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  • Setrakian Tours Armenia, Announces Plans to Establish a New Institut

    AGBU PRESS OFFICE
    55 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone (212) 319-6383
    Fax (212) 319-6507
    Email [email protected]
    Webpage www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    Thursday, May 20, 2004

    SETRAKIAN TOURS ARMENIA
    ANNOUNCES PLANS TO ESTABLISH A NEW INSTITUTE FOR DIASPORAN ARMENIANS

    During his first official visit as AGBU President, Mr. Berge Setrakian
    toured Armenia April 1 - 10, 2004, and held a series of meetings with
    top government and church officials from the Republic and neighboring
    Karabakh. He toured AGBU's diverse array of Armenia-based projects
    and announced plans for a new Melkonian center for Armenian youth
    in Yerevan.

    With a long record of assistance to Armenia that began with
    pioneering projects of the 1920's and 1930's--humanitarian relief,
    the repatriation of Armenians, the creation of new villages, and the
    building of medical and educational institutions--AGBU continues its
    contribution to the development of a strong and independent state.

    Today, AGBU's initiatives, with the generosity of its members and
    donors, touch the lives of thousands and thousands of Armenians
    worldwide. AGBU President Berge Setrakian's recent trip reinforced
    the organization's interest in the development of Armenia's spiritual,
    economic and intellectual infrastructure.

    TIES THAT BIND

    Since the 1988 Gyumri earthquake and Armenia's independence in 1991,
    AGBU, while continuing to develop its Diasporan programs, has paid
    special attention to the homeland and more recently, Karabakh.

    During his visit to Armenia, Setrakian met with President Robert
    Kocharian and other high ranking officials, including Premier
    Andranik Markarian, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, Education and
    Science Minister Sergo Yeritsian, Culture Minister Tamar Poghossian,
    Chairman of the Constitutional Court, Gagik Harutyunyan, as well as the
    American, Russian, French and Lebanese ambassadors. At these meetings,
    the AGBU President outlined the organization's vision to work with
    local Armenians to preserve a common Armenian heritage. The government
    officials expressed their appreciation for AGBU's accomplishments
    and for its important achievements and programs both in Armenia and
    the Diaspora in pursuance of the organization's goals and mission.

    Continuing on his ten-day tour, Mr. Setrakian visited the American
    University of Armenia (AUA), where he received a warm reception
    by university staff and members of the student body. He expressed
    great pride in the continuous growth of AUA since its founding as a
    partnership venture of the Armenian government, AGBU and the University
    of California corporation.

    "I am very glad that 80 percent of AUA graduates find employment
    locally and remain in Armenia. We are proud to be part of the
    university," Mr. Setrakian said at the event.

    The AGBU President also met with Rector of Yerevan Medical University,
    Dr. Vilen Hakobyan, and visited the state-of-the-art Ultrasound Center
    (UC), which boasts an extensive training program that attracts medical
    students not only from Armenia but India, Nepal, Russia, and the United
    States. The UC was established jointly with the Yerevan State Medical
    University and Philadelphia's Thomas Jefferson University through
    the financial support of AGBU and the leadership of Dr. Levon Nazarian.

    Mr. Setrakian paid a visit to the president of Yerevan State Univeristy
    (YSU) and met with the members of the University Council. YSU Rector
    Radik Mardirossian expressed his appreciation for AGBU's continued
    support of higher education in the country and the funding it provides
    for various YSU's projects.

    In his remarks, Mr. Setrakian emphasized the importance of
    the development and strengthening of the country's educational
    system. He said that the future of the country would be best secured
    by maintaining the highest level of quality public education. Private
    institutions, he added, can only compliment a more broad-based national
    public educational program.

    A COMMON BELIEF

    Mr. Setrakian visited AGBU-funded projects administered by the Holy
    See of Etchmiadzin, including St. Nersess the Great Hospital and the
    various churches in the capital constructed with funds provided by
    AGBU benefactors, including, St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral-the
    largest Armenian church in the world.

    Mr. Setrakian toured the Arapkir Soup Kitchen and Nork Childrens'
    Center, which have been joint projects of AGBU and the Holy See
    since their establishment in 1993 and are a part of a network of
    six soup kitchens and three Childrens' Centers. These programs
    provide daily meals to more than 1200 elderly pensioners and 5,000
    young Armenians the opportunity to supplement their daily education
    in a number of fields including art, music, sports, and computer
    science. Mr. Setrakian met with many Soup Kitchen recipients during a
    lunchtime meal and listened carefully as they explained how crucial
    AGBU's help is in their lives. On the same day, the AGBU President
    attended a multi-talented performance presented by the Nork Center
    students.

    That evening, Setrakian attended a dinner with all senior directors and
    managers of AGBU-run projects in Armenia. He stressed the importance
    of coordination among AGBU's respective activities in order to create
    a better synergy that would benefit all programs. Mr. Setrakian had
    the opportunity to attend the premier of the "Gayaneh" ballet by
    the National Theatre of Opera and Ballet, a production co-sponsored
    by AGBU.

