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Hovnanian's Fortuitous Path To America

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  • Hovnanian's Fortuitous Path To America

    HOVNANIAN'S FORTUITOUS PATH TO AMERICA
    By Bill Mooney

    Trenton Times, NJ
    Sept 27 2006

    MOUNT LAUREL -- Jirair Hovnanian, patriarch of the J.S. Hovnanian &
    Sons building company, never forgets where his family came from.

    "My family was driven out of Turkey during the 1915 massacre," said
    the recent recipient of the Ellis Island Medal of Honor. "My father
    was 15 years old, and they were driven into the Syrian desert. The
    Turks wanted to wipe out the Armenian minority when Armenians were
    the tradesmasters, the businessmen." Hovnanian, now in his 70s, was
    born in Baghdad, Iraq, lived in Kirkuk for a time and then attended
    a Jesuit school in Baghdad. A different place and time.

    Those memories stayed with him as he arrived in this country in
    1948 at the age of 21 with his family and served as inspiration as
    he helped build up what has become one of the larger home-building
    enterprises in the region. The medal, given earlier this month by
    the National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations, recognizes citizens
    of diverse ethnic backgrounds for contributions to the United States.

    "I was born in Baghdad," he said. "America is really my first country."

    A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of
    Business, Hovnanian began a construction business in 1959 with
    his three brothers, then in 1964 started his own company that now
    includes two sons Stephen and Peter, as well as a grandson, Garo,
    and has established a base building homes and commercial properties
    in central and southern New Jersey.

    "I never really came through Ellis Island," he said, but he appre
    ciates what it stands for. "That facility allowed so many millions
    of Americans to come to this country and become citizens of this
    coun try."

    Of the medal, he said, "I will cherish it forever. It gives me the
    opportunity to say thank you to America."

    As a successful businessman, Hovnanian has given back to the community
    here and abroad. He is the founder of the Armenian Sis ters Academy,
    a private school; a member of the Armenian Assembly of America; and
    an archdeacon of St. Gregory's Armenian Church in Philadelphia. He is
    working to establish a high-tech center in Armenia, an International
    Synchotron Light Source Accelerator Research Center in conjunction
    with the European Union and the U.S.

    Department of Energy.

    "We have everything. They don't have everything," he said of the
    Middle Eastern and Central European regions. "We have to show them
    how to become successful. It's like the Bible says: Don't give them
    the fish; give them something to fish with."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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