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Alique Topalian: From Cancer Child to Distinguished Graduate

by Asbarez Staff
May 25, 2011
in Community, Featured Story, Latest, National, Special Reports, Top Stories
3
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Alique Topalian

BY TOM VARTABEDIAN
CLEVELAND—Alique Gabrielle Topalian continues to remain the consummate poster child for her generation.
As a child of 4, she was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia — a rare cancer that starts inside the bone marrow and usually targets children. Her prognosis was not favorable. Doctors felt she would need a bone marrow transplant to survive and a match couldn’t be found.
After nine months of chemotherapy treatments, some of which was experimental, she went into remission and has been cancer-free ever since the loss of vision in one eye and a learning disability in math and science has only heightened her ability to excel.
Come June 5, she will graduate with distinction from Beaumont High School, an elite private Catholic all-girls’ school in Cleveland Heights. Although the school doesn’t rank its students, her near 4.0 GPA would have qualified for valedictorian status.
Alique as a child

She’s been playing tennis ever since her post-cancerous days, even receiving awards from the sport. But more the scholar as evidenced by her Cum Laude on a National Latin Exam and editor of her school paper.
The list goes on, reading like a veritable Who’s Who with Shakespearean recitations to Congressional commendations, a Capitol Hill lobbyist and Armenian community activist like her prominent dad Mourad and her dedicated mom Michele Seyranian.
No fewer than six universities throughout the land have offered scholarships with Ohio University winning her acceptance. She will soon embark upon an undergraduate degree in Psychology while working toward a doctorate and her ultimate dream.
More than anything, this 17-year-old coed has yearned for a career to help others in the same manner she was helped.
“I tend to be very compassionate and care deeply for others around me,” she says. “I want to make a large difference in the world. You meet people who have gone through the same treatment and it helps to realize that people do survive and thrive afterward.”
Much of it has to do with the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry which she has promoted over the past decade. As a Leukemia Lymphoma Society Girl of the Year, she has held her title proudly, speaking at teachers’ workshops and offering inspiration to other childhood victims and survivors.
“School is a way for me to further my education,” she emphasizes. “As a cancer survivor, I’ve had to work much harder than most kids to achieve these grades. My dream is to impact the world and help others who have gone through similar situations, perhaps help find a cure for cancer. It may sound like a cliché because I know so many others who wish the same thing.”
An uncle is fighting a 3-year battle with bone cancer and Alique is there on the front lines, working with doctors and hospitals. Mike Topalian stood by his niece when she was faced with the ordeal. Now she’s doing the same for him.
“Because of her work with patients and their families, Alique was selected for an internship at The Gathering Place, which researches cancer,” said her dad. “Mike’s cancer is in the late stages and he’s suffering a lot with it but never complains or tells anyone about the pain. Alique is by his side doing all she can to ease the torment.”
As a passionate spokeswoman, Alique addressed the Armenian Bone Marrow Registry’s annual benefit this past year. It was nothing new for the teenager. She’s been making these speeches right along.
Her talk was motivational. Alique told of how she valued her heritage and the importance of being a donor. She spoke about people helping people and how the younger generation can make a difference at an age when many like her are getting a bad rap.
“People wonder why there must be an organization specifically designated to Armenians,” she told the gathering. “We are a strong people with a beautiful history of survival and a unique genetic makeup, making it difficult to find matches within the international registries.”
There was the time when she was that little girl needing a bone marrow transplant. Her parents were told she had a 20 percent chance of survival. A match was never found, even with her own family. As it turned it, her cancer went into remission through extensive chemo treatments. As a fifth-grader, Alique was named Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s Girl of the Year and has been touted by the Bone Marrow Registry for meritorious service.
“Many other Armenians in my situation were not as fortunate,” she said, thanking all those who stepped forward to register. “Your dream of helping to save a little girl has grown into this organization. Now it’s become a large part of my life.”
Since its inception in 1999, it has grown to great extents. Six years later, the Mariana Kazarian Center opened in Los Angeles. In 2007, the Registry opened its new Stem Cell Harvest Center in Yerevan, which offers transplants to may Armenians with cancer, diabetes and heart ailments. Last year another Harvesting Center was launched in Armenia.
“Everything in the world happens for a reason,” Alique pointed out. “The nine months of suffering I endured along with my family has helped save the lives of multiple Armenians around the world. By seeing the progress over the past 11 years, I can only anticipate greater things to come.”
The youngest of six children, Alique speaks about cancer in much the same way an authority on the subject might. She addresses teachers’ workshops and converses with friends on the street. The ambassadorship in her knows no boundaries.
She’s even spoken on Capitol Hill in Washington, lobbying for dollars to gain support for pediatric cancer research.
“I talk to them when a student has cancer and how to help them return to school when they’re out for treatments,” says Alique. “Cancer doesn’t have to be a death sentence. In fact, it’s made me stronger. You can only hold a grudge for so long and learn to live every day to the fullest.”
Her mom considers Alique somewhat of a miracle girl and continues to remain a catalyst in the fight for a cure through her work with the donor registry.
“What was once the exhausted princess waging a war on cancer is now a healthy and happy young woman,” Seyranian notes. “When we went looking for a suitable donor, doctors told us the best hope would be another Armenian. We sent out a plea for help and the Armenian community responded not only for Alique but for hundreds of other Armenians around the world also in need. Alique is considered a miracle because we never found a match for her and today she thrives. We’ve been blessed.”
At Beaumont School from where Alique will soon graduate, the beat goes on in the classroom and on radio interviews. As a volunteer at Montefiore — a Jewish nursing home in Beachwood — she visits residents and helps brighten their day. On top of that, she’s employed at Nordstrom.
Her favorite school subject happens to be English and she also enjoys community theater. Alique was chosen for the Baldwin-Wallace College Leadership & Public Policy Institute this year and recently elected into the peer ministry at Beaumont.
This past April 24th found her in California with her dad, campaigning for human rights and genocide recognition. She served as a monitor at the protest and relished the experience.
“I don’t know where Alique gets these ideas about unity, recognition and reparations,” says her dad. “She’s pretty much on top of current events and wants to be on a megaphone. She has no problem speaking before hundreds of people.”

