Skip to main content

Idaho potatoes being turned into skin-care products

Liyah Babayan and her son, Dominic, 10, with a collection of Make Peace soap bars.

By Bill Schaefer

For Idaho Farm Bureau Federation

TWIN FALLS – Idaho’s famous potatoes have fed the world for generations but now, through the efforts of an Idaho entrepreneur, they are being used to produce skin-care products and at the same time help restore human dignity to displaced people around the world.         

It’s a story that began during a conflict half-way around the world in Asia but found a home here in Idaho.

The year was 2016 and Liyah Babayan was looking to begin a new start-up business making beauty products that would complement her boutique consignment shop, Ooh La La, in Twin Falls.

She was trying to decide what ingredients to use for the beauty products while listening to Beyonce’s hit album “Lemonade.” She was considering a variety of ingredients, including goat milk and honey, when suddenly an inspiration came to her.

“I thought, ‘yeah, you know, life’s never given me lemonade but life has given me potatoes,’” she said.       

She also remembered how her grandmother would apply potatoes as a topical relief for headaches, fevers and rashes.

“I did research on this potato remedy and the (cultures) across time where it exists (and) the potato’s kind of been that dull, boring miracle,” Babayan said.

For Babayan, it was a recognition of the life she had made for herself and her family here in Idaho since arriving as a refugee from Azerbaijan in 1992.

“It brought me to Idaho and gave me potatoes, that was the reality but it was a metaphor, too,” she said of the refugee status that brought her family to Idaho.

And with that inspiration came the impetus to begin a cosmetic line made from Idaho potatoes that she would name, “Make Peace.” Make Peace skin care products include soap, skin lotion, lip balm, beard balm and a clothing line, but soap is the primary product at this time.

“You just have no control over where you end in the world, in life and what it hands you,” she said. “The main thing is to make peace of it and for me make peace became the philosophy of Make Peace but also the products being driven by potatoes, making sure to incorporate potatoes into the organic skin care line.”

Make Peace is not only a new enterprise but represents one more challenge in a life of challenges for Liyah Babayan. Make Peace is an attempt to bring her life’s journey full circle with a product dedicated to helping the world’s homeless and vulnerable population. This is something that resonates with her and her family.

Born in Baku, Azerbaijan, in 1983, her family is of Armenian heritage. The majority of Armenians are Christian and are an ethnic minority in Azerbaijan, a country that is almost 97 percent Islamic.

Azerbaijan and Armenia shared a common border and they were two of 15 republics that comprised the former Soviet Union (USSR). With the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, both Azerbaijan and Armenia became independent nations.

A territorial dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia developed in 1988.

Tensions between the two countries during this time provoked civil unrest and resulted in a series of ethnic cleansing pogroms of Armenians living in Azerbaijan in Sumgait and Baku.

As a result of the pogroms Babayan’s parents would seek safe refuge for the family, which included her brother, Aram, in neighboring Armenia, abandoning their home and many of their possessions back in Baku.

During the next four years, they would live in exile in Armenia while her father petitioned the United States for asylum as political refugees.

Their petition was granted in 1992 and they would begin a new life in Twin Falls, Idaho.  

Fast-forward 28 years and Babayan has established deep roots within the Twin Falls community. She is a college graduate, U.S. citizen, a successful business owner, a mother home-schooling her son and daughter and she has written an autobiography, “Liminal, a refugee memoir”.

Passion is a word that frequently comes up in discussions with Babayan. It’s a state of being that she emphasizes in everything she undertakes. Whether it is her work, her family or her community, if she can’t be passionate about what she is involved in then it’s time to move on and find a new passion in life and work.

When Babayan started Ooh La La in 2007, she made three promises to herself.

The first was that if she should ever lose the passion for her business for two consecutive weeks, she would consider that to be her two-week notice.

The second promise was that she would never compromise her family for her business.  

The third promise was that if Ooh La La proved to be successful, she would begin another business in 10 years.

“If I’m still in business I have to just completely pivot and start something brand new,” she said of this third promise she had made. “Challenge myself in an industry I’m not familiar with so I can keep growing because it will then trickle into the business I already have.”

While seeking a new challenge after 10 years in business was the original motivation for Babayan, there was an even more important reason for this start-up for her.

“For me the driving factor was human rights when it came to this Make Peace company and brand,” she said. “Physical dignity and hygiene as a basic human right … Human beings all deserve dignity. All dignity begins physically. Physical dignity begins with hygiene.”

The Make Peace brand is more than just a product. It is a philosophy that is rooted in Babayan’s personal refugee experiences growing up.

“Children of war have a special place in my heart because I was one of them,” she said. “I know their reality so Make Peace became a little bit bigger than just a soap for me. As a belief that peace is born in the thoughts, words and actions of everyday life. Make Peace is the practice of peace-making within our own heart, our own mind, our own life, our own relationships.”

In the time since she started Make Peace it has remained a small enterprise but that hasn’t stopped Babayan from trying to make a difference in people’s lives.

“Soap is a life necessity but for millions of displaced people around the world this is unattainable,” she said. “So, the commitment was for every product sold, Make Peace would donate a bar of soap to a child or adult in refugee camps as well as displaced people right here in the U.S.

“For me that’s the homeless, that’s the children that are going through the foster care system and many of our veterans, who may have shelter but they are displaced.”

Knowing that some people might not want to change their current beauty products for the Make Peace products, Babayan has extended the merchandising to include a clothing line of T-shirts and infant onesies. With each purchase, a bar of soap is donated to an organization dedicated to helping refugees and displaced people.        

For Babayan, the core foundation for Make Peace is to help bring human dignity to displaced people.

“There is no more intimate way to care for another human being than to care for their cleanliness,” she said. “I’d liked to see the soap be able to generate scholarships and support other projects.”