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Agnes M. Mooradian, 85, Determined, Kept Family History Alive

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  • Agnes M. Mooradian, 85, Determined, Kept Family History Alive

    AGNES M. MOORADIAN, 85, DETERMINED, KEPT FAMILY HISTORY ALIVE
    Elbert Aull

    Portland Press Herald
    July 14, 2008 Monday
    Maine

    SOUTH PORTLAND

    Agnes M. Mooradian and her husband disagreed about the apple tree in
    their backyard.

    Mrs. Mooradian thought it deprived what would be a great vegetable
    garden of sunlight. Her husband thought it was a nice tree.

    The way Mrs. Mooradian, who died Saturday at the age of 85, took care
    of the tree became family legend, her older daughter said.

    The petite, determined woman cut down the tree limb by limb, piece
    by piece - slowly, so her husband wouldn't notice.

    John Mooradian was standing at his kitchen window when it finally
    dawned on him.

    Cynthia Young of Falmouth, the Mooradians' older daughter, still
    remembers her puzzled father's words: "Didn't we used to have an
    apple tree in the backyard?"

    That was her mother - the determined woman who pulled a sled through
    the snow to deliver bread from her father's bakery as a child and
    still found time to study and take care of her siblings, Young said.

    Mrs. Mooradian was born March 25, 1923, in Portland, the oldest of
    John and Rose Mezoian's four children.

    Her father came to the United States with his parents in 1910, at a
    time when Armenians were faced with increasing levels of hostility
    in his native Turkey.

    Other families would follow at the start of the Armenian
    Genocide five years later. The families formed a tight-knit
    community. Mrs. Mooradian's parents were optimistic about the future.

    "They knew that being here in the U.S. was an opportunity for them
    to move forward and raise their children in a safe environment,"
    Young said.

    Mrs. Mooradian spent her youth balancing school with household chores
    and work at her father's bakery. She delivered bread from the bakery
    to homes and grocery stores, pulling the food along on a sled during
    the winter, Young said.

    Mrs. Mooradian graduated from Portland High School in 1942.

    She married John Mooradian on Aug. 24, 1947. The couple had two
    daughters and, after brief stints in Portland and Cape Elizabeth,
    settled in South Portland.

    Mrs. Mooradian was part of the group that in 2002 founded the Armenian
    Cultural Association of Maine.

    She was her family's oral historian, passing on stories about growing
    up as a first-generation American to her children. One thing she
    always stressed to her children was the value of an education, and
    the importance of never giving up, Young said.

    "My parents always felt with an education, you can accomplish anything
    in life," she said.
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