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  • Community Regroups After Its Pastor's Death

    COMMUNITY REGROUPS AFTER ITS PASTOR'S DEATH
    By Tom Vartabedian

    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/04/08/a- community-regroups-after-its-pastor%e2%80%99s-deat h/
    April 8,2009

    Weeks after his death, a community continues to mourn the loss of
    its beloved pastor.

    The passing of Der Vartan Kassabian March 12 has sent the Merrimack
    Valley reeling with aftershock and cast parishioners from St. Gregory
    Church into a bereaved state.

    It's not something anyone can forget overnight, much less an
    eternity. But like he would have wished, grief must be replaced by
    healing and the congregation must persevere.

    If anything, this pastor always preached vitality and encouraged his
    flock to settle for nothing less.

    As Sunday School students come to grips with reality, several are
    looking to the church for strength. The priest who once humored them
    with a casual Sunday sermon is no longer there.

    He taught them well. Hopefully, the lessons will guide them toward
    greater maturity.

    Local genocide committees will miss his sturdy presence at
    commemorations where prayers will mourn his loss. If anything, they
    will remember the man for his oratorical brilliance and the knack
    for always finding the right words in a dire situation.

    Two years ago, when vandals destroyed some genocide billboards around
    Greater Boston, Armenians everywhere were aghast.

    Could this be another vile Turkish prank? Such vandalism made the
    Boston papers with pity.

    As the Armenian public criticized the act, Der Vartan found a positive
    side. In an invocation he delivered, he told the audience that such
    acts were "a blessing in disguise."

    "The publicity we received from this caught the eye of every
    sympathetic reader and underscored nine decades of intolerance by
    our people toward Turkey," he pointed out. "You can't buy this kind
    of press. They did us a favor."

    With his pearls of wisdom, Der Vartan was like a firefly on a moonless
    night, casting certain radiance where there was none.

    The elderly continue to wallow with grief. Each Sunday, he would
    regale them with words of inspiration, whether it was from the altar
    or during a coffee hour. Shortly after his father's death, Mgo walked
    into an Armenian School class and sat with the younger students.

    His place, he felt, was with them as words of encouragement flowed from
    his mouth. A year ago this time, his essay on genocide recognition took
    first prize. As another contest took effect, he urged the students
    to enter, get involved, make a difference in their church, much the
    same way his father had intended.

    As another phase of a renovation project takes place inside the
    church, there seems to be greater initiative than ever to get the
    work accomplished in his memory. A better tribute couldn't be possible.

    The Easter season took on greater significance this year as in the past
    with the death of Christ resurrecting an entire Christian nation. In
    some ways, the same could be said for Der Vartan's demise.

    Life after death.

    Visiting clergy continue to do their part until a replacement is
    named. Every promise has been made by the hierarchy to find a suitable
    pastor. To walk in his shoes would be a daunting task for any cleric.

    Meanwhile, a congregation has been enamored to carry on the work he
    so delegated to others.

    Jesus Christ died two centuries ago. Presidents like Abe Lincoln
    and John F. Kennedy are gone. Our rich, classical composers, Bach,
    Beethoven, Mozart set their own standard.

    Are they really dead? Are not their words and music still heard?

    Der Vartan had no illusions of grandeur, yet he was grand in his own
    humble, charismatic way. The man some predicted would never make a
    good priest was fit to be a prince of his church.

    It isn't the quantity of life-the number of years-that matters, but
    rather the quality, how that life was lived. Der Vartan lived his 51
    years exceptionally well.

    In an age of takers, he was a giver. Like the coin of life, his
    life was dedicated to two sides, his family and his work. For that,
    he leaves behind a rich legacy we have all grown to appreciate.

    He took the time to love and laugh-to serve and enjoy countless
    friendships. He took the time to dream, play and reflect a little
    more than we ordinarily would.

    Der Vartan didn't need a clock in his timeless journey, or a schedule
    to maintain. He killed time by working it to death.

    What you do for yourself unfortunately dies with you. But what you
    do for others lives on after you. A man such as Der Vartan will never
    die in the eyes of a grateful community.
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