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Diocesan Council and FAR Board gather in Armenia

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  • Diocesan Council and FAR Board gather in Armenia

    PRESS OFFICE
    Department of Communications
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Jake Goshert, Media Relations Specialist
    Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 160; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.net

    July 19, 2007
    ___________________

    FIRST EVER JOINT TOUR OF ARMENIAN PROJECT SITES

    This June marked the first joint tour of Armenia by the Diocesan Council and
    the Board of Directors of the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR), the
    Diocesan-affiliated development organization which is working to bring hope,
    opportunity, and empowerment to the people of Armenia.

    The members of the Diocesan Council serve as the Board of Trustees for FAR,
    and the trip was a chance for the two groups to get to know each other and
    to see the work FAR is accomplishing. Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate
    of the Diocese and President of FAR, led both delegations.

    "We -- the Primate, the Diocesan Council, and the FAR Board -- spent quality
    time together," said James Kalustian, Diocesan Council treasurer. "We got
    to know each other better on a personal level and got a better understanding
    for what motivates each of us in our service to the Church and our people.
    It was an impressive and inspiring group of people. We also accomplished a
    lot in terms of work we needed to get done and people and organizations we
    met with."

    Many of the Council members had seen pictures and read reports about the
    work of FAR does in Armenia, but seeing it first-hand, they said, really
    brought home the ability FAR has in efficiently turning donations into hope,
    opportunity, and empowerment for the Armenian people.

    "FAR's success is truly inspiring beyond words," Kalustian said. "The
    projects are really making a difference in the lives of people who need our
    help to help themselves. It was also wonderful to see first-hand that FAR
    is now going beyond just providing aid but is helping people become self
    sufficient by teaching them skills and trades. As inspiring as it was, we
    soon realized there is still so much to be done."

    During the trip, the Primate, FAR Founder and Honorary Life Chairman Kevork
    Hovnanian, Chairman of the FAR Board of Directors Randy Sapah-Gulian, and
    FAR Executive Director Garnik Nanagoulian met with Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian. The FAR Board and Diocesan Council delegation met with Prime
    Minister Serge Sargsyan, along with the foreign and health ministry.

    "We were happy to hear the highly positive assessments these leaders had of
    FAR and our work," said Garnik Nanagoulian, FAR executive director. "All of
    them expressed hope that FAR will continue our work in Armenia and shared
    their appreciation for the significant contributions our donors and
    supporters have made to the nation."

    Diocesan Council Chairman Oscar Tatosian noted that the meeting with Prime
    Minister Sargsyan was particularly productive and enlightening.

    "He's well aware of how important the Eastern Diocese is and the role the
    Eastern Diocese has played in supporting Armenia. He was thankful for it
    and he was well informed. It was also obvious he had good relationship with
    our Primate," Tatosian said. "The one thing he did mention was that it
    would optimize our efforts if there was more cooperation and lack of
    duplication between the different organizations operating in Armenia.
    That's definitely an approach we need to look at."

    The group also met with U.S. Embassy officials, such as the then-charge
    d'affairs Anthony Godfrey, and the director of the U.S. Agency for
    International Development (USAID) in Armenia, Karl Fickenscher. At the
    Embassy the group discussed the recent awarding of a $3.1 million USAID
    contract to rebuild the water system around the city of Artashat.

    VARIETY OF PROJECTS

    The group of community leaders saw many different projects operated by FAR.


    They toured the Homeless Children's Center in Yerevan, where FAR is offering
    hope to at-risk youth and leading the charge to modernize Armenia's foster
    care system. They met with elderly beneficiaries at the FAR-run Gyumri
    Senior Center and the Vanadzor Old Age Home, who are living their final
    years in dignity thanks to FAR's efforts.

    The Board members also met with students at the Gyumri Information
    Technology Center, which is creating the opportunity of well-paid employment
    in the earthquake ravaged zone. They also toured the Octet Music School, a
    project providing hope to the children of Gyurmi by providing access to
    musical education. They also toured the FAR soup kitchen in Gyumri, which
    is made possible by the complete financial support of FAR Board member
    Nishan and Margrit Atinizian.

    The Board members also had time to talk with many of the beneficiaries of
    FAR projects, to hear how FAR efforts are empowering them to build the civil
    society of Armenia. They spoke with recipients of Armenian National Science
    and Education Fund (ANSEF) grants, which provides financial support to
    Armenia's scientists and researchers. They heard from the older orphans
    able to make a life for themselves thanks to the opportunities provided by
    the Gulamerian Vocational Training and Education Program as well as the
    scholars attending college and university thanks to the Mathevosian and
    other scholarship programs.

    At the National Medical Library the group also spoke with participants in
    FAR's Continuing Medical Education (CME) program, which pairs provincial
    doctors with their peers in Yerevan to provide education and access to the
    latest technology. The Board met with both rural participants and those
    Armenian doctors who volunteering to serve as mentors.

    TOWARDS DEVELOPMENT

    Following the joint tour with the Diocesan Council members, the FAR Board of
    Directors held a meeting to discuss the group's focus.

    "The objective of the visit was to review FAR programs and, looking at the
    current and future needs of the Armenian people, to develop a new strategy
    for FAR over the next 10 years," said Randy Sapah-Gulian, chairman of FAR.

    He said the FAR Board agreed with the need to further efforts to provide
    tools, resources, and guidance to the Armenian people so they can build
    their own civil society and be empowered to create their own future.

    "When FAR was established, we had to be there to provide aid, food, shelter,
    medicine, so the Armenians could overcome the earthquake and other
    troubles," Sapah-Gulian said. "But today, as the nation has strengthened,
    FAR remains there to provide a helping hand, not a charitable handout."

    -- 7/19/07

    E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News and
    Events section of the Eastern Diocese's website, www.armenianchurch.net.

    PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate and President of
    the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR), with members of the Diocesan Council and
    FAR Chairman Randy Sapah-Gulian visit FAR's Homeless Children's Center
    during the recent joint trip to Armenia.

    PHOTO CAPTION (2): Vicki Hovanessian, wife of Diocesan Council Vice
    Chairman Dr. Raffy Hovanessian, listens to some of the students from FAR's
    Octet Music School in Gyurmi during the joint Diocesan Council and FAR Board
    of Directors tour of FAR projects.

    PHOTO CAPTION (3): Members of the FAR Board and the Diocesan Council listen
    to a presentation on the success of FAR's Gyumri Information Technology
    Center (GITC) in rebuilding the region's economy.
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