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  • Montreal: Taking care of business in time of crisis

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    August 8, 2005 Monday
    Final Edition

    Taking care of business in time of crisis: When Zaven Darakjian, who
    has owned the Pitstop garage for 34 years, was diagnosed with
    leukemia, his wife Araxy, a broadcaster by training, stepped in to
    run the shop

    by STEPHANIE WHITTAKER, Freelance

    Araxy Darakjian smiles wistfully at the suggestion that she's
    handling a tough situation with grace and courage.

    "Do I have any choice?" she asks. "This is our livelihood."

    Darakjian is sitting in the office chair normally occupied by her
    husband, Zaven Darakjian, who, for the past 34 years, has run the
    Pitstop, a garage on lower Peel St. that specializes in the repair
    and maintenance of antique and foreign cars and racing cars. It's an
    eclectic place, the kind of business in which you'll spot an open
    copy of Sun Tzu's The Art of War on a bookshelf in the bathroom
    beside a volume of Armenian poetry and a calendar sporting a 1956
    Ford Comet. If you're a customer, you might sip green tea while your
    vintage British sports car is being repaired.

    A broadcaster by training, Araxy, 52, stepped in to run the business
    a month ago when her husband was diagnosed with leukemia and
    hospitalized. It's the kind of scenario that most owners of small
    businesses hope they'll never have to face. The person who is the
    nerve centre of the operation is suddenly not there and family
    members must pick up the slack.

    "At first, I was calling Zaven while he was in the hospital 12 times
    a day to ask him about the running of the business," Araxy said from
    the office that overlooks the service area of the Pitstop. "I would
    need his expertise on where to get hard-to-find car parts. His brain
    works like a computer."

    The couple's problems began last winter. "Zaven wasn't feeling well
    throughout the winter," Araxy said. "But he thought it was the flu.
    You have a few flu-like symptoms when you have cancer. Then it got
    worse in May. Sometimes, he would fall asleep in his office chair. He
    would complain about being tired all the time, but he was still
    working and very dedicated to his community work as a basketball
    coach. He would push himself."

    In early June, Zaven injured his toe and the wound wouldn't heal. "He
    knew he wasn't getting better and on June 17, we went to the
    emergency department at the Jewish General Hospital," Araxy said.

    Blood tests confirmed that he was in the early stages of acute
    myeloid leukemia, a diagnosis that stunned the couple. "I said to the
    doctor: 'Surely, you're not talking about that dirty word, cancer,' "
    Araxy said. "But he was. We couldn't believe it. But I trusted the
    doctors. And then the specialists began visiting one by one."

    Zaven was moved into the hospital's intensive care ward and began
    receiving chemotherapy treatments. He also underwent surgery to
    reduce the effects of swelling in his neck.

    But his concern was what to do about his garage, where he employs one
    other mechanic. "The day after I took him to the hospital, I came to
    the garage and the phones were ringing," Araxy said. "Customers
    wanted to speak to Zaven. What was worse, I didn't know how to
    retrieve the phone messages from his voice mail. I didn't know what
    had hit me and then I just knew I had to come to my senses, that this
    was real life."

    Unable to speak because of the tubes that were keeping his airway
    open, Zaven began writing notes to his wife about the operation of
    the business whenever she visited the hospital. "I'd bring the notes
    to the garage the next day," Araxy said. "He was worried about his
    family (the couple have two teenage children) and the business. He
    received excellent care and I told him to have faith in the doctors
    so he could take care of getting better and I would take care of the
    business."

    Araxy has a degree in English literature and history that led her
    into a broadcasting career in Australia. Her experience of her
    husband's business had been limited to helping out with bookkeeping
    and office management. She also works part-time at the Montreal
    Children's Hospital as an interpreter of Arabic and Armenian. "I
    don't know much about the technical aspects of cars," she said. "So I
    rely on our mechanic, Jean Tremblay, who does his job so well.
    Meanwhile, I deal with the customers' questions. I order parts and do
    the billing. The most overwhelming part of the work was the
    paperwork. This is a family-friendly garage. Customers come to have a
    cup of coffee and some drop by to say hello even when they're not
    bringing their cars in for repairs. Some of Zaven's clients who have
    moved to Ontario or B.C. have sent us customers."

    Araxy said she has started to organize the office for her husband's
    return to work in two months time.

    He's home now, recuperating, but spends many hours each day sleeping
    while his body recovers.

    Araxy exudes the air of a woman who sets self pity aside to do what
    needs to be done during a crisis. "Sometimes, I'd be sitting here in
    the office and my eyes would get wet and I'd tell myself to collect
    myself. You have to be tough. If you're weak, you'll go under."

    Zaven said he's been impressed with how his wife has filled his shoes
    in his absence. "There was so much information about the work that
    she was not familiar with," he said in a telephone interview from his
    home. "I told her to be brave and I would guide her through it.
    Sometimes, she'd call me a dozen times during the day with
    questions."

    Araxy says she'll stay on the job to continue helping once her
    husband returns to work.

    Says Zaven: "We're a strong team. We have total faith in each other."

    GRAPHIC:
    Photo: MARIE-FRANCE COALLIER, THE GAZETTE; At the Pitstop garage,
    Araxy Darakjian is running the family business while her husband,
    Zaven (on computer screen), recuperates from chemotherapy.
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