    On April 4, His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians,
    received President Setrakian at the Holy See of Etchmiadzin. His
    Holiness thanked AGBU for its steady financial and moral support of
    various projects undertaken by the Church. His Holiness expressed
    satisfaction regarding the close cooperation between AGBU and the
    Holy See in the areas of Christian education, church building, social
    program development, and community-church relations. Setrakian shared
    his thoughts about the new programs that AGBU is planning both in
    Armenia and the Diaspora. He further congratulated His Holiness on
    the incredible renovations that have taken place at Etchmiadzin in
    recent years, the progress in the dissemination of Church teachings
    among Armenians, and the level of new clergy recruitment with the
    development of extensive religious educational programs.

    Mr. Setrakian renewed the commitment of AGBU to continue assisting
    the Church to further develop and strengthen its role in the daily
    life of all Armenians.

    After their audience, Setrakian accompanied His Holiness to the
    AGBU-supported Vaskenian Theological Seminary in Sevan to view
    first-hand the cooperation between Etchmiadzin and AGBU. Created
    through the generous donations of AGBU members, the Vaskenian Seminary
    is a modern facility for training and preparing future clergy to
    serve Armenians around the world.

    THE ROAD TO KARABAKH

    While in Armenia, Mr. Setrakian made a special two-day journey
    to Karabakh, where AGBU France has successfully implemented a
    repopulation project--AGBU's centennial initiative--for an enclave
    still scarred by the effects of war. Along with the construction
    of new homes, schools and centers for the local population, the
    ambitious plan offers humanitarian and economic assistance for local
    residents. Following AGBU France's successful rehabilitation of the
    village of Norashen, AGBU chapters worldwide have adopted other similar
    village reconstruction projects. The Karabakh Repopulation Centennial
    Project mirrors AGBU's first accomplishments in 1906 to reach out to
    the rural Armenian populations in the provinces of the Ottoman Empire.

    In Stepanakert, Mr. Setrakian met with Karabakh President Arkady
    Ghukassian along with Prime Minister Anushavan Danielian and Foreign
    Minister Ashot Ghulian, before traveling to Shushi where he was
    received by H. E. Archbishop Barkev Martirossian. Mr. Setrakian
    congratulated the Karabakh administration on the modern highway,
    created through Diasporan funds, that links the Republic with Armenia
    through the Kashatagh (Lachin) corridor.

    Setrakian toured the devastated areas and institutions that remain
    damaged since the war, particularly the hospitals, schools and other
    basic facilities. He also visited various revitalization projects
    accomplished through AGBU funds, including a residential complex that
    houses 50 families of the Karabakh war heroes and one of the main
    roads of the city named after the late AGBU President Alex Manoogian.

    BACK TO YEREVAN

    As he concluded his trip, Mr. Setrakian made a special point of meeting
    with the Armenian Writers' Union (AWU). Levon Ananian, President of
    AWU, thanked Mr. Setrakian for AGBU's support of some of the Union's
    activities that help it to maintain the Armenian heritage.

    "Today in Armenia, AGBU is implementing vital projects. We appreciate
    AGBU's attitude towards Armenian literature and Armenian writers,"
    Ananian said. With a belief in cultural exchanges between Armenia
    and its Diaspora, last year AGBU translated Peter Balakian's Black
    Dog of Fate into Armenian. Now with AGBU's support, AWU has announced
    more ambitious plans to publish a 'contemporary Armenian literature
    in translation' series to expose Armenian language writing to a
    global audience.

    A NEW MELKONIAN FOR A NEW MILLENNIUM

    Education has always been a vital component of AGBU's mission, thus,
    it came as no surprise that Mr. Setrakian chose his Armenia-trip to
    announce plans to establish an Armenia-based institute for Diasporan
    youth. Mr. Setrakian discussed the program with government officials
    who showed great interest and pledged their assistance to the endeavor
    to ensure its success. While project details have not been finalized,
    the initiative, Mr. Setrakian said, would be AGBU's latest and most
    innovative venture to connect Diasporan youth with their homeland.

    The proposed center to be established in the memory of the Melkonian
    Brothers, according to the AGBU President, will include an educational
    building, a 100-room boarding facility, a state-of-the-art Armenian
    language study center, a sports complex and other facilities. It
    promises to strengthen cultural bonds and create exchange programs
    for Armenian youth from all parts of the Diaspora.

    CONTINUED SUPPORT

    After a week of meetings and surveying AGBU's local projects, President
    Setrakian summarized the organization's work in Armenia and its
    symbiotic relationship with the nation's aspirations. He emphasized
    the importance of developing and strengthening the ties between
    Armenia and the Diaspora for the benefit of the future development
    of the Armenian nation as a whole. He added that Armenia's strength
    and survival will provide the strongest and most vital component for
    the preservation of our identity in the Diaspora.


    AGBU is the largest Armenian non-profit organization and promotes
    Armenian heritage around the world. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
    membership organization. It was established in 1906 to preserve
    and promote the Armenian identity and heritage through educational,
    cultural and humanitarian programs. AGBU supports and operates schools,
    centers and offices in 23 countries around the world and serves some
    400,000 Armenian annually.

    For more information on AGBU and its programs in Armenia, please
    visit www.agbu.org.
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