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Cleveland Community Rallies Around Teen From Armenia Suffering From

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  • Cleveland Community Rallies Around Teen From Armenia Suffering From

    CLEVELAND COMMUNITY RALLIES AROUND TEEN FROM ARMENIA SUFFERING FROM LEUKEMIA

    COMMUNITY | AUGUST 6, 2013 4:11 PM
    ________________________________

    Funds Desperately Needed for Costly Treatments

    By Alin K. Gregorian

    Mirror-Spectator Staff

    CLEVELAND - When one thinks of a major Armenian community in the US,
    certainly Glendale, Fresno and Watertown come to mind. However, it
    seems when it comes to the true meaning of community, the folks in
    Cleveland make up for their small size with their generous hearts.

    The community, through St. Gregory of Narek Church and its pastor, Fr.

    Hratch Sargsyan, is rallying around Stella Arakelyan, 17, a leukemia
    patient from Armenia has been receiving care at the Cleveland Clinic
    since May. Stella is accompanied by her mother, Iren.

    In a letter to the Mirror-Spectator, she wrote, "Four days before
    her prom in Yerevan, Armenia, she was diagnosed with Philadelphia
    Chromosome Positive Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. This diagnosis came
    as a shock to her family and friends and herself. At the tender age
    of 10 she had already been diagnosed with another life-threatening
    disease - diabetes. Stella had endured her illness with extraordinary
    strength and maturity, but this new blow and the terrifying diagnosis
    of cancer has put a stop to her dreams."

    Iren Arakelyan, speaking by phone from Cleveland, praised the community
    for its warmth and support in this trying time.

    Speaking in Armenian, she said, "I have no relatives here, no one or
    nothing. Now I feel I am surrounded by people who are all dear to me
    and my child. There are such good people here in Cleveland. They are
    all taking care of me."

    Stella Arakelyan goes into Cleveland Clinic for monthly chemotherapy
    treatments, her mother said. This month was the third such treatment,
    the last part of a three-month cycle.

    The results after this last round will be analyzed at the end of
    August, at which time, the next course of action will be determined.

    Iren Arakelyan, herself a physician as is her husband, Levon, said
    that there is about an 80-percent chance that their daughter will
    require a bone marrow transplant.

    "It is very difficult," Iren Arakelyan said. "Still, we are fighting
    it. Stella is an excellent student. She wants to go to medical school
    too and become a doctor," said her mother. "She is very beautiful
    and smart. We are fighting with God's help. We have no choice."

    According to the church website, despite the deep discounts Cleveland
    Clinic has given the young patient, the cost of the treatment is
    exorbitant, hovering around $500,000 now and expected to rise if
    there is the need for a bone marrow transplant.

    "We are in the process of initiating a campaign to gather some funds
    from charitable organizations, however Stella and her mother who are
    now living in the St. Gregory of Narek parish house are trying to cut
    even on their daily expenses to save for the treatment. Their needs are
    not only monetary but spiritual and moral," read the church's website.

    The Armenian-born Sargsyan took the helm of St. Gregory of Narek Church
    in 2011, after short stints at St. John Armenian Church of Southfield,
    Mich. under the guidance of its pastor, the Rev. Garabed Kochakian,
    and St. Sahag Armenian Church in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.

    Sargsyan has opened the doors of the parish house to the Arakelyans
    and parishioners take turns hosting the family, cooking for them or
    transporting them.

    "We mainly try to support them morally and with our prayers," Sargysan
    said. "We don't give up hope."

    He added, "I feel joyful to see a challenging situation in which
    fellow Christians and fellow Armenians all come together. Half a
    million dollars will be hard to raise but for some reason, I don't
    lose faith. We need to find those generous people."

    He continued, "It is sad and difficult when I go to the hospital
    to visit Stella. I just visited her today," but, he added, she is
    responding well to treatment.

    In a statement, Iren Arakelyan wrote, "Father Hratch Sargsyan, the
    spiritual leader of the community, is responsible for our free lodging
    adjacent to the church and for the invaluable moral support to our
    family. The benevolence, the atmosphere of constant care and material
    support has created an ambience of being surrounded by family. Stella
    is on the very beginning of her path to recovery and the amazing
    warmth and moral support she is getting from the Armenian community
    has an immense effect on the success of the healing process. There
    are no words with which I can express my heartfelt gratitude to the
    people who have become the pillar of our strength in these few first
    days. On behalf of my family, I want to thank all who are supporting
    us with their Christian generosity of spirit in this difficult time."

    Dr. Gevog Yaghjyan, a fellow physician in Armenia who works at
    Yerevan's University Hospital N1 with Stella's parents, got a call
    from colleague Dr. Bella Grigorian, a neurologist in same hospital,
    asking for help for the young girl. "I told Bella the truth; the only
    place where they can get not a cutting age treatment and support of
    Armenian community will be in Cleveland. On May 23 I got the latest
    lab results from Iren by e-mail and called Dr. Rafi Avitsian with
    the question, 'can we help this family. They need our help.' Rafi's
    reaction was 'Send all the results immediately.'"

    Through Avitsian's coordination with the Cleveland Clinic International
    Department, all the paperwork and visa applications were completed
    in two days.

    Donations for Stella Arakelyan can be made via
    http://www.stgregoryofnarek.org/news/we-need-your-help/ or checks
    can be mailed to St. Gregory of Narek Church, 678 Richmond Rd.,
    Richmond Heights, OH 44143. Make checks payable to St. Gregory of
    Narek, memo line: Stella Arakelyan.

    Sargysan stressed that if anyone is interested in contacting him
    about the case, he would be happy to speak to them at 440-264-3541
    or [email protected].

    There is also Facebook page at
    https://www.facebook.com/HelpForStellaAraqelyan.

    - See more at:
    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/08/06/cleveland-community-rallies-around-teen-from-armenia-suffering-from-leukemia/#sthash.gg47RIrc.dpuf

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