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Diasporic Canvass of Armenian Itineraries

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  • #11
    Detroit Free Press, MI
    July 25 2005

    Edward Jamian: Longtime businessman faced each day with a smile

    July 25, 2005

    BY PATRICIA MONTEMURRI
    FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

    In his wallet, across from his driver's license, Edward Jamian always
    carried a photo of his wife of 57 years, Kora.

    He'd pull the wallet from his pocket, open it up to display his
    wife's smiling face next to his license mug shot. Then, he'd fold the
    wallet shut with a quip: "Look, now we're kissing."

    Mr. Jamian's good humor and never-ending optimism were hallmarks of
    his life.

    The longtime businessman and insurance agent from Bloomfield Hills
    died Friday from complications of congestive heart failure at
    Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. He was 83.

    "He faced each day with a smile and never surrendered to negative
    thinking," said his son, John Jamian, a former state representative
    from Bloomfield Hills who is now acting administrator of the U.S.
    Maritime Administration.

    Mr. Jamian was born in Turkey. When he was a toddler, his family
    escaped the turmoil following the Armenian genocide by fleeing to
    Banes, Cuba. In Cuba, the family owned a general store called the
    Republic of Armenia. As a youngster, Mr. Jamian helped out by fixing
    toys for sale.

    At age 15, he and his family immigrated to Detroit, where Eduardo
    Jamgotchian became Edward Jamian. He learned to speak English with
    the Spanish accent he acquired in Cuba.

    He graduated from Northwestern High School in Detroit and enlisted in
    the U.S. Army Air Corps, where he was a staff sergeant and aerial
    engineer teaching recruits aboard Mitchell B25 bombers during World
    War II.

    Mr. Jamian dubbed the B25 he piloted the Detroit Flash, painting the
    name in bright red letters.

    After the war, he courted his future wife at church socials at St.
    John Armenian Church, when it was located in northwest Detroit, and
    he impressed her with his dance moves.

    He also studied accounting at the Detroit Business Institute, and
    like several members of Detroit's Armenian immigrant community, owned
    or operated hotels and apartments in and around downtown Detroit.

    Mr. Jamian once owned three hotels, including the La Plaza at the
    corner of Grand River and Cass. From 1962 into the early 1990s, he
    worked as a real estate broker and insurance agent.

    "We didn't measure anything in finances. My father measured
    everything in honor," his son said. "My dad didn't have
    acquaintances. He had true friends. He gave to anybody who asked him.
    ... If he had it, he would give it."

    Among his proudest moments were when his two sons were elected to
    public office. John Jamian was elected to the state Legislature in
    1991 and served through 1996. Gregory Jamian was elected in 2002 to
    the Oakland County Board of Commissioners, representing Bloomfield
    Hills, West Bloomfield and Orchard Lake, where he still serves.

    Besides his wife and sons, Mr. Jamian is survived by a daughter,
    Christina Johnson, and eight grandchildren.

    Funeral services will begin at 11 a.m. today at St. John Armenian
    Church, 22001 Northwestern Highway, Southfield.

    A Knights of Vartan service will be at noon in the church's cultural
    building. There will be a Masonic burial service under the auspices
    of Ashlar Lodge No. 91 F&AM at 2:15 p.m. in Woodlawn Cemetery Chapel
    in Detroit.

    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

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