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  • After 54 Years, Optician Retires

    AFTER 54 YEARS, OPTICIAN RETIRES
    By Bruce Edwards

    Rutland Herald
    02.01.2010

    Cassandra Hotaling / Rutland Herald Michael Birajiclian, the optician
    at Vermont Optical, speaks about his retirement at his store in
    Rutland on Tuesday.

    He's come a long way since he began his career a half century ago in
    his native Syria.

    But after 54 years as an optician, Michael Birajiclian has seen his
    last customer and fitted his last pair of glasses at the Vermont
    Optical shop at 116 Merchants Row.

    Birajiclian was quick to say he wouldn't miss anything about the
    business until his wife Sandy gently reminded him about all the
    customers he's met over the decades.

    "The people, who were very good to me," Birajiclian said. "Rutland
    has been very, very good to us and I thank them for it."

    Taking a seat at one of the small fitting tables in his spacious and
    well lit Merchants Row shop the other day, Birajiclian recounted his
    odyssey from Syria to Rutland.

    Born in 1934 in Allepo, Syria's second largest city, he graduated
    from high school and began what became his life-long career at age 19.

    "We didn't have an optical school so I learned on the job," said
    Birajiclian, who's of Armenian descent and retains a distinct accent.

    In 1962, his employer sent him to the United States to check out the
    latest Bausch & Lomb optical equipment.

    Once here, he decided to stay.

    He eventually wound up employed by the Bausch & Lomb laboratory in
    Springfield, Mass., but encountered problems because the job didn't
    pay enough to qualify for a visa extension. That's when Birajiclian
    said a local optician named Philip Murphy offered him a job at better
    pay and in so doing solved his visa dilemma. During his nine years in
    Springfield, he met his future wife, Sandy Hewitt from North Pomfret.

    The couple, now married, relocated to Vermont to be closer to his
    wife's family. The move also meant Birajiclian would be closer to
    Montreal where his father's family had immigrated. Birajiclian and his
    wife settled on Rutland where he joined a practice with two optical
    doctors at the Merchants Row location. He's been there since that
    first day in 1971 and in 1978 became the sole owner of Vermont Optical.

    Like other professions, Birajiclian said he's seen a number of changes
    over the years. When he first arrived in Rutland, he said there were
    only a handful of optometrists. Today, with many more optometrists
    also selling glasses as part of their practice, he said it's difficult
    for an independent optician to stay in business.

    "Now you have to have a doctor to survive in the optical business,"
    he said.

    The arrival of the chain store opticians has hurt business. But
    the chains don't always please their customers, Birajiclian said,
    so those dissatisfied customers will seek out a local optician.

    During their years in Rutland, the Birajiclians raised two sons and
    a daughter. The youngest, Michael, is an optician at Central Vermont
    Eye Care at 69 Allen St.

    Although he closed his shop Friday and is officially retired,
    Birajiclian said he'll spend a few hours each week lending a hand
    and seeing customers at his son's Allen Street location. That's an
    aspect of the job he doesn't want to give up.

    "I love people to talk to them and visit with them and try to make
    them happy," he said.

    "That's one of his greatest joys," his wife, Sandy, added.

    [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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