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The Armenian Mirror-Spectator - 11/28/2009

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  • The Armenian Mirror-Spectator - 11/28/2009

    The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
    755 Mount Auburn St.
    Watertown, MA 02472
    Tel: (617) 924-4420
    Fax: (617) 924-2887
    Web: http://www.mirrorspectator.com
    E-mail: [email protected]

    December 5, 2009

    1. Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Telethon Raises $15.8 Million
    2. Agassi Autobiography Bares Ordeals of Pro Athlete Life


    ******************************
    1. Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Telethon Raises $15.8 Million

    By Alin Gregorian

    Mirror-Spectator Staff

    **
    LOS ANGELES - The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund's 12th annual Telethon,
    broadcast live from Los Angeles on November 26, raised $15.8 million.
    Telethon 2009's theme was `Our Shushi,' reflecting the Hayastan All-Armenian
    Fund's strategic objective of helping rebuild the historic Armenian city, in
    Artsakh. The telethon was equally dedicated to the fund's ongoing Rural
    Development Program, which revitalizes scores of towns and villages
    throughout Armenia and Artsakh, with particular emphasis on border
    communities.

    Telethon 2009 featured many performances, as well as short films on Shushi
    and the Rural Development Program, and appearances by a legion of special
    guests, including Ara Vardanyan, executive director of the Hayastan
    All-Armenian Fund; Ara Harutunian, prime minister of Nagorno Karabagh;
    Archbishop Pargev Mardirossian, primate of the Diocese of Artsakh; David
    Babayan, press secretary of the president of Nagorno Karabagh; Robert
    Avetisyan, the republic's permanent representative to the United States,
    and
    several Armenian-American community leaders and benefactors.

    The donations will finance a slew of infrastructure and
    community-development projects in Shushi. Plans include the construction or
    renovation of roads, schools, water networks, residential complexes, and
    various cultural and community institutions. Funds raised in the course of
    2009 will also continue to benefit the Rural Development Program, with
    initiatives ranging from new gas and water pipelines to new or restored
    schools and farming-assistance programs.

    `This telethon is yet another testament to the unity of the Armenian
    people,' said Vardanyan in his address during the event. `Today, as with
    previous telethons, we announce the results of fundraising activities
    organized by various Hayastan All-Armenian Fund affiliates throughout the
    year. The raised funds will help us address issues of national importance.'

    `I would like to express my gratitude to all of our benefactors,' Vardanyan
    continued. `Without your invaluable support, the fund's work will simply be
    impossible. It is your trust that enables us to move forward, rebuild our
    homeland stone by stone, and help shape a better future for our children.'

    Telethon 2009 was preceded by two major fundraising events, in Europe and
    Russia. At the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund's Fundraising Gala, held on
    October 25 in Moscow, Russian-Armenian entrepreneurs contributed close to
    $5.3 million. And during November 19-22, the fund's Pan-European Phoneathon
    rallied Armenians across the continent, as an army of volunteers, working in
    five French cities, made telephone appeals to thousands of compatriots. With
    more than 12,400 supporters making pledges or donations, the phoneathon
    raised $1.8 million - reflecting a 10-percent increase over the 2008 total.

    Overall, an unprecedented number of Armenians from across the globe
    participated in the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund's fundraising events in 2009.
    Of special note has been the exponential growth of the fund's support bases
    in Armenia and Artsakh. By the launch of Telethon 2009, more than 20,000
    Armenia residents had contributed to the fund. Of these supporters, 13,000
    made donations at their local post offices, thanks to a convenient
    contribution process made possible by a recent partnership between the
    Hayastan All-Armenian Fund and HayPost. Thousands of other Armenia residents
    made donations through text massaging, an extremely simple and convenient
    contribution mechanism introduced by longtime fund supporter VivaCell-MTS
    for its mobile-service subscribers.
    Armenia Fund USA Executive Director Raffi Festekjian, also sounded positive.
    He attributed the lower figures to the Russian community, which had raised
    a
    tremendous amount last year. This year, he said, they raised a quarter of
    what they had done in their inaugural year. `And obviously the economic
    conditions are not conducive. Overall, considering the number of
    participants across the board has increased. It means the future is better.'

    He also praised the telethon's presenation, saying it was becoming more
    professional each year in terms of delivery and content. The East Coast, he
    said, still remains difficult territory for this region, since it is `more
    difficult to find a common channel across the board.'

