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Powered by goodwill: man honors brother's legacy of giving

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  • Powered by goodwill: man honors brother's legacy of giving

    Boston Globe, MA
    Nov 26 2006

    Powered by goodwill

    Quincy man honors brother's legacy of giving with bike-a-thon
    fund-raiser
    By Rich Fahey, Globe Correspondent | November 26, 2006

    QUINCY -- Richard Boyajian says that when he thinks about the smiling
    faces of the children, it reminds him of his brother. And that
    inspires him to pedal faster.

    Each Memorial Day weekend, Boyajian , 67, takes off with about a
    dozen friends on a 25-mile bike-a-thon from Cambridge to Lexington
    and back to raise money for the Nish Boyajian Memorial Foundation,
    which he founded in the name of his brother, Harold Nishan Boyajian ,
    who died of cancer in 1995. He uses the funds raised to improve
    school playgrounds in Armenia, the country his father, Haig, left in
    1910. (Armenia, a former Soviet republic, regained its independence
    in 1991.)

    Boyajian recently returned from his sixth trip to Armenia, but this
    time with a heavy heart: His mother, Mary, died at age 92, two days
    before he arrived home on Sept. 30. Boyajian had gotten word during
    his trip that she had fallen ill, but she appeared to be improving
    and in no immediate danger when she suddenly took a turn for the
    worse.

    He came home, as he always did, with a souvenir from Armenia for his
    mother, a small cap in Armenian colors. It went with her when she was
    buried.

    "My mother never could believe what we did to keep Nish's memory
    alive," Boyajian said recently, remembering the pride his mother had
    in his goodwill missions to his father's homeland. Haig Boyajian ,
    who died in 1978, raised his family in the warmth of Watertown's
    large Armenian-American community; Mary was born in Fitchburg.

    On his latest trip, Boyajian brought sports and playground equipment
    for seven schools in Armenia, as well as fully equipped first aid
    kits, working in conjunction with the Mirak Foundation.

    "I think Nish would be happy with what I'm doing," he said.

    Nish Boyajian ran a print and office supplies firm in Waltham. He was
    president of the Men's Club at St. James Armenian Church in Watertown
    and the Watertown Rotary Club, and served on the board of the
    Watertown Boys Club, among his many endeavors.

    "He was a very charitable man and well-known in the Armenian
    community," said Boyajian , who also tried to find ways to give back,
    as his brother was doing. He helped raise money for Armenian
    earthquake victims in 1988, and rode his bike each year to raise
    funds to fight diabetes, from which he and several other family
    members suffer.

    The Nish Boyajian Memorial Foundation began in 1995, when Boyajian
    was driving his brother to a hospital in Philadelphia for
    experimental cancer treatments and found himself wishing he and other
    family members had something to do as they waited in the lounge while
    Nish was undergoing the treatments.

    "There was no real recreational area you could go to, to take your
    mind off what was happening," he said.

    After his brother's death that year, Boyajian made a solo 70-mile
    bike ride in Nish's name, raising enough money to buy two treadmills.
    He donated one to the cancer ward of the hospital where Nish had been
    treated, to give patients and family members something to do while
    passing time. He lent the other to Nish's son, Richard, who was
    recovering from a bone marrow transplant for leukemia, and later
    donated the machine to Regina Cleri, the home for retired priests in
    Boston's West End, where he has been cutting the priests' hair for
    many years.

    He raises much of his foundation's funds today from per-mile pledges
    or flat contributions from longtime customers at his Boston Brahmin
    Hair Salon on Portland Street, near North Station in Boston. It
    remains a modest nonprofit, pulling in about $7,000 each year from
    the bike-a-thons.

    Boyajian had his real epiphany for the foundation's work in 2000, in
    a chance meeting with a group of young Armenians who had come to the
    Boston area through an exchange program between Cambridge and its
    Armenian sister city of Yerevan, under the auspices of the US Agency
    for International Development. Boyajian entertained the visitors,
    taking them to hockey games, hosting a cookout, and organizing
    outings to nearby Wollaston Beach.

    The Rev. Joanne Hartunian, youth exchange program director for the
    Cambridge Yerevan Sister City Association, later asked Boyajian
    whether he would chaperone a group of local students traveling to
    Armenia that year. That opportunity would lead to his embracing his
    Armenian heritage and beginning the annual trips with the proceeds
    from his fund-raisers, and to hosting various Armenian groups
    traveling to this country.

    Many friends and customers have been supportive, he says, both with
    the fund-raisers and with the visitors. Even the Boston Bruins have
    lent a hand. "The Bruins and Nate Greenberg" -- longtime assistant to
    former Bruins president Harry Sinden -- "have been great," he said.
    "They've opened their doors to many of my Armenian guests."

    Boyajian has studied Armenia's history and learned enough of the
    language to make himself understood on his visits. But his new
    friends over there have helped the missions as well.

    Businessman Arthur Hovsepyan of Magnon Manufacturing, for example,
    has made the money Boyajian raised go a bit further. He manufactured
    the chairs and tables for the schools in Zeytoun and the playground
    equipment for the schools in Gyumri, allowing Boyajian to cut out the
    middleman.

    Boyajian knows he can't ride his bike forever. He is hoping that the
    next generation -- perhaps his nephew Richard, whose leukemia has
    been in remission for several years -- will pick up and continue the
    cause, in memory of Nish.
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