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Andrew Antranig Shahinian; fostered Armenian culture

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  • Andrew Antranig Shahinian; fostered Armenian culture

    The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
    September 28, 2005 Wednesday
    All Editions

    Andrew Antranig Shahinian; fostered Armenian culture;
    Helped preserve folk music, art

    By PETER J. SAMPSON, STAFF WRITER, North Jersey Media Group

    Andrew Antranig Shahinian of Oradell, a prominent member of the
    Armenian-American community whose passion for native music and art
    was celebrated, died Saturday after a long illness. He was 87.

    Mr. Shahinian was born in Yerevan, Armenia, on June 2, 1918. Fleeing
    ethnic genocide at the end of World War I, the family immigrated to
    Syracuse, N.Y., in 1920 and relocated to New York City a decade
    later.

    An accomplished violinist, the young Mr. Shahinian turned down a
    scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music and pursued a career in
    graphic arts.

    Enlisting in the U.S. Army during World War II, he became a pilot and
    flight instructor, flying B-29 bombers. At the end of the war, he
    resumed his career as a photoengraver.

    Over the years, Mr. Shahinian and his partners acquired more than a
    dozen firms, making the Master Eagle Family of Companies into one of
    the largest graphic arts businesses in the country. He retired in the
    late 1980s.

    Mr. Shahinian was active in numerous Armenian-American organizations,
    serving in leadership positions in the Armenian General Benevolent
    Union, the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church of
    America and the Armenian Library and Museum of American, and on
    various ad hoc committees dedicated to the advancement of Armenian
    culture and the preservation and development of the fledging Armenian
    nation.

    He led humanitarian fund-raising and relief efforts to assist
    Armenian refugees displaced by massacres and ethnic cleansing in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region of the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan.

    At home, Mr. Shahinian was known as "the rock," because as the
    patriarch of large extended family, he could always be counted on
    when someone needed help, said his son, Armen Shahinian.

    As a first-generation Armenian, he took pride in and was dedicated to
    preserving the heritage and culture of an ancient people who at
    various times in their history have come close to annihilation, said
    Armen Shahinian.

    He supported Armenian artists and writers at every opportunity and
    possessed an encyclopedic knowledge of Armenian songs, taught by his
    parents, that served his efforts to preserve folk music.

    Mr. Shahinian is survived by his wife, Alice; five children, Steven
    Shahinian of Midway, Ky.; Armen Shahinian of Franklin Lakes; Virginia
    Devitre Shahinian of Cohasset, Mass.; Paul Shahinian of Wyckoff; and
    Linda Pedrazzini of Switzerland; 13 grandchildren and two
    great-grandchildren.

    A wake will be held at St. Leon's Armenian Church in Fair Lawn on
    Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Funeral services will be held
    there Friday at 10 a.m. Arrangements are by William G. Basralian
    Funeral Home, Oradell.

    Donations are being directed to the Armenian General Benevolent
    Union, 55 E. 59th St., New York, N.Y. 10022, for the AGBU Karabakh
    Centennial Repopulation Project to aid displaced Armenian refugees.
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