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Dr. John Wilhelm Will Be Honored by The Eastern Diocese

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  • Dr. John Wilhelm Will Be Honored by The Eastern Diocese

    PRESS OFFICE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Taleen Babayan
    Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.net

    April 19, 2010
    ________________________________________


    Dr. John Wilhelm will be honored by the Eastern Diocese with its "St. Vartan
    Award," at the Diocesan Assembly banquet on April 30 in Chicago

    On a winter day in 1989 a plane carrying 37 children landed at Andrews Air
    Force Base in Washington, D.C. The children were victims of the devastating
    earthquake that had struck Armenia two months earlier, leaving 50,000 dead
    and thousands injured and homeless.

    It was on that day - February 9, 1989 - that Dr. John Wilhelm entered their
    story and helped pave the way to modernizing rehabilitation medicine in
    Armenia.

    At the time, Dr. Wilhelm was working for Project HOPE, a not-for-profit
    international health care agency based in Washington, D.C. Upon greeting the
    children - who had come to receive treatment in the U.S. - he struck up a
    friendship with Dr. Garen Koloyan, a young pediatric orthopedic surgeon from
    Yerevan who accompanied the group.

    Over the next six weeks, the two doctors designed an eight-year medical
    program to be implemented in Armenia through Project HOPE. The program would
    train doctors and nurses in pediatric orthopedics and rehabilitation, as
    well as introduce physical and occupational therapy to Armenia's medical
    centers.

    Almost a quarter-century later, Dr. Wilhelm's dedication and commitment has
    brought a better standard of living and improved healthcare to countless
    people in Armenia. In gratitude for his tireless efforts, the Diocese of the
    Armenian Church of America (Eastern) will honor him with the "St. Vartan
    Award," during its 108th annual Diocesan Assembly in Chicago, Ill., on
    Friday, April 30.

    Recognizing potential and determination

    Born and raised in Chicago, Dr. Wilhelm was trained as an obstetrician and
    endocrinologist, and received a master's degree in public health. As a
    senior medical student, he spent four months in Sri Lanka with Project HOPE,
    which implements health education programs and provides humanitarian
    assistance worldwide. "That was the beginning of my realizing there's a
    bigger world," said Dr. Wilhelm.

    In the mid-1970s, rather than entering private practice, he opted to work
    with Project HOPE-and the association continued for the subsequent 13 years.
    During this time, Dr. Wilhelm developed international healthcare programs in
    Latin America and the Caribbean.

    He began working for the Chicago Department of Public Health in 1990, and
    since 2005, Dr. Wilhelm has served as the executive director of the
    non-profit Infants Welfare Society of Chicago, which provides healthcare for
    low-income women and children.

    It was during his tenure at Project HOPE that Dr. Wilhelm and Dr. Koloyan
    initiated a program to train medical professionals in pediatric orthopedics
    and rehabilitation.

    "Dr. Koloyan was a visionary and said the best thing would be to help him
    build a pediatric orthopedic and rehabilitation center in Armenia," said Dr.
    Wilhelm. "Project HOPE wanted to train Armenians in Yerevan to take over and
    build this whole system of care for children with disabilities."

    Seeing potential and determination in Dr. Koloyan, Dr. Wilhelm supported Dr.
    Koloyan's one-year fellowship in pediatric orthopedics at the Shriner's
    Hospital in Portland, Ore. The training helped to further improve the
    treatment of children with orthopedic problems in Armenia, especially those
    with cerebral palsy.

    "After the training, we were able to create in Armenia the rehabilitation
    team, which helps children with disabilities in their medical,
    psychological, and social rehabilitation," said Dr. Koloyan. "We started the
    outreach clinic project in many regions of Armenia, in Artsakh, in all
    orphanages around the country, where they have children with
    physical-including orthopedic and mental-problems."

    Later Dr. Wilhelm, along with the Chicago Armenian community, helped raise
    money for the renovation of the pediatric orthopedic department and the
    operating room at the University Children's Hospital in Yerevan, as well as
    additional training sessions for other doctors. In addition, Dr. Wilhelm
    personally supported and cared for children who received prostheses in the
    U.S.

    The drive to help

    At the suggestion of the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Dr. Koloyan
    also initiated a sports rehabilitation program in Armenia. Dr.
    Wilhelm-again, supported by the Chicago Armenian community-organized a
    series of fundraisers for the sports program.

    "We have a group of pillars of the Armenian community in the Chicago, a
    group that is still very strong," said Dr. Wilhelm. "Many of these people
    are among my best friends."

    Eventually, the program became known as PYUNIC (the Armenian Association for
    the Disabled) and Dr. Wilhelm served as its first president in the United
    States. Children with disabilities benefited from summer activities at Lake
    Sevan, winter ski camps, and the introduction of wheelchair basketball.

    Armenian youths with prostheses took part in the wheelchair sections of the
    Chicago and New York marathons, and participated in downhill skiing and
    sailing in the Special Olympics World Winter and Summer Games in Nagano,
    Salt Lake City, and Atlanta.

    "This speaks to his work with PYUNIC," said Dr. Koloyan. "Children who had
    never traveled outside of their native village before the earthquake, were
    now able to have a new and better life through the sport and camp program."

    The two doctors' most recent project is the building of a new pediatric
    orthopedic department at the Arabkir Joint Medical Center in Yerevan, an
    undertaking they began in 2007. This year, Dr. Wilhelm founded "Renaissance
    of Children," a non-profit sister organization which aims to provide free
    treatment for children with disabilities in Armenia.

    In 2000, the Yerevan State Medical University awarded Dr. Wilhelm the
    "Mkhitar Heratsi" medal for his humanitarian work.

    "Through all these projects, he was able to improve the lives of thousands
    of disabled children in Armenia, not only those who were injured in the
    earthquake, but all disabled children around the country," Dr. Koloyan said.


    Dr. Wilhelm has been to Armenia three times, in 1992, 1996, and 2000.

    "I am just so struck by the Armenian community's drive to help their
    country," he said. "As an ordinary American, it's just amazing to see the
    commitment of the diaspora to help their homeland."

    He adds, "We have a real leader in Dr. Koloyan. Our work is a good
    investment; it's a success story."

    Dr. John Wilhelm will be presented with the Diocese's "St. Vartan Award" at
    the 108th Diocesan Assembly, in Chicago, Ill. The presentation will be made
    during the assembly's gala banquet on Friday evening, April 30, starting at
    6:30 p.m., at the Marriott Chicago O'Hare Hotel. For information on the
    banquet and this year's Diocesan Assembly, log onto the host parish's
    website, www.2010diocesanassembly.org.

    ###



    Photo attached: Dr. John Wilhelm.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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