    Phoneathons similar to the ones in France have started taking place in the
    East Coast, he said. A week before the telethon, he said, about 100
    volunteers in Boston gathered to call for donations. Similar efforts also
    took place in New York and Detroit.

    `My goal is to expand the constituency more, to get more of the $200 to $500
    donations, to engage the community. Historically, the East Coast has more
    relied on very large donors, which have slowly moved away especially in
    these difficult times,' he said.

    He added, `As donors over time get used to the organization, you can see
    their donations increasing. We talk a lot about our motherland. This is land
    we've had thousands of year. [But] we can never be free unless we're free of
    poverty, free of despair and have the ability to dream of the future. We
    want to make sure that we give these folks in Shushi and Armenia to have the
    Armenian dream of hard work and perseverance pay off eventually. We want to
    help them create jobs and self-sustain themselves.'

    The chairman of fund's French Affiliate Bedros Terzian, said of the
    phoneathan conducted there, `The commitment made by around 12,400 families
    is the best demonstration of dedication for the homeland. This is the result
    of every single person's free choice rather than their obligation.'

    Although the phoneathon was mainly by the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund's
    French affiliate, it is in fact a genuinely pan-European effort uniting
    Armenian communities across the continent, given the full participation of
    the fund's German, and Switzerland affiliates. Accordingly, the phoneathon's
    volunteer corps includes many Armenians from Germany and Switzerland.

    Orange France Telecom, the major sponsor of the phoneathon, has been
    providing significant infrastructure and technical support to this principal
    fundraising event for years.

    Robert Avetisyan, the representative of Nagorno Karabagh in the US, said on
    Tuesday that he was thrilled with the results of the telethon and its goal
    this year.
    `All Armenians round the world, and those in Karabagh, know the significance
    of Shushi. It is very sad that from the very moment of liberation in 1992,
    not much has been done to restore it,' he said. `We feel that it is time to
    join our effort in order to restore the citadel of Armenian culture and
    identity. We appreciate the Himnadram's involvement in the process.'

    Avetisyan noted that it was the suggestion of the Karabagh government to
    focus on Shushi, and that work is already underway to relocate some
    government offices from Stepanakert to Shushi, in order to help revitalize
    the city. The funding for the moves come from the Karabagh budget, he
    stressed. The end date for that project is 2010, he said.

    `It was our initiative [the Karabagh government] to address the Himnadram
    board of directors to allocate all to funds to the restoration of Shushi and
    we are very satisfied that it did happen and that the money will allow for
    the restoration,' he said.

    Avetisyan stressed that the Karabagh government allocates a great deal of
    its budget to the restoration of villages, roads and other necessities. `We
    think that even a belated initiative to direct the efforts of the whole
    Armenian nation to restore one of the main cities of Karabagh can serve as
    an answer to the question [of Karabagh's future.] This effort helps us be
    more confident in our future and reinforces the idea that only Karabaghtsis
    are the masters of our destiny.'

    Avetisyan said he was delighted with the number of people who participated
    this year. `We thought the amount of course is important, but also important
    is to see how many Armenians in the world support Armenia and Karabagh. The
    most important and the best thing in all this is that we saw a significant
    increase in the number of donors.'

    The biggest dollar amount was raised in Russia, followed closely by the
    European Union.

    Irina Lazarian, the executive director of Armenia Fund USA, said that last
    year's figure of $35 million was an aberration, one which was helped along
    by several individual donors sponsoring specific projects.

    `I consider we did very well, considering the whole situation' of the
    economy, she said. She added that she could not say whether or not the
    debate about the protocols with Turkey affected the pledges, but she did
    note that `Shushi has a special appeal' to Armenians.

    She added, `Shushi is important [also] because it's the first part of
    Karabagh, off Lachin corridor, when you enter Karabagh along the
    Goris-Stepanakert highway. It has to be strong and prosperous.'

    The main corporate sponsor of Telethon 2009 was VivaCell-MTS. Other sponsors
    included ACBA Credit Agricole Bank, Ameria Bank, Ardshininvestbank, and
    HayPost.

    ************************************ **************

    2. Agassi Autobiography Bares Ordeals of Pro Athlete Life

    By Daphne Abeel
    Special to the Mirror-Spectator

    >From the outside, what could be more glamorous than the life of a top,
    professional tennis player? Dressed, usually, in gleaming whites, cheered by
    crowds, they enjoy a life of travel and hob-nobbing with other celebrities
    and adoring fans.

