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Matchmaking, the Ultimate Government Service

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  • Matchmaking, the Ultimate Government Service

    Actual link:  
    <http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/25/fashi on/weddings/25FIELD.html?_r=1&sq=birthright%20 armenia&st=nyt&scp=1&pagewanted=print& gt;
     
    May 25, 2008, NY TIMES

    Matchmaking, the Ultimate Government Service

    By FRANCESCA SEGRÈ

    NEXT month, Justin Mei, 20, will be on his way to the Love Boat.
    That's the nickname for a monthlong cultural tour of Taiwan sponsored and
    partly subsidized by the Taiwanese government. The program - officially
    called the Expatriate Youth Summer Formosa Study Tour to Taiwan - has
    nothing to do with boats and it isn't supposed to be about love. It is
    designed to expose young people with Taiwanese roots like Mr. Mei to the
    motherland through courses in Mandarin, sightseeing and traditional arts.
    -I want to reconnect with my heritage,- said Mr. Mei, who was born in Dallas
    and attends the University of Texas there. -I've been disconnected.-
    But the trip has long had a reputation for flirtations, flings and wedding
    proposals. Hence the nickname.

    Michelle Hsieh, 23, who grew up in Anaheim Hills, Calif., and now lives in
    New York, fantasized about the program since she first heard about it in
    junior high school. She went on the study tour in 2004 and found a boyfriend
    the first week. Of the roughly 500 men and 500 women on her tour, she
    believes most found romance immediately.

    -With no parent supervision, it's bound to happen,- she said.
    Kerry Liou, section chief of expatriate youth programs for the Taiwan
    government Overseas Compatriot Affairs Commission, said in an e-mail message
    from Taipei: -Given that the age of most program participants is only 20
    years old, we don't encourage any romance on the trip. However, we would
    like to see the participants continue to keep in touch after they return to
    their country of residence.-

    The commission, according to its Web site, aims -to unite the strength of
    all our people in Taiwan and abroad to help the government maintain its
    national security and pursue sustainable development.- Those sturdy ideals
    did not seem to be on the minds of many Love Boat participants.

    -My parents didn't know it was a big hookup fest,- Ms. Hsieh said. -They
    thought it was about culture and heritage. I don't think it would ever cross
    their mind that people would go on the trip to find their soul mates.-

    But perhaps Ms. Hsieh and other Love Boaters underestimate their parents.
    According to a study using the latest Census Bureau figures, the percentage
    of Asian women born in the United States who marry Asian men has declined to
    37 percent from 59 percent since 1994. The proportion of American-born Asian
    men who marry Asian women has also dropped, to 52 percent from 65 percent.
    -Foreign-born parents are distraught over the assimilation process for their
    kids,- said Daniel T. Lichter, a professor of policy analysis and management
    at Cornell who has long studied marital assimilation and was the lead author
    of the study. -They want their kids to be closely tied to the religion, the
    race, the language.-

    Ms. Hsieh said that her parents -always said they want me to keep within the
    race or ethnicity - ideally, they want me to marry someone who is
    Taiwanese.-

    -The Love Boat definitely made me want to marry within my ethnicity,- she
    added. -It made me realize how important it was to have that background of
    being from a Taiwanese family.-

    She is now dating a Taiwanese-American.

    Mr. Mei, whose mother encouraged him to go on the trip, said that if his
    parents were aware of the Love Boat's reputation, which he doubts, -then I
    guess they're trying to suggest something to me.-
    He insists that his focus is on Taiwan, not women. -I'm young,- he said.
    -I'm not that obsessed with love. I'd like a girlfriend, but I'm not that
    interested.-

    Taglit-Birthright Israel, a program that sends young American Jews on 10-day
    trips to Israel, is less guarded about its romantic record. In fact, one of
    the program's founders, the financier Michael Steinhardt, treats couples who
    meet on the trip and then marry to a honeymoon at his Caribbean villa. The
    eight-year-old program does not keep track of participants' weddings, but at
    least 30 couples have taken Mr. Steinhardt up on his offer.

