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  • Ara Barmakian: Leading jeweler helped many immigrants

    The Boston Globe
    March 24, 2006 Friday
    THIRD EDITION

    ARA BARMAKIAN; LEADING JEWELER HELPED MANY IMMIGRANTS; AT 77

    BY GLORIA NEGRI, GLOBE STAFF


    Ara Barmakian, who took his father's small business and turned it
    into one of the largest family-owned jewelry companies in the
    country, died Sunday at his Belmont home after a brief illness. He
    was 77.

    Mr. Barmakian, who trained as an engineer at the Massachusetts
    Institute of Technology but entered the jewelry business in his 20s
    when his father died, was considered one of the biggest diamond
    dealers on the East Coast and a giant in the jewelry industry.

    "This man built an empire in Massachusetts, and he helped everyone
    who needed help along the way," said Souren Maserejian, a Boston
    jeweler, who was one of many new Americans Mr. Barmakian sponsored
    and mentored in the jewelry business.

    The son of Armenian immigrants himself, Mr. Barmakian not only
    sponsored his arrival in this country from Armenia in 1972,
    Maserejian said, but gave him a job in his office at Barmakian
    Jewelers for two years.

    "He was like an older brother to me," he said. "My dream was to have
    my own place, and I got it in 1975."

    Though Mr. Barmakian was an MIT graduate, Maserejian said, "he could
    sit down and talk to the plainest person with plain language and be
    their friend. For any person, he gave the opportunity to encourage
    him."

    Mr. Barmakian helped many young immigrants realize their dreams, said
    his daughter Gail, of Oak Bluffs.

    "Dad had the biggest heart in the world," she said. "He bonded with
    people quickly. He was also a workaholic."

    Mr. Barmakian was renowned for his knowledge of the jewelry business.

    "He was a maven," said Deepak Sheth, a New York jewelry and diamond
    wholesaler. "He was one of my first customers when I came here from
    India, a noble and generous man who treated others with tremendous
    dignity. He took care of people and gave them respect. He was honored
    and recognized in the jewelry industry for his knowledge and plans
    for its growth."

    Last year, in Basel, Switzerland, the Armenian Jewelers Association
    made Mr. Barmakian its international president. Three years earlier,
    also in Basel, the AJA elected him chairman of its East Coast area
    and gave him its lifetime achievement award.

    "Ara was a born leader," said Hagop Baghdadlian, owner of Cora
    Diamonds in New York City. "He was shrewd, smart, and an inspiration
    to all of us."

    Ara Levon Barmakian was born in Cambridge to Levon and Hripsime
    Barmakian, who had fled the Armenian genocide from their home in
    Malatia in Turkey.

    Mr. Barmakian spoke no English until he was 5 and started attending
    the Watertown public schools, his family said. He quickly
    demonstrated an aptitude for all things mechanical, "as well as hard
    work."

    His mother died while he was in college studying engineering, and his
    father soon after.

    Levon Barmakian left behind his interest in a small shop he had
    opened with his brothers in the Jewelers Building downtown "with a
    shoebox of inventory," the family said.

    "Dad was always the dutiful Armenian son," Gail Barmakian said, "and
    knew what he had to do. He became the patriarch of the family to his
    younger twin brothers and director of the company."

    With his brothers as partners, the three built the business. Today it
    consists of stores in Boston, Framingham, and Nashua.

    Mr. Barmakian had learned "by necessity and by his growing interest"
    all aspects of the business, from gemology to metallurgy, design and
    manufacture, marketing and sales. He traveled the world on business
    trips.

    In 1952, Mr. Barmakian married Natalie (Gazoorian) of Worcester.

    Marcia Gazoorian of Worcester said her brother-in-law was "definitely
    a self-made man."

    "He was a no-nonsense person," she said. "If something had to be
    done, he learned how to do it and did it."

    "He was compassionate and inquisitive. . . . He learned a lot by
    talking with people. If you wanted to talk something through, he
    would ask the right questions," she said.

    Mr. Barmakian's favorite place away from work, his wife said, was at
    Oak Bluffs on Martha's Vineyard, where the family had a home.

    "That's where he would relax. He loved the water and the ocean," she
    said.

    Besides his wife and his daughter, Mr. Barmakian leaves two other
    daughters, Karen Herosian of Belmont and Janice McCullough of
    Sudbury; his son, Ara Jr. of Belmont; two brothers, Diran and Vahan,
    both of Winchester; and 11 grandchildren.

    A service will be held at 11 a.m. today at St. James Armenian
    Apostolic Church in Watertown. Burial will be in Mount Auburn
    Cemetery, Cambridge.
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