ARCHPRIEST FR. ARSHAG DAGHLIAN REMEMBERED FOR HIS PIETY
By Tom Vartabedian
At an age when most people—let alone clergymen—retired to the comfort of an easy chair or a nursing home, Archpriest Fr. Arshag Daghlian forged ahead.
Well into his 80s, he could be found going through security checks at airports and making calls to different congregations throughout the country.
He played his role as outreach priest to the hilt, regardless of health conditions, travel distances, jostling crowds and a biological clock that kept ticking away. |
That clock finally stopped June 10 after 42 years. The beloved cleric was 88 and succumbed with his family by his bedside following a series of complications and a rigorous bout with chemotherapy. “His road was always paved with spirituality,” said Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America. “He baptized our young, buried our old, married young couples and made house calls to the infirmed. He tended his flock with true character and leaves behind a legacy to be admired and emulated.”
The father of five and grandfather of seven never compromised his family for his vocation. In fact, he led them to the sanctuary where son John became a deacon and chaired the board of trustees at St. Stephen’s Church in Watertown, while daughter Houry also became a trustee.
Another daughter, Nora, is wed to Attorney Richard Sarajian, former chairman of the Prelacy’s Executive Council and active in the New Jersey area. Daughter Sonia is a registered nurse who is often seen juggling the church with her profession.
Nothing grieved Der Arshag more than the sudden death of his daughter Aida ten years ago.
Only a month ago, Der Arshag got to see his grandson, Ara Sarajian, graduate from Merrimack College, North Andover—the same school he attended, as well as all five of his children.
Funeral services, which took place on Monday, June 14, at St. Stephen’s Church, eulogized a man who shared his family with the church and served as a role model for generations that followed. “His home was the altar of the
Armenian church,” said Richard Sarajian. “He came along at a time when
priests were scarce and churches were in need of spiritual guidance. He
gave you love and got love in return.” |
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| Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan presents Rev. Archpriest Arshag Daghlian with a letter of blessing from His Holiness Catholicos Aram 1 during NRA Convention in 2003 marking his 35th anniversary in the priesthood. |
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| Rev. Archpriest Arshag Daghlian, center, is joined by the late Rev. Vartan Kassabian, left, and son John Daghlian, a deacon, during a genocide memorial commemoration in Merrimack Valley in 2008. |
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| Rev. Archpriest Arshag Daghlian, right, is shown with Rev. Vartan Kassabian --- two former pastors of St. Gregory Church of North Andover, MA, who passed away within the past 14 months |
Son John characterized his dad as
someone who inspired him throughout
life—with a sense of humor intact.
“If I grew up to be half the man he was, I would accomplish
everything,” he pointed out. “He loved to read jokes from the Reader’s
Digest and share them with others.”
A most touching tribute was given by his granddaughter Aline Chareth.
“My grandfather’s smile lit up a room,” she brought out. Archpriest Fr. Antranig Baljian, pastor of St. Stephen’s Church, commended his late colleague for the role he assumed as the church’s “Father Confessor.” His presence was always a source of comfort and joy to the pastor, trustees and the worshipping faithful.
For nearly two decades, he traveled every weekend to a different parish from Cleveland and Waukegan to Niagara Falls and Hartford-New Britain, visiting parishes with no clergy presence.
He would embark from Logan Airport every Saturday toward a new destination. Over that time, he maintained an impeccable record toward consistency, even with hurricane warnings, delays of every magnitude, excruciating inspection lines, and lingering layovers.
Airline food was a far cry from the home-cooked Armenian food prepared by his dutiful wife Lucy, who often accompanied him to the airport if not further. He wound up serving 19 different parishes.
Had Der Arshag not chosen the life of service to God, he most likely would have been a mechanic. He could have been the guy who repaired your car engine, or worked on a missile in a power plant.
He would often reflect with abundant sentiment upon his days in Lebanon, already married with three children and into his 40s, when he’d come home with grease on his hands.
He broke the news to his family and headed off to the seminary at Antelias. After completing his studies, he was ordained in Whitinsville in 1967 by the then Prelate of the Prelacy, His Eminence Archbishop Hrant Khatchadourian.
“I was surprised, but not totally amazed by his decision,” Yeretzkin Lucy admitted. “I could see the happiness in his eyes.”
He began his ministry at St. Paul’s Armenian Church in Waukegan, Illinois. Three years later, he packed his bags—and a family of five children—and headed toward North Andover, Massachusetts, where the community had just purchased a Protestant church ready to be converted.
Over that time, he worked with trustees to pay off the mortgage, renovated the church hall, expanded the Sunday School, taught Armenian language to adults, and participated in ecumenical services with sister churches across Merrimack Valley.
“I always took a particular interest in people who were bedridden,” he once admitted. “The fact that my whole family was involved with the church was particularly gratifying. Whatever I’ve given , I’ve gained back a hundredfold. I’ve never regretted a moment of it.”
Der Arshag served in North Andover 15 years (1970-85), longer than any other pastor, before leaving to serve the Prelacy’s infinite role as a “traveling priest.”
“The only Sunday he ever missed was when he came down with pneumonia and we wouldn’t let him travel,” said Sonia Daghlian. “People loved my dad because of his honesty. That made him very special.”
In 1987, Der Arshag was elevated to Archpriest and received the “Dzaghgya Pilon” from His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of Cilicia.
Two years ago, a large crowd turned out in St. Stephen’s Church to celebrate the 40th anniversary of his ordination. Among the speakers, daughter Houry paid special tribute to her dad.
“His grasp on world affairs is truly remarkable,” she said then, “whether it’s politics, gardening, sports or religion. Put a tool in his hands and he’d fix an engine. He has played soccer and the accordion, even rode a motorcycle, and worked as a librarian—a genuine Renaissance man. But above all, his family, his God and his Armenian heritage always took precedence.” |
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