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  • Peter Aharon Goolkasian, 94; freethinker put talents to use

    Boston Globe, MA
    Jan 2 2005

    Peter Aharon Goolkasian, 94; freethinker put talents to use
    By Avi Steinberg, Globe Correspondent

    Peter Aharon Goolkasian, a druggist, inventor, and artist, died Dec.
    21 in Armenian Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Jamaica Plain. He
    was 94.

    A survivor of the Armenian Genocide of 1915, Mr. Goolkasian was
    unusually candid about his experience with human brutality, but he
    was never defined by it. "He was a great lover of life, never bitter,
    and despite losing almost his entire family, he was one of the most
    optimistic people I knew," said his daughter, Dianne Goolkasian
    Rahbee.

    Although he never returned to his native Armenia, Mr. Goolkasian
    planted and maintained a mulberry tree, a tree common in his
    homeland, in his backyard as a reminder of his lost home. "Even
    before ethnic pride was popular, my father instilled us with pride in
    who we are and where we came from," said his other daughter,
    Priscilla DerAnanian.

    Born in 1910, he was a young child when the genocide swept through
    his homeland. He was eventually brought to Boston and raised by his
    uncle and mother. He decided to go into the family business of
    running pharmacies, and after graduating from the Massachusetts
    College of Pharmacy, settled in Waltham with his young family and ran
    his own shop. Over the years he owned and worked at various
    apothecaries in the Boston area, including Beacon Hill's Clough &
    Shackley.

    Having gone into the family business as a matter largely of duty and
    convenience, Mr. Goolkasian undertook a midlife career change and
    pursued what had been until then only a hobby: electronics. He worked
    for Honeywell then Bolt, Beranek and Newman.

    Known for his lively intellect and impulse for tinkering, Mr.
    Goolkasian was responsible for a number of patented inventions:
    "tooth-ease pads," colored flames for birthday candles, and a heart
    pulse monitor used for patients during surgery, according to family
    members. Before tape-recording technology was widely available, he
    once fashioned a recording device out of a Coca-Cola box for his
    young daughter to use when practicing the piano.

    After his retirement, Mr. Goolkasian had time to pursue other
    passions, such as fashioning stained-glass lamps and gem faceting.
    His sold his gems, cut in a special style that he devised, to area
    jewelers.

    At age 84, Mr. Goolkasian decided that it was time to commit his
    story to paper and wrote a frank memoir, "My Life," which was
    published privately by his family. His book, which he dedicated to
    "all those people in the family of humanity that have suffered from
    man's inhumanity to man," was received warmly in a letter by Elie
    Weisel.

    Mr. Goolkasian also penned a collection of essays, "Deliberations
    Today for a Better Tomorrow," on topics ranging from children to
    religion to mythology and the environment. "He was a freethinker,
    always eager to give advice. Once we gave him a computer, there was
    no stopping him," recalled his daughter Priscilla.

    "He enjoyed life and took pleasure in all living things," said
    Priscilla. "He never used insecticides or fenced his garden because
    he wanted to share it with everyone, even with the animals in the
    yard."

    Besides his daughters, Mr. Goolkasian leaves his wife of 67 years,
    Isabelle; four grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

    Funeral services were held Dec. 24 in Holy Trinity Armenian Church in
    Cambridge. He was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in Acton.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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