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He didn't live to tell the world about the Genocide, but his grandda

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  • He didn't live to tell the world about the Genocide, but his grandda

    PRESS OFFICE
    Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Tel: (212) 889-5150; Fax: (212) 889-4849
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.farusa.org

    December 22, 2006
    ___________________

    GENOCIDE DEATH HONORED WITH DONATION TO FUND FOR ARMENIAN RELIEF

    It is a unique number: 46732314673231. It binds Negdar Arukian to her
    father and her grandfather. Today Negdar is using the number to improve the
    lives of the next generation.

    The digits are the New York Life insurance policy number of Negdar's
    grandfather Thomas Parounaghian. When she received a check through the
    recent settlement of claims brought on behalf of victims of the Genocide,
    she decided to donate the money to the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR) to
    help orphans in Armenia.

    HISTORY OF LOSS

    Though some of the details are lost with time, Negdar knows her grandfather
    Thomas moved to the United States sometime before 1915. In America, he
    worked as a merchant. He traveled back to his home in Arabkir, where he
    asked his wife, Negdar's grandmother to move back to America with him.

    "She asked about life in America and he told her that in America husbands
    and wives kissed and held hands on the street," Negdar said, recalling the
    traditional family stories. "So she said 'No way am I going to go there.'"

    Instead, Thomas stayed in his village, where he and his wife had two
    children, Negdar's father Yeghishe and a daughter. It was there Thomas was
    killed during the Genocide. Negdar's grandmother and their two children
    were sent into the desert.

    The young family eventually found their way to Lebanon, before settling in
    Ethiopia in 1927. Negdar was born in Ethiopia, moving to Montreal in 1977
    before heading to America a few years latter, bringing her father with her.

    He brought something with him as well, Thomas's New York Life policy number.

    "I don't know how my father, through all that, through the Genocide, how he
    kept that policy number with him, but some how he did," said Negdar of her
    late father, who was too young to remember his father. "He wanted to look
    into it, but at the time nobody wanted to help. Nobody wanted to find out
    about this policy."

    FUTURE OF HOPE

    Eventually, Vartkes Yeghiayan, who was born in Ethiopia like Negdar, and
    fellow Los Angeles lawyer Mark Geragos would take an interest in Thomas' New
    York Life policy number.

    In 2004, as part of the historic legal settlement the team brokered, New
    York Life agreed to pay $20 million to settle the suit on behalf of 2,300
    unsettled claims. As a descendent of a policy holder, Negdar ended up with
    about $5,000 after their settlement was divided between Thomas' six
    grandchildren.

    "I felt so happy," Negdar said about the settlement. "Even if it was only
    $5, I would have been happy. Because it was something my father wanted to
    have taken care of. And though he's not here, it was finally taken care of.
    His daughter fulfilled his efforts."

    Negdar, her husband Hratch, and two daughters, Arpi and Talin, decided they
    didn't need to buy extra Christmas gifts this year or plan a family vacation
    with the money. Instead, they donated it to the Fund for Armenian Relief
    (FAR), the preeminent aid and development organization operating in Armenia.

    She asked that the money go towards FAR's Homeless Children Center in
    Yerevan, which works to save the souls of at-risk and runaway youth through
    temporary housing, medical care, and social services.

    "When I went to Armenia, I saw the orphanage. And my father was an orphan,"
    Negdar said emotionally. "I had worked with FAR for a long time. I knew
    when I gave the money to FAR, it would go where I wanted it to go."

    For Negdar's two daughters, the gift is just another example from their
    parents of the importance of giving back to the community. Negdar, for
    example, has been active for more than two decades in the Holy Martyrs
    Church in Bayside, NY.

    "I was not at all surprised by my mother's decision. She is one of the most
    generous and kind-hearted individuals I know, and I am very proud to be her
    daughter. It will serve the right cause" said her daughter Arpi.

    Since its founding in response to the 1988 earthquake, FAR has served
    millions of people through more than 220 relief and development programs in
    Armenia and Karabagh. It has channeled more than $270 million in
    humanitarian assistance by implementing a wide range of projects including
    emergency relief, education, medical aid, construction and job opportunity
    development.

    FAR, one of the preeminent relief and development organization operating in
    Armenia, is dedicated to realizing the dream of a free, democratic,
    prosperous, and culturally rich Armenia. It works towards a brighter future
    by partnering with donors to make life a little better for our people. By
    offering hope and more promising prospects in Armenia, Karabagh, and
    Javakhk, FAR binds the Diaspora and the Armenian family together around the
    globe.

    For more information on FAR or to send donations, contact us at 630 Second
    Avenue, New York, NY 10016; telephone (212) 889-5150; fax (212) 889-4849;
    web www.farusa.org; e-mail [email protected].

    -- 12/22/06

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