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The Wisdom of a Father Who Has Suffered

Ruben Navarrett Jr. on

Manoukian's father, who was born in Syria, started out a carpenter and soccer player and wound up a doctor who spoke five languages and served as an interpreter for the British army.

When I asked Manoukian what his father taught him about being a dad, he rattled off a list: "Take care of your kids. But don't spoil them. Make sure they go to work and go to school. Make sure they take up honorable professions."

Like what? I asked.

"Priests or teachers," he said. "He used to say that one holds the book of God, the other the book of knowledge."

On the day he graduated from law school, Manoukian recalled, his father literally punched him in the gut and he gave him marching orders: "Your job is not to make as much money as you can; it's to do good things for people."

Manoukian and his wife, Patricia, who is an appellate court judge, were blessed with three sons: Michael, an attorney; Martin, who enrolled in medical school before joining the Navy; and Matt, the Marine.

While the boys were growing up, Manoukian was still a lawyer working long hours and he missed a lot of school activities. He made a change. Suddenly, he was coaching soccer games.

When I told him that I'm struggling to find a balance between being too strict or too lenient, he advised: "You're better off being too strict. If you're going to make a mistake, make it in that direction."

 

After graduating from college, Matt joined the Marines, completed Officer Candidate School and infantry training, and served his first deployment in Iraq as a platoon commander. He rose to the rank of captain and became what his comrades-in-arms call "a marine's marine." Whether in a firefight, or on patrol, he protected his men by being the first into harm's way.

Matt later did two tours in Afghanistan with special ops. Sadly, he didn't complete his second. He was killed by a Taliban fighter in August 2012.

"To say I'm proud of him doesn't quite capture it," Manoukian said, choking up. "I'm proud of all my boys and what they've done with their lives."

This American family has come a long way, and it has paid a heavy price for the trip. No one knows that better than a certain judge who, while already an immigrant success story, wanted simply to be a good dad -- and pulled it off.

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Ruben Navarrette's email address is ruben@rubennavarrette.com.


Copyright 2016 Washington Post Writers Group

 

 

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