    -In Birthright there have been many successful matches, and that is the
    unintended but happy outcome of the trip,- Mr. Steinhardt said. The program,
    designed to strengthen Jewish identity and ties to Israel, will send 23,000
    Americans to Israel this summer.

    -We are demographically challenged,- Mr. Steinhardt added. -In the
    non-Orthodox world, intermarriage rates have soared, and generally the
    intermarried are less likely to have Jewish kids.-
    A survey conducted in 2000 and 2001 by United Jewish Communities found that
    American Jews who married since 1996 had an intermarriage rate of 47
    percent.

    The Israeli government partly sponsors Taglit (Hebrew for -discovery-), and
    Jacob Dayan, the Israeli consul general in Los Angeles, said that when
    marriages came out of the trip, -that's fantastic.- But he said his
    government was most interested in the program's potential to address
    misconceptions about Israel.

    Lance Sager, 27, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Natalie Kline, 26, of
    Potomac, Md., met on a Birthright Israel trip in 2006. They began talking as
    they hiked down from the ruined fortress of Masada just after sunrise on the
    second day.

    Their first kiss was six days later, Ms. Kline remembers: -We were at a
    kibbutz, it was late at night, the sprinklers were going, the moon was up,
    the stars were out. It was like a movie.-

    Mr. Sager said: -You're with everyone who has the same faith. You have a
    strong connection with someone off the bat. You're seeing something you've
    never seen before. You see things from the tops of mountains.-
    Mr. Sager proposed to Ms. Kline in February, and they plan to marry in
    November. Honeymoon location? Israel.

    Sheila Sager, Mr. Sager's mother, said she was thrilled that her son planned
    to marry a Jewish woman, though if he had chosen someone of a different
    faith, she -wouldn't have disowned him.-

    Having taken 160,000 people to Israel so far, Birthright may well be the
    largest free cultural tour program. But it is not the oldest. The Expatriate
    Youth Summer Formosa Study Tour has been running for more than 40 years; the
    Irish Way and the Voyage of Discovery of the National Italian American
    Foundation were both founded in the mid-1970s.

    Birthright Armenia, a relative newcomer to summer cultural programs, was
    established in 2003 and has sent 300 young people to Armenia. At least five
    couples who met on the trip have married.

    Marriage -was never in the short- or long-term vision for the program,- said
    Edele Hovnanian of Middletown, N.J., the founder of Birthright Armenia. -But
    it's icing on the cake. All the better.-

    The program focuses on community service, the Armenian churches and bringing
    people of Armenian descent on visits to the motherland.

    -Every single person is important when the population is so small,- Ms.
    Hovnanian said. Of the 7 million Armenians worldwide, 3 million live in
    Armenia and 1.5 million live in the United States, according to the Armenian
    National Institute.

    Birthright Armenia encourages those with any amount of Armenian blood to
    participate and helps pay for the trips. -It's like gaining an extra player
    on the team when you get an Armenian who is a quarter Armenian,- said Ms.
    Hovnanian, an executive with a family real estate development firm.

    Talar Topjian said -it was love at first sight- when she spotted Raffi
    Sarafian during a Birthright Armenia volunteer meeting in Yerevan, the
    Armenian capital, in July 2005.

    -I saw this girl coming down the stairs,- Mr. Sarafian said. -She was late.
    She walked like a movie star.-

    -There's no way we would've met without the program,- Ms. Topjian said.
    -Right after the meeting we went to a party and we were Armenian-dancing and
    laughing, and that's where it all started.-

    Ms. Topjian, of Washington, and Mr. Sarafian, of Valence, France, are both
    24. They said that looking for a mate was not on their minds, but they
    formed a bond over things Armenian - church, music, dance and country.
    They will marry in France on Aug. 2. -We joke,- Ms. Topjian said, -but we
    have to marry to multiply the race and make a stronger Armenia.-

    One can argue whether any of these programs really strengthen cultural and
    political ties. But the romantic angle is undeniably clear.

    -I have another daughter going to Israel in August,- Mrs. Sager said. -Maybe
    lightning will strike twice.-

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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