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A man of letters - and passion

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  • A man of letters - and passion

    The Toronto Star - www.thestar.com
    Jan. 17, 2005. 06:41 AM

    A man of letters - and passion
    Edited Armenian paper before moving to Canada
    Architect also wrote book about William Saroyan


    CATHERINE DUNPHY
    OBITUARY WRITER

    Two careers, two countries, one passion.

    Call it pride, if you will, of place or of history but certainly of a
    people. Bedros Zobyan was an architect and crusading newspaper editor
    born and raised in the Turkish city of Istanbul who used both of his
    careers to nurture and nudge his fellow Armenians closer to their
    heritage and culture.

    Five years ago, long after he and his wife and daughter had immigrated
    in 1967 to live quietly in Don Mills, as well as after retiring from
    the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce where he designed everything
    from buildings to bank machines, Zobyan once again took up his pen.

    He wrote a book about the three-week trip he took in May 1964 with
    William Saroyan to find the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and
    playwright's Armenian ancestral home.

    Towards Bitlis with William Saroyan was published by an Armenian
    publisher in 2003. The cover features a photo of Saroyan sitting on a
    rock in the rugged Anatolian countryside alongside a signpost stating:
    Bitlis 10.

    The pair went from Istanbul via Ankara to Samsun on the Black
    Sea. They stopped at Lake of Van (considered to be as sacred a place
    as Ararat to Armenians). Venturing into remote villages where
    Armenians had lived before the genocide of 1915, they found Armenian
    children being raised in primitive conditions by Turkish and Kurdish
    families.

    In Bitlis, Saroyan located the foundations of his family's home, with
    some help from villagers hoping this rich American was going to lead
    them all straight to a hidden cache of gold. (He didn't.)

    Although Zobyan told his family that Saroyan took notes during their
    trip, the author never directly wrote about it, although he did write
    a play called The Istanbul Trilogy. Zobyan, however, wrote up a series
    about the trip for his newspaper called: "60,000 Kilometres in 16 Days
    with William Saroyan."

    For years people told him he should write a book based on those
    articles. And when he finally did start writing, he became immersed in
    the work.

    "While he was working on the book, nothing else existed," said his
    wife, Seta.

    It took three years. A perfectionist, he typed, copy-edited and
    typeset the book, along with choosing and laying out the photos, then
    sent it to the publisher in Istanbul. When the publisher sent back the
    galleys, Zobyan proofed every comma.

    "Every day I came home from school and my grandfather would be
    typing. Every day," said Amara Possian, 15. "My grandma too, both of
    them always had red pens."

    American Armenians had arranged a special book launch for October 2003
    in California, but Zobyan was too ill to attend. When he died at 82 of
    pancreatic cancer this past December, he had received dozens of
    letters from Armenians around the world thanking him for writing the
    book.

    It is considered much more than a travel book.

    "It's part of our history," says his friend, Arta Yuzbasian, an
    Armenian artist living in Toronto. "It was very well received within
    the Armenian diaspora, especially in the U.S."

    A dignified and diffident man, Zobyan was well respected within the
    Armenian community in Toronto.

    "People looked up to him," said Berc Luleciyan. a deacon at the Holy
    Trinity Armenian Church, who attended high school with Zobyan in
    Istanbul.

    In 1958, Zobyan was commissioned by the patriarch of St. Gregory the
    Illuminator Church to build a new church in the old authentic Armenian
    style on the site in Istanbul of the old church that had been
    expropriated to make way for a highway. He rescued and reincorporated
    the ceramic tiles from the original chapel, marble stones, and reused
    the carved stone cross belonging to the 500-year-old church.

    It was - and continues to be - the only one of Istanbul's 28 Armenian
    churches that displays the austere, powerful lines and massive
    stonework that marks Armenian church architecture. The church's
    Catholics wrote him commending his work.

    "My father built the most important church in Istanbul," said his
    daughter, Hasmig Possian, 53.

    But he was having more fun as a journalist working at the Marmara, a
    daily started in 1940 by Seta Zobyan's father, a well-known foreign
    correspondent. The young couple took over the paper in 1950. One of
    two Armenian dailies in Istanbul, it had a circulation of 5,000 but a
    considerably larger reach in terms of influence.

    Zobyan lobbied in its pages to save the church he would go on to
    rebuild; his scoop on the guilty verdict of the court martial trials
    of the Democratic Party president and its prime minister landed him in
    prison for two days. Seta Zobyan pulled every string she had to get
    her husband released.

    "Without bribery he would have been in jail months and months," she
    said.

    They lived a good life for a time, attending balls, receptions for
    visiting royalty, the ballet and concerts. "I translated for Petula
    Clark when she was getting a leather coat made," his daughter
    recalled. She also danced with Eric Burdon, lead singer of the
    Animals, when she was 14 and her father took her on his press pass to
    a club.

    But after the military coup of 1960, many Armenians left Turkey,
    including many of their families. In 1965 they sent their daughter to
    Toronto, to St. Clements School, where they believed she would be safe
    and get a better education.

    Two years later, they immigrated, but it wasn't until 1970 that they
    sold the paper.

    "That still hurts," said Seta Zobyan.

    Neither practised journalism in Canada: Bedros Zobyan went to work for
    the large architectural firm of Page and Steele building the Commerce
    Court towers, and Seta Zobyan found a job in market research. She now
    works part-time as a court translator and interpreter.

    In the 1970s they visited Saroyan at his home in Fresno, Calif. He had
    two houses, one in which he lived and one in which he wrote. After
    Saroyan died of cancer in 1981, his homes became the site of a museum
    dedicated to his works and his Armenian heritage.

    Zobyan made sure the museum received copies of his book; he'd hoped to
    translate it into English for Armenians living in California and
    Europe.

    "I will translate it," Seta Zobyan said. "That was his wish and I will
    try and make it come true."


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