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Jerry Kouyoumjian Leaves $2,491,000 to AGBU Programs

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  • Jerry Kouyoumjian Leaves $2,491,000 to AGBU Programs

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Monday, December 4, 2006

    Jerry Kouyoumjian Leaves $2,491,000 to AGBU Programs

    The last survivor in his family, Jerry Kouyoumdjian, eager to ensure
    AGBU's mission to promote the Armenian heritage, bequeathed his
    estates to the organization that helps 400,000 Armenians annually.

    Natives of Kharpet in historic Armenia, the Kouyoumjian family found
    refuge in Boston after a long journey that began during the Armenian
    Genocide. Setrak Kouyoumdjian and Aznive Kurkdjian fled with their
    four sons to the French city of Marseille in the early 1920s, where
    they lived with other Armenians who escaped sure death at the hands
    of Turkish authorities. Varoujan, known as John, and Zaven, known as
    Jerry, were among the four Kouyoumdjian boys who traveled with their
    parents and received an education in French schools until they
    finally settled in the United States in 1938, on the eve of the
    Second World War.

    John, born in 1915, completed the 12th grade in Marseille, while
    Jerry, born in 1921, left France before completing high school.

    Wide-eyed and keen to succeed, John established two retail businesses
    in America, one selling greeting cards and the other repairing
    watches and selling jewelry. He never married and nurtured his
    interest in cultural activities, particularly ballroom dancing, in
    which he was a skilled performer.

    The younger Jerry joined the United States Army during World War II
    and, as a technical officer, served in the Battle of Normandy, in the
    Rhineland and throughout Central Europe. His honors included the
    European, African, Middle Eastern Theatre Ribbons. After his
    honorable discharge in 1945, Jerry joined his older brother John in
    the retail business. A bachelor all his life, Jerry loved to help
    those less fortunate than himself and also enjoyed supporting the
    arts and public television.

    Both brothers lived a private, quiet life during their final years in
    Boston. Little information remains about the other members of their
    immediate family. John passed away at the age of 77 in 1993, while
    Jerry lived until this year, when he died at the age of 84.

    Totaling $2,491,000, the Jerry Kouyoumdjian Memorial Fund will
    support AGBU's educational, cultural and humanitarian projects in 35
    countries.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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