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Birthright Armenia Participants Find Much Warmth In The Homeland

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  • Birthright Armenia Participants Find Much Warmth In The Homeland

    Birthright Armenia Participants Find Much Warmth In The Homeland


    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Contact: Linda Yepoyan
    February 28, 2008
    Phone: 610-642-6633
    [email protected]

    Yerevan, Armenia-Despite frigid temperatures, sidewalks covered in
    ice, and multiple layers of outerwear that can make recognition of a
    familiar face out in public quite challenging, there is a handful of
    diasporan volunteers who are quite hot on the Homeland. The physical
    conditions associated with harsh Armenian winters seem a mere blemish
    in the larger scheme of what living in Armenia has to offer them.

    It is true. January, February and March are traditionally not the
    most popular months of the year to be living in Armenia. However, the
    current winter group of Birthright Armenia participants hailing from
    Aleppo, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Scarborough, Ontario
    and Edmonds, WA is getting charged emotionally and spiritually, and
    is reaping the unique benefits of the off-peak immersion experience.

    Areg Maghakian, Mher Azezian, Nyree Abrahamian, Viktoria Simonyan,
    James Keshgegian and Ryan Weber feel pretty fortunate. Most of them
    were scheduled to return to their countries of residence months ago,
    but each has decided to stay on in Armenia for varying, personal
    reasons. There are different aspects of living in Armenia as a
    volunteer that resonate loud and clear with them. Some like the
    obvious benefits their valuable community service or professional
    internship will bring to the resume building process. Others thrive
    on their much improved language skills. Yet others find the newfound
    friendships and other soul-searching relationships they build while
    volunteering in Armenia to be the most noteworthy reason they continue
    to stay. And for others still, they cannot bear the idea of not being
    with their homestay families who have truly made them feel at "home".
    In a way, they have discovered a new home. As one volunteer noted,
    "what was once a place that I associated only with my grandfather's
    stories is now very much an integral part of my own life".

    Areg Maghakian and Ryan Weber were June 2007 arrivals with the Armenia
    Volunteer Corps (AVC). Ryan, a native of Milwaukee, came with the
    initial intent of carrying out community service for three months and
    returning to the US. He stayed on an extra six months because "I loved
    my work, fellow volunteers, coworkers, host family, Birthright/AVC
    staff and the city and country I was living in. The only question I
    was faced with when I was considering extending was "why return?" As
    for Maghakian, if he finds a job that pays for his living expenses,
    his plans are to stay long-term and make Armenia his home.

    Newtown Square, Pennsylvania is a long way from Yerevan, but Jimmy
    Keshgegian was determined to return to Armenia this winter after
    spending three weeks there with the ACYOA Armenia Service Program
    this past summer. Aside from an interesting job placement in the music
    industry working for Sharm, there were many other facets of Armenian
    life that were enticing him back. He explains, "Something about my
    summer stay was not complete. I wasn't finished yet. I could tell
    there was more to it."

    Nyree Abrahamian of Ontario, packed her bags for a six-month
    volunteer opportunity at the Armenian Tourist Development Agency,
    ending in Feburary. Chances are slim that she will be returning in
    February, however. She sought and was offered employment at her
    internship site as a marketing specialist, and looks forward to
    staying longer-term. Says Nyree, "I've decided to stay and work in
    Armenia. I may not know exactly what is ahead of me, but I know that
    I am on the right track. I'm in the right place at the right time, and
    I've never felt so connected to something that I care so deeply about."

    To get a much richer and truer sense of what life in Armenia
    is like, Birthright Armenia, together with one of its sponsored
    organizations, the Armenian Volunteer Corps, actively promotes and
    sponsors volunteerism during the non-summer months. As one volunteer
    recently stated, "If it weren't for Birthright Armenia and AVC,
    visiting Armenia would be comparable to seeing Paris in August - not
    the most true picture of what that city and its people are all about ."

    Birthright Armenia's mission is to strengthen ties between the homeland
    and diasporan youth by affording them an opportunity to be a part
    of Armenia's daily life and to contribute to Armenia's development
    through work, study and volunteer experiences, while developing a
    renewed sense of Armenian identity. For more information, or to make an
    online donation, please visit our web site at www.birthrightarmenia.org
    <http://www.birthrigh tarmenia.org/> .

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