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AGBU Yerevan Summer Intern Program's Premier Session Strengthens

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  • AGBU Yerevan Summer Intern Program's Premier Session Strengthens

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    Thursday, August 16, 2007

    AGBU Yerevan Summer Intern Program's Premier Session Strengthens Global
    Armenian Community

    On Sunday, August 5, 2007, the inaugural season of the AGBU Yerevan
    Summer Intern Program (YSIP) ended when the last of the 16 students
    returned home to their respective communities filled with a new direct
    knowledge of the land and people of Armenia.

    During the five-week YSIP program, the participating students from four
    countries (Canada, Egypt, Romania and the United States) worked as
    interns in some of Armenia's premier institutions and corporations,
    including, the Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Armenia, the
    country's National Assembly, the Central Bank of Armenia, the American
    University of Armenia, the Cafesjian Foundation, the "Sharm" media
    company, and a number of leading medical institutions.

    YSIP is AGBU's third summer intern program, joining the New York and
    Paris programs to offer college-aged students a perfect mix of
    professional and personal experiences. The program is unique in that it
    gives Armenians studying in different educational institutions all over
    the world a chance to increase their work experience and reconnecting
    them to their heritage.

    While workdays are spent gaining hands-on work experience, in the
    evenings and weekends YSIP participants were given the opportunity to
    explore Armenia and Karabakh. In addition to the traditional tourist
    attractions of Garni, Geghard, Sevan, Dilijan, and Khor Virap, students
    visited many AGBU-supported programs in Armenia, touring the American
    University of Armenia and the Ultrasound Training Center, attending a
    concert by the world-renowned Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra, and being
    treated to a performance and exhibition at one of the three AGBU
    Children's Centers.

    During a special weekend trip to Karabakh, YSIP participants also saw
    first-hand the great impact AGBU-funded projects in the region are
    having, including the rebuilt Stepanakert School #7, an apartment
    building for war veterans and war widows, a chess school, the Alex
    Manoogian monument on Alex Manoogian Street in Stepanakert, and a
    concert by the Karabakh Chamber Orchestra, all of which were established
    through the generosity of AGBU donors.

    YSIP interns also took a trip to three villages in Karabakh's southeast
    Hadrut region that are part of the AGBU Repopulation Project. They
    toured the growing village of Norashen, which already has a school,
    kindergarten and medical clinic, and the smaller Bareshen settlement
    nearby. Students also saw the newly inaugurated village of Jrakn, which
    will be completed in the next few years. As part of their journey to
    Karabakh, interns had the unique opportunity to meet with Karabakh
    National Assembly Speaker, Ashot Ghulyan, and learn about the progress
    Karabakh has made towards greater stability and prosperity.

    As an added feature of the YSIP summer schedule, students took part in
    Armenian language classes, dancing lessons, history lectures, as well as
    meetings with various governmental leaders of the Republic of Armenia.
    Some of the featured speakers and leaders who met with YSIP interns were
    Ashot Melkonian, Director of Armenia's History Institute; Hayk Demoyan,
    Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum; and Deputy Foreign Minister of
    the Republic of Armenia, Armen Bayburtian. The weekly dance classes for
    YSIP interns at the Nork Children's Center culminated in a small July
    31, 2007 performance for the local community.

    Lia Sarkissian of Los Angeles interned at the Karagyozian Clinic and had
    a positive experience, learning the medical field in another country.
    "My impressions of Armenia's medical facilities were eye-opening. I saw
    differences, but at the same time I am proud to be given the opportunity
    to participate in an internship program here and gain first-hand
    knowledge. I cannot describe or fully explain the emotions that I felt
    here in Armenia. I will never forget these five weeks that I spent
    here." Sarkissian says she is eager to visit Armenia at the next
    available opportunity.

    Another Armenian American, Aleen Tovmasian, interned at a legal
    consulting firm, Global SPC, in Yerevan. She blogged about her summer
    work experience on the YSIP blog. "My internship, or 'practica' as they
    call it here, [allowed me to] conduct research and formulate, translate,
    and help with sociological surveys in benchmark countries in order to
    determine what may be the best plan for implementation domestically. It
    is extremely interesting to read about the technological, political, and
    financial climates in Armenia, and work toward improvements in those
    areas. I never imagined that I would be as interested in the development
    of policy, but I guess much of my intrigue with the topic emerges from
    my newfound attachment to this country and the prosperity of its
    children. With more technological advancements, the children of Armenia
    will be able to keep up with and have the same opportunities as children
    in other parts of the world."

    YSIP co-coordinator Tamar Shahabian is assured that the interns are all
    satisfied with the AGBU program and impressed with their experiences.
    "We were very well received here. They have a deeper understanding as to
    why they feel Armenian. There are difficulties here, but the interns
    want to come back again; that tells me that the program was successful."


    Shushanik Ghaltakhchian, also a YSIP co-coordinator, was directly
    involved in job placement process and echoes that the program was hugely
    successful: "The biggest achievement of the program is that most of
    these youngsters have decided to come back to Armenia and this time not
    alone, but with their families, grandmas, sisters and other family
    members."

    YSIP also organized a reception for program supervisors at Yerevan's
    local Folk Art museum on Thursday August 2, 2007. The event was designed
    to thank all the employers who generously opened their offices to YSIP
    participants and ensured that they receive a great deal of experience in
    their respective fields of study. Many of the supervisors asked to
    address the gathering and expressed their happiness at YSIP's success.

    While summer internships are common in the West, they have only recently
    become more prevalent in Armenia. So, it is no surprise that YSIP
    supervisors, like Harutyun Poghossian, Head of Marketing and Quality
    Department of ACBA Credit Agricol Bank, also found the experience
    educational and rewarding. "It was a great pleasure for us to have two
    young people working with us whom we loved very much and whose leaving
    will be difficult for us. They saw all the processes going on in our
    bank. They got in touch with the bank employees and, what is more
    important, learned a lot about Armenians [in Armenia]," Poghossian
    explained.

    For Mary Ghazarian, Executive Director of the EuroTerm company, the
    AGBU's offer was unexpected. "Our intern perfectly substituted our
    employee who was on vacation. My assessment of YSIP is very positive.
    Youth from the diaspora come to Armenia, get in touch with us and get
    acquainted with our businesses," Ghazarian said.

    To keep friends and family informed about their homeland experiences,
    YSIP interns posted items from their time in Armenia and Karabakh on a
    specially prepared weblog (or blog) designed for the program. Filled
    with stories and photos, the YSIP blog can be found online by visiting
    www.agbu.org/ysip.

    YSIP Intern, Lara Golnazarians summed up her summer of a lifetime in her
    blog entry at the end of July: "I never realized how holistically
    encompassing this experience would be. A five-week internship, which I
    expected would add to a warm extension as a young professional, has
    become a journey of self- realization...while visiting Armenia, I
    continuously experience a wide and varying range of feelings. Besides
    feeling happiness, joy and pride, I also felt pain, suffering and
    frustration. Although contrary to my initial intentions, I believe that
    one must feel all these emotions in order for a visit to Armenia to be
    more than just a superficial journey."

    The AGBU Yerevan Summer Intern Program (www.agbu.org/ysip) places young,
    aspiring Armenians in five-week internships at leading institutions,
    organizations and corporations in Yerevan, Armenia, while providing a
    well-rounded program of Armenian cultural, educational and community
    service activities. To obtain an application or information about the
    2008 program, please email [email protected].

    For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit
    www.agbu.org.

    With reporting from Gohar Gevorkian of Azg newspaper (08/04/07)
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