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  • Winchester woman brings Armenian treasures to area

    Burlington Union

    Winchester woman brings Armenian treasures to area

    By Christopher Rocchio/ Staff Writer
    Thursday, February 24, 2005

    Gail O'Reilly, a Winchester resident since 1979, has served the community in
    a variety of ways over the years. She is a member, and former president, of
    the Winchester League of Women Voters. She was also a Town Meeting member
    from 1985 to 2003.

    Her memberships, O'Reilly said, are an outlet for her sense of civic
    duty and she has enjoyed the experiences and people. But while she was busy
    serving the community, her father asked a question that impacted her life:
    Why don't you do something for your own people? he said to her.



    O'Reilly took her father's advice, and in 2000, began Made in Armenia
    Direct, a business that brings authentic treasures made by Armenia's most
    skilled artisans to the U.S. She said the business idea originated when she
    made her first trip to Armenia in 1991. There she took pleasure strolling
    through a local park. On weekends, she said many Armenian artisans would
    gather to peddle their goods, but appeared to be having a tough time
    supporting themselves.

    "It broke my heart," said O'Reilly. "There were very few tourists, so I
    was concerned the artisans would leave the country, which in turn would then
    lose the skill."

    After another trip in 2000, she decided expose the artisans and their
    goods to an American market. The operation began as a Web site. At the time,
    she said, Armenians who had lived under communism their whole lives had no
    idea about accountability and quality control. O'Reilly said the artisans
    never thought of being entrepreneurs, and she was unsure what could be
    delivered, in what quantity and how fast. Now she knows, and the system has
    grown smoother.

    "One of my goals is to be in as many retail stores in the U.S. as
    possible," she said.

    Made in Armenia Direct currently works with about 50 artisans and three
    cooperatives. Goods include handmade jewelry (pendants, earrings and
    bracelets), leisure items (toys, games, dolls, musical instruments,
    postcards and books), home decor items (wall hangings, paintings, decorative
    plates, vases, candleholders and tableware), apparel and accessories
    (scarves, ties, bags, hats and capes) and holiday specialties.

    Currently, Made in Armenia Direct goods are sold in 12 retail stores
    across the nation, with some as close as Arlington and others as far as
    Wisconsin. While she doesn't mind the Web-based business, she said the work
    attracts more attention if sold in retail stores.

    "Every artisan is an independent agent," she said. "They're not
    employed by me."

    O'Reilly said she is very cognizant of child labor laws, and none of
    the goods she sells are produced in sweat shops. Also, she doesn't negotiate
    with the artisans, and generally pays them what they ask. If the product
    does not sell because the cost is too high, she believes the craftspeople
    will understand why she doesn't order from them anymore.

    "I don't want to compete with third-world countries for goods," said
    O'Reilly.

    When the business first began, she found artisans by walking through
    the park that gave her the idea for the business, and approaching them to
    ask if she could market for them. She also knows a few Armenian Americans
    who have since moved back to Armenia, and help her identify certain gifted
    artisans. Mostly, her search for craftspeople passes from word-of-mouth, and
    she almost never returns to the park that sparked the idea.

    "Some artisans who used to sell their goods in the park aren't there
    anymore," said O'Reilly. "It's because I'm giving them enough business."

    O'Reilly showed off examples of several of the goods that Made in
    Armenia Direct sells. She said hand-sewn cards, available only in retail
    store locations, were made in an orphanage. O'Reilly said this may sound
    like a sweat shop, but explained the children who live in the orphanage are
    trained with a skill at 16 years so they will be prepared to enter the world
    once they turn 18. The cards are made by teen-agers preparing to leave the
    orphanage.

    "It fits nicely with one of my goals to keep the artisans in Armenia,
    but allow them to work and live with dignity," she said.

    Also, O'Reilly said she worked with college-aged students at a design
    school in Armenia to design and create a cape. While the student's work was
    terrific, O'Reilly said the project hit a snag when she realized the
    students did not have "American taste" and were unsure what colors, fabrics
    and patterns to incorporate in the design. From now on, O'Reilly brings
    American catalogs with her whenever she travels to Armenia to show the
    artisans the type of things people in this country have a desire for.

    "It was a lot of work designing the cape but we all did it together,"
    she said.

    While she travels a lot with her husband, O'Reilly said they had never
    been to Armenia before 1991 when they accompanied the Armenian Assembly of
    America. She said a devastating earthquake hit Armenia in 1988, and the
    assembly and U.S. government raised a total of $7 million for relief
    efforts. Specifically, she said the money was used to build a housing
    manufacturing plant to help more than 500,000 displaced Armenians.

    "Attending the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the factory is what brought
    me to Armenia, and the trip changed my life," she said.

    O'Reilly tells all the Armenian Americans she meets if they visit their
    home country - they will not return the same. She saw many impoverished
    people, thought of her grandparents and felt how fortunate she was.

    "I felt for those people and thought it was my responsibility to take
    care of my homeland," she said.

    Made in Armenia Direct products can be purchased at Artwear or
    Crossroads Trade, both located on Massachusetts Avenue in Arlington. They
    can also be found via the Web site www.madeinarmeniadirect.com.
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