    The inside or back story can be very different and it was for André Agassi,
    who was often ranked as the number-one player in the world, retiring at the
    age of 36. He played competitively for 20 years, from 1986 to 2006.

    Trained and browbeaten unmercifully by his ambitious, enraged father, Mike,
    Agassi began hitting tennis balls at the age of 7. Born in Tehran, his
    father was possessed of a manic drive to make his children, not only André,
    into star tennis players. He built a court in a deserted area outside of
    Las Vegas where the family lived and Agassi was confined to that court for
    most of his childhood, hitting balls spit out by a machine his father
    invented which the young André called `the dragon.'

    He was the youngest of four and the most talented as an athlete. Mike
    Agassi, a former boxer, had tried to develop his three older children as
    tennis players, but none had the natural capabilities of André. His father
    cared very little whether his son got an education and pulled him out of
    school at a moment's notice for matches and practice. Agassi dropped out
    of
    school permanently in the ninth grade.

    Sent to Nick Bolletieri's tennis camp at age 12, he began a regime that was
    equally punishing. Hours of drills, indifferent food and little time for
    himself left the young André ill equipped to deal with the normal process of
    growing up.

    While tennis provided Agassi with a living, fame and even, eventually his
    wife, German tennis star Steffi Graf, throughout the book, he proclaims his
    hatred of the sport. Describing his feelings as a young boy, he says, `I
    hate tennis, I hate it with all my heart, and still I keep playing, keep
    hitting all morning and all afternoon because I have no choice. No matter
    how much I want to stop, I don't. I keep begging myself to stop, and I keep
    playing, and this gap, this contradiction between what I want to do and what
    I actually do, feels like the core of my life.'

    Eventually, he achieves some separation from his obsessed father and
    develops a group of trainers and associates who would help him cope with the
    challenge of being a top athlete. They included his older brother, Philly,
    his friend, Perry, his dedicated trainer, Brad Gilbert and others.

    Agassi is remarkably `open' about his personal difficulties. Tennis fans
    will recall his often outlandish dress and the bandanas he wore around his
    head. The bandanas were necessary because, as he admits, he was losing his
    hair and did not want what he considered a physical humiliation to be
    revealed. It was his first wife, Brooke Shields, who persuaded him to shave
    his head.

    Agassi describes vividly the physical and mental efforts that are necessary
    to endure to achieve top status in a relentlessly competitive arena.
    Especially as he ages, the tapings of his blistered feet, the cortisone
    shots he needs to ease his aching back play more and more a part of his
    maintaining his ranking as a top player. At a low point, he takes drugs both
    to bolster his flagging commitment to the game and to keep his demons at
    bay.

    The description of his marriage to Brooke Shields is the description of what
    was pretty much a non-marriage. Separated for most of the time by their
    different professional commitments, his to the tennis tour, and hers to her
    acting career, the two spend little time together and their attempts at
    achieving any true intimacy were largely thwarted, both by circumstance and
    lack of real communication.

    Often ranked number one, Agassi's nemesis was Pete Sampras, whom he met in
    many finals at major tournaments. Agassi, so conflicted about his
    involvement with professional tennis, is both baffled by and envious of
    Sampras' steady, almost boring and emotionless commitment to the game.

    Thanks, no doubt to his collaborator, J.R. Moehringer, a Pulitzer
    Prize-winning journalist, (whose name appears only in the acknowledgments),
    the book is written with verve and style. The story does have a happy
    ending, for while Agassi was defeated at the US Open in 2006, he had by this
    time met and married Graf and together now they have two children. The book
    closes with a charming description of the two pros hitting balls to each
    other on a rented court near their home in Las Vegas.

    Agassi now gets satisfaction from his foundation and the school it supports,
    the André Agassi College Preparatory Academy, a charter school for
    underprivileged children.

    Many athletes have written memoirs and autobiographies, but few have
    achieved the blatant honesty of this volume. The book could have lasting
    value for young athletes contemplating a professional career.

    Agassi mentions his Armenian background only once. It would be interesting
    to know more about Agassi's feelings about his Armenian-Iranian roots.
    The book will interest tennis fans, but its appeal surpasses that of the
    conventional sports autobiography. It is a story of intense struggle,
    triumph and the ultimate acceptance of defeat on the court, which frees its
    narrator for the next chapter in his life. It is a rewarding read.

    Open By André Agassi. Alfred A.Knopf.,
    388 pp. 2009 $28.95. ISBN 978-0-307-26819-8
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