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  • 'Lifelong volunteer' helped Armenians

    'Lifelong volunteer' helped Armenians
    By Jim Steinberg

    The Fresno Bee
    June 23, 2006

    Rosemarie Saghdejian of Fresno left Beirut, Lebanon, as a child,
    eventually growing up to become a leader in Armenian charity around
    the world and in education in Fresno.

    Mrs. Saghdejian served as a board member of the international
    Armenian Relief Society and the Armenian Community School in Fresno.
    She founded the Trinity Adult Day Care Center in Fresno.

    Mrs. Saghdejian died Saturday. She was 52.

    Tatul Sonentz-Papazian, executive ARS director, said from the agency
    headquarters in Massachusetts that Mrs. Saghdejian was dynamic and
    committed. She worked with the Armenian Relief Society to raise funds
    and involve more people in the organization's work.

    The ARS operates in 23 or 24 countries, Sonentz-Papazian says, and
    Mrs. Saghdejian's work touched people in all of them.

    Yeretsgin Sossy Costanian, an ARS assistant coordinator in Fresno who
    also left Beirut, came to know Mrs. Saghdejian when the two worked
    together in Los Angeles.

    "She had a love for humanity," Costanian says, "and she was adored
    by seniors. She was like an angel."

    Mrs. Saghdejian graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a
    teaching credential. She moved to Los Angeles to become close to
    its growing Armenian community. She received her master's degree
    from UCLA in French culture and arts, and met her husband, Abraham
    "Apo" Saghdejian.

    Former Fresno Mayor Jim Patterson lives around the corner from the
    Saghdejians' home, and recalls Mrs. Saghdejian helping him and,
    especially, his wife, Sharon.

    "She took Sharon under her wing, and treated her like a daughter,"
    Patterson says. "Rose and Abe made us feel we were invited to their
    dinners because we were part of the family. I loved her baklava and
    humus. A regular plate would show up o-n our doorstep."

    Abraham Saghdejian recalls his wife's work for others regardless of
    national boundaries: "She was generous and helpful to people all over
    our community. She was a lifelong volunteer, a leader who had been
    to Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh."

    He referred to a disputed Armenian enclave inside the neighboring
    nation of Azerbaijan.

    The couple worked together with the ARS o-n a relief telethon for
    victims of the 1988 Karabakh earthquake, which killed upward of 25,000
    people and left 500,000 homeless.

    Mrs. Saghdejian spoke fluent English, Armenian, French and some Arabic,
    her husband says.

    Apart from her work, Mrs. Saghdejian was an excellent cook and
    hostess, he says: "She made beautiful dishes and set beautiful
    tables. Congressmen remember her food."

    Mrs. Saghdejian's accomplishments and contributions could not prepare
    her for the tragedy of their lives, Abraham Saghdejian says. o-n
    July 14, 2004, their son, Hovig, 23, was killed in a Herndon Avenue
    traffic collision.

    "She was very hurt," Saghdejian says.

    "She had been such a healthy woman. Then she came up with cancer in
    the stomach. Grief can do anything.

    "She never complained. She talked with people about their
    organizations, and asked what they were doing... She brought life,
    joy and happiness to people in pain."

    A funeral service was held Thursday at Holy Trinity Armenian Church
    in Fresno, followed by burial in Masis Ararat Cemetery.

    The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559)
    441-6311.

    www.ancfresno.org
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