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Birthright Armenia Alums Now In The Lead

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  • Birthright Armenia Alums Now In The Lead

    PRESS RELEASE
    Contact: Linda Yepoyan
    August 31, 2007
    Phone: 610-642-6633
    [email protected]



    BIRTHRIGHT ARMENIA ALUMS NOW IN THE LEAD

    Yerevan, Armenia - Driven by their passion, past experience, and a strong
    belief in the growing youth movement to Armenia, three former volunteers
    sponsored by Birthright Armenia seized the opportunity to lead by example
    this summer. Each one was responsible for imparting their knowledge and
    enthusiasm to a new crop of volunteers, while representing three leading
    diasporan organizations in Armenia.

    Tamara Shahabian, who interned with the Armenian Volunteer Corps (AVC) in
    2005, returned to the Homeland as the intern coordinator for the newly
    launched AGBU Yerevan Summer Internship Program. With sixteen young
    diasporans in her group, Shahabian relied on her own experience and personal
    contacts to help pull together a dynamic five-week itinerary of cultural,
    social and educational activities. `I was honored to have the opportunity
    to help lead these interns in their first experience working in Armenia,
    because I know first-hand how inspiring and life-changing intern programs
    can be. My goal was that the participants get a fuller picture of Armenia,
    and gain a desire to contribute to its future,' comments Shahabian.

    Her alumni colleague, Talene Kavazanjian, a native of Toronto, also
    volunteered with the AVC in 2005. Yerevan was the base for her two-month
    stint as the Intern Director of the Christian Youth Mission to Armenia
    (CYMA) program. Having to lead 17 young interns accepted under the
    auspices of the Western Diocese, Kavazanjian wore all the necessary hats of
    supervisor, activities coordinator, mentor, and colleague, to ensure her
    group was having as great an experience as possible while interning in
    Armenia. `Prior to having lived daily life in Armenia, I never
    understood the distant gap that existed between the Diaspora and Armenia, or
    the desperate need to bridge the gap by discovering Armenia on your own, and
    creating a personal connection with the Homeland,' explains Kavazanjian. She
    adds, `I wanted to work with CYMA, because I knew firsthand, that it is only
    by working and living in Armenia, that I myself was able to connect to our
    motherland, emotionally, professionally as well as culturally. My journey to
    Armenia, provided me the opportunity to grow spiritually, to immerse in our
    rich cultural life, all while growing in my professional career, and it is
    for that reason, I wished to work with an internship program that seeks to
    foster these feelings and changes in other young diasporan Armenians.'

    Maral Melkonian, an AVC volunteer in 2006, joined in with her own leadership
    role as the Director of the AYF Summer Internship Program. It was Maral
    who spoke so passionately about her own experience at a community event upon
    her initial return to the U.S. that moved the AYF internship coordinators to
    approach her for the directorship. `I so enjoyed being able to share with
    my AYF interns the excitement of building their own experience, as they
    embarked on their own journey to Armenia,' says Melkonian. `The past two
    months afforded me ample opportunity to work closely with the interns and
    witness them discover the importance of their presence in Armenia, but
    mostly the meaning of the present time in Armenia's modern day history.

    Birthright Armenia's philosophy promotes the preparation of volunteers for
    future leadership roles within their communities, diasporan organizations,
    and in the development of Armenia. Kavazanjian clearly understands the
    ultimate goal, and realizes the personal changes she has undergone in a
    before and after scenario that she shares.

    `Before leaving for my first internship in Armenia in 2005, I was asked in a
    survey, `Do you think it is your generation's turn to contribute to the
    future development of Armenia' and I remember thinking to myself, what an
    odd question? What could I, or other Armenians my age possibly do for
    Armenia?", tells Kavazanjian. "Three years ago, hardly anyone ever talked
    about moving to Armenia, or contributing to its future development.  Within
    those two short months, I realized the importance of my role in the future
    of Armenia, and I now feel it is our generation, more than that of my
    parents or grandparents, that will someday live in Armenia, and partake in
    the development and strengthening of our newly independent country".

    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. To learn more about the organization, or to support its mission
    through an online contribution, please visit www.birthrightarmenia.org

    # # #
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