Asbarez Staff

Asbarez Staff

Next Post

Mikael Mouradian Named New Bishop of the Armenian Catholic Eparchy of US and Canada

Comments 3

  1. Gary Anadolian says:
    11 years ago

    Go Alique Go, Go Alique Go. Congratulations. I am also as lucky as your dad and I can understand his happiness .My daughter Mary is also a miracle girl as you are she was diagnosed with hotchkins lymphoma back in 2004, when she was only 14. Now at 21 she is in full remission and she just proudly graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University in San Diego. She is the only Armenian out of 4200 students and the only Armenian out of 980 Graduates. I just hope that one day soon she can share some of her stories and pictures just to show you how she represented herself while graduating in front of 6000 people. You could see her from miles away, her top part of her graduation cap was painted the Armenian flag. I really appreciate it if you contact the Asbarez Newspaper and ask for my e-mail address for contacting Mary and me. I wish you nothing but the best and you will always be in my prayers. Again, Congratulations and God bless you. Keep up the good work.
    I hereby give Asbarez my permission to forward and deliver my e-mail address to Alique Topalian. Thanks. Gary Anadolian

    Reply
  2. Necati Genis says:
    11 years ago

    I hope Ms. Alique Gabrielle Topalian have a long, happy and healthy life.
    What i dont understand is that non of those who had commented on the rubbish topics like “who has won song contest ” for days , has not any word to say abouth this young girl.
    Where is your sense of humanity ?
    Where are you Avery , Hrant K. ??

    Reply
  3. Vanessa Kachadurian says:
    11 years ago

    A great heart warming story about the success of what the Armenian Bone Marrow Registry can do for children like Alique. This is a testimony that children can overcome these terrible childhood Leukemia and not just survive but thrive. Thank you for this great story and we encourage everyone to register, it is a simble cheek swab and it could save another life somewhere in the world.

    Reply

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