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  • Gutted, her grandfather's house - Arathoon Stephen's descendant...

    The Calcutta Telegraph, India
    March 26 2010

    Gutted, her grandfather's house - Arathoon Stephen's descendant takes
    shelter in home for old Armenians

    POULOMI BANERJEE


    Irene Martin and husband Jimmy Harris on Park Street the morning after
    the fire. (Pabitra Das)
    The granddaughter of the man Stephen Court was named after now lives
    in one room of an address for old Armenians with nowhere to go, barely
    a seven-minute drive away from her home that is burnt, blackened and
    out of bounds.

    Till Tuesday morning, the day she turned 84, Irene Martin was a
    `popular, fun-loving' resident of Stephen Court, known to most as `a
    relative of Arathoon Stephen', after whom the 18A Park Street building
    was named.

    On Wednesday morning, the feisty Armenian woman looked `disturbed and
    dazed' as she sat on the Park Street pavement with husband Jimmy
    Harris, staring at their flat no. 27 of Stephen Court.

    On Thursday morning, the homeless octogenarian woke up `incoherent and
    hallucinating' in the Sir Catchick Paul Chater Home, better known as
    Armenian Home, in Park Circus.

    `Irene Martin is the granddaughter of Arathoon Stephen, who built
    Stephen Court and also founded the Grand hotel. Her husband Jimmy
    Harris is an Englishman. They live on the second floor of Stephen
    Court and we live on the first. We have been neighbours since 1965,'
    Manu Lilaram told Metro.

    Her Armenian friends rescued them on Tuesday afternoon. Peter
    Hyrapiet, the president of the Armenian Club, recounted: `We were at
    the club (at Queens Mansion) when the fire broke out and I told
    another member to get Irene Martin and her husband down.' That was
    easier said than done as they did not want to leave their home.

    `It was hard persuading them,' said Cecil Milne, the honorary
    treasurer of the club and the caretaker of the Armenian Home. After
    getting them down, they were taken to the Home. `Ironically it was
    Irene's 84th birthday that day,' said Hyrapiet. `We brought a cake to
    try and cheer her up.'

    But to little avail. The morning after, the couple slipped out and
    went back to Park Street. `They are badly shaken and hallucinating,'
    said Milne.

    This is not the Irene friends have known for decades. `She is like an
    institution on Park Street. She often walked into our showroom
    (Satramdas Dhalamal at Queens Mansion), holding her trademark
    cigarette,' said couture jeweller Raj Mahtani. `She loved to dance, to
    lift up her skirt and do a little hop in sheer fun,' added Hyrapiet.

    Irene would often spend time in the auction houses on Russell Street
    and sit down with a coffee at Flurys.

    Nora Arathoon was a friend she would spend a lot of time with. `She
    was born in Calcutta and baptised in the Armenian Church here. Her
    grandparents were so rich she never needed to go to work. She spent
    most of her time looking after the house or taking care of her mother
    (Anna). She wasn't very young when she married Jimmy Harris. They
    don't have children.'

    The grand old lady of Park Street, whose grandfather was the first
    managing director of Stephen Court Ltd, was described by neighbour
    Lilaram as being `very nice, very fond of music'. His son, Vijay,
    fondly added: `A strong personality, a commanding voice and the gift
    of the gab.'

    That is something even the Queen got a taste of. `Irene loved to
    recount her tea tryst with Queen Elizabeth II when she had visited
    Calcutta in 1961,' said a friend.

    ' WITH MOHUA DAS
    http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100326/jsp/calc utta/story_12262357.jsp
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