Lowell ARF Honors 50-Year Members

LOWELL, Mass.—Throughout their distinguished ARF careers, Joseph Dagdigian and Stephan Dulgarian symbolized the very best as 50-year members of the Lowell Gomideh.

Members of the growing Lowell ARF 50-Year Club are, from left, Aram Jeknavorian, Joseph Dagdigian and Stephan Dulgarian.
Members of the growing Lowell ARF 50-Year Club, (L-R) Aram Jeknavorian, Joseph Dagdigian and Stephan Dulgarian.

The two were honored on their golden anniversaries during a gala celebration Dec. 6 at St. Gregory Church in North Andover, which was attended by a large and spirited audience.

They join Aram Jeknavorian, who was honored a year ago, giving the Lowell Gomideh three members who have reached this celebrated plateau, with others in close proximity.

The Lowell ARF represents the first organized Gomideh in the United States, followed by Lawrence and Haverhill, giving the Merrimack Valley a dash of historic prestige.

“They are the role models to which we truly aspire and the Armenian patriots who never let down their guard,” said Gomideh chairman Tom Vartabedian. “Our community would not be as vibrant were it not for these two individuals. As patriots, they have often gone above the call to help their fellow Armenians, whether physically, morally or fraternally.”

During his half-century with the Gomideh, Dagdigian has made annual trips to Armenia, documenting and photographing the country-at-large. What he brings back home, he shares with others during lectures and presentations.

A course he offered at NAASR, titled “A Visual Journey Through Armenian History,” covered 3,000 years of Armenian history and culture. A portion of those proceeds were donated to the Shengavit Historical and Archeological Cultural Preserve in Armenia.

Dagdigian has been heavily involved with ANCA work throughout Merrimack Valley and is a member of  the Knights of Vartan. Through his efforts, the Cosmic Ray Division in Armenia—a scientific research station on Mount Aragats—has realized thousands of dollars raised for its cause.

Presenting him with his award was his brother John, who is close to 50 years himself.

For more than 20 years, Dulgarian served as an advisor to the Armenian Youth Federation, taking members under his wing and guiding them through a more productive Armenian lifestyle.

A son of genocide survivors, he is currently serving on a committee to erect an imposing genocide memorial by Lowell City Hall.

His personal letter-writing campaigns to government officials have gone a long way to creating awareness and understanding, not to mention his association as caretaker of the 50-year-old Lowell ARS Community Center.

Dulgarian was presented the Vahan Cardashian Award in 2011  by the Armenian National Committee of America for dedicated community service.

Speaking on his behalf were two of his four children, Stepan and Sona (Gevorkian), who outlined the influence their dad had on their active AYF careers.

The main speaker was Dr. Dikran Kaligian, who updated the audience on significant events taking place in Armenia.

A musical interlude was provided by soloist Nina Hovsepian, accompanied by pianist Mary Barooshian.

A reflection on the 25th anniversary of the earthquake in Armenia was provided by Dr. Ara Jeknavorian with visuals and commentary. Jeknavorian also gave an update on the Lowell Memorial, which will be dedicated next April during a flag-raising ceremony at City Hall.

Prayers were offered by Rev. Stephan Baljian, pastor.

Tom Vartabedian

Tom Vartabedian

Tom Vartabedian is a retired journalist with the Haverhill Gazette, where he spent 40 years as an award-winning writer and photographer. He has volunteered his services for the past 46 years as a columnist and correspondent with the Armenian Weekly, where his pet project was the publication of a special issue of the AYF Olympics each September.
Tom Vartabedian

Latest posts by Tom Vartabedian (see all)

6 Comments

  1. So, in the “old days” when you reached 50 years, you were given a gold lapel pin with the zinanshan and a 50. Did these dedicated ungers receive theirs, or is that another time-honored ARF tradition that has passed by the wayside?

  2. I lived in the Merrimack Valley and was an AYF member with Steve,Joe and Aram., where they were active. members in the Lawrence Vartanatz AYF. Congradulations on achieving 50 years of dedication.

  3. To answer Lolo’s comment above, this is a tradition started last year in Lowell to recognize our 50-year members who are time-honored ungers in our organization. I do not believe the organization has cointinued the tradition of presenting those gold lapel pins with “50” on them. Therefore, we took it upon ourselves with the Central Committee’s blessings to give homage where it’s due and hope other Gomidehs throughout the world also conform.

  4. Congratulations gentlemen.
    A childhood friend of mine was named Satinique Dulgarian. I would very much like to get in touch with her.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*