations commemorating St.
    Vartan, who fought for Christianity against the Persians in 451. He lost,
    but managed to persuade the Persians that the Armenians would never give up
    their religion.

    Mrs. Javizian's son owns Simon Javizian Funeral Home, Detroit.

    In addition to her son, survivors include another son, Garry; two daughters,
    Helen Javizian and Margaret Zadikian; 11 grandchildren; seven
    great-grandchildren, and seven great-great-grandchildren.

    Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at St. John's Armenian Church,
    22001 Northwestern Highway, Southfield, where prayers will be at 7:30 p.m.

    The funeral will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the church, with Armenian
    clergymen from all over the area participating. Burial will be in Woodlawn
    Cemetery, Detroit.

    The family suggests memorial donations to St. John's, 22001 Northwestern
    Highway, Southfield 48075, or St. Sarkis Armenian Church, 19300 Ford Road,
    Dearborn 48128.

    Contact JEANNE MAY at 586-469-4682 or [email protected].
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