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Gladys Berejiklian’s dad Krikor is the power behind the Premier

SHE may be the most-powerful person in NSW, but Premier Gladys Berejiklian still has to answer to her dad. The pair sat down with the Sunday Telegraph’s Miranda Wood for their first interview together to mark Father’s Day.

Premier Gladys Berejiklian's fathers day wish

KRIKOR Berejiklian takes his role as First Dad of NSW very seriously.

The 86-year-old was watching the dismantling of Tent City at Martin Place on TV when he decided to head to the homeless camp and provide his eldest daughter with a first-hand report.

“If there’s something on the news, like anywhere there’s a bit of a problem, he’ll actually catch the bus and go and check it out and ring me,” NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian told The Sunday Telegraph.

“My dad loves catching public transport, especially when I was Transport Minister.

Ms Berejiklian with her dad Krikor at the Opera House, which Mr Berejiklian helped build. Picture: Sam Ruttyn
Ms Berejiklian with her dad Krikor at the Opera House, which Mr Berejiklian helped build. Picture: Sam Ruttyn

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“Even now he’ll ring me and he’ll go ‘Glad, I’m in Gosford’ and I say ‘what are you doing in Gosford’.

“He goes ‘I just caught the train up here and the Opal machine is not working and you’re losing a lot of money so you better get it fixed’.”

During her 15 years in public life, the doting dad of three daughters — Gladys, Rita and Mary — has learned not to take political attacks on Ms Berejiklian personally.

The Premier has also trained her father and 79-year-old mother, Arsha, to follow one simple rule.

“Unless they hear from me, it’s not true,” Ms Berejiklian, 47, said.

The Berejiklian family outside their Ryde home in 1980.
The Berejiklian family outside their Ryde home in 1980.
Ms Berejiklian (on left) with her sister Rita and her aunt.
Ms Berejiklian (on left) with her sister Rita and her aunt.

“So my sisters rang me and said ‘can you please ring Mum and Dad because everyone is congratulating them and you haven’t told them’.”

When she did finally tell them, Ms Berejiklian said her father was “trying to be cool about it”.

“He pretended like it was no shock,” she said.

“He was obviously proud but still had that level of concern as well — they do worry about me.”

Her parents, who will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary next year, have a drawer at their home, full of scrapbooks on Ms Berejiklian’s rise to the top job in NSW.

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The couple were married in the late 1960s after they migrated separately to Australia.

More than 40 of the Premier’s relatives were victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide leaving her four grandparents orphaned.

Born in Aleppo, Syria, Mr Berejiklian and his wife, who was from Jerusalem, spoke Armenian at home and when the Premier started school, she couldn’t understand English.

Ms Berejiklian said her dad “settled down later in life because he kind of did his bucket list before he got married.

Ms Berejiklian’s parents Krikor and Arsha, and sisters Rita and Mary, proudly pose with Ms Berejiklian on the day she was sworn in as NSW Premier last year. Picture: David Moir
Ms Berejiklian’s parents Krikor and Arsha, and sisters Rita and Mary, proudly pose with Ms Berejiklian on the day she was sworn in as NSW Premier last year. Picture: David Moir

“He wanted to see Pele play in Brazil so he spent six months living in Brazil and then he wanted to chase Bridget Bardot in France, so he went to Paris.”

During The Sunday Telegraph’s photo shoot with the Premier to mark Father’s Day, Mr Berejiklian beamed with pride.

“First of all I am proud that I am with my daughter right now walking in front of the Opera House,” he said.

“I am particularly proud to be with her now because I worked on the Opera House as a boiler maker and welder a long, long time ago, just a few years before it was completed.”

Ms Berejiklian later said her father told her: “Glad, this is one of the happiest days of my life”.

The father and daughter still converse in Armenian and over the years, Ms Berejiklian said their relationship has “deepened”.

“It’s more a friendship than anything else, and a respect,” she said.

The Premier and her father enjoy a special bond. Picture: Sam Ruttyn
The Premier and her father enjoy a special bond. Picture: Sam Ruttyn
Ms Berejiklian said the visits her elderly parents every Saturday. Picture: Sam Ruttyn
Ms Berejiklian said the visits her elderly parents every Saturday. Picture: Sam Ruttyn

“During our teenage years, he was strict but, mind you, he needed to be stricter with my sisters than with me — I didn’t break any rules.”

The Premier said she regularly talks to her father and he has recently started sending her text messages — via his wife.

And every Saturday, she schedules time to visit her parents.

“I feel guilty,” she said. “I spend once a week with him.

“He’s been timing it lately, saying ‘Glad, you’re only staying for 45 minutes today’.”

Today she plans to spend a little longer with him at her uncle’s house, fulfilling Mr Berejiklian’s Father’s Day wish “to be with my family and spend time with my relatives”.

Ms Berejiklian said she and her sisters were “lucky” their parents were still alive and active in the community.

“We feel blessed to have them because not everybody has parents living to that age,” she said.

“No matter what happens in life, my Dad has always had a really positive attitude and I think that’s rubbed off a bit on me because he’s always very can do and no matter what the situation is, he’ll always find a silver lining.”

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Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/gladys-berejiklians-dad-krikor-is-the-power-behind-the-premier/news-story/f414633f5755c62bb5333f9c8c26a87f