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Birthright Armenia Now Thriving Year-Round

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  • Birthright Armenia Now Thriving Year-Round

    PRESS RELEASE
    BIRTHRIGHT ARMENIA
    November 20, 2006
    Contact: Linda Yepoyan
    Phone: 610-642-6633
    [email protected]


    BIRTHRIGHT ARMENIA NOW THRIVING YEAR-ROUND

    Yerevan, Armenia - With three years of successful volunteer program
    sponsorship under its belt, Birthright Armenia has proven successful once
    again in bringing new volunteers to participate in the progress of the
    Homeland. This year an increasing amount of diasporans are recognizing
    volunteerism as more than something to fill in the summer gap and are
    choosing longer stays in the colder months. The proof is in the numbers.
    With fall and winter enrollments up by more than 300% from 2004, the
    2006/2007 volunteer program is proving to be one of the strongest yet.

    So, why are these volunteers braving the cold and putting their current
    professional lives on hold to volunteer in the Homeland?
    Twenty-five-year-old Armenian Volunteer Corp (AVC) volunteer Laura T. states
    that she chose a year-long volunteer program because she wanted to allow
    enough time to make a genuine effort to contribute to Armenia. `One of the
    main factors in committing to a long-term stay in Armenia is the
    understanding that building relationships and trust within a community takes
    time to develop. Personally, I anticipated many significant cultural
    challenges and dramatic language improvements necessary before beginning to
    understand how and where to contribute.'

    Recognizing that longer-term stays enhance a volunteer's connection through
    total immersion, Birthright Armenia has made a significant push this season
    to attract volunteers for community service programs outside the summer
    months. All signs show that their efforts are working as the group is
    currently partnering with more than 15 service organizations, bringing in
    volunteers from more than 12 different countries. University of Maryland
    Business School graduate and AVC volunteer Sevan Ohanian says that because
    he wanted the experience of living and working in Armenia for a longer
    period of time, the AVC fall program allowed him the flexibility to fulfill
    his goals. Both Laura and Sevan felt that volunteering after the summer
    busy season when most of the short-term volunteers had already left would
    actually help them achieve more stability in a new environment.

    As with the summer program, volunteers participating in the fall and winter
    programs are dedicating at least 30 hours per week to volunteer activities
    ranging from English instruction to governmental work to environmental
    preservation. In addition, they are all engaged in the supplementary
    services offered by Birthright Armenia to fully immerse participants in
    Armenian culture, including weekly educational forums, Eastern Armenian
    language instruction, excursions to the various regions of Armenia and
    Nagorno-Karabagh, and social `havaks' that bring together diasporan
    volunteers and Armenian youth. Many of the volunteers are also living with
    Armenian host families for either all or part of their stay as part of
    Birthright Armenia's homestay program.

    Finally fulfilling a four-year dream of visiting Armenia, Laura points out
    that living in the Diaspora often portrays a skewed vision of Armenia's
    current reality based on a `collection of historical myths.' Although Laura
    feels that even a year may not be long enough, she aims to `understand the
    source and necessity of the myths and differentiate between the ones that
    stunt our growth and the ones that inspire us to move forward.'

    Sevan also used this sort of sentiment to propel him to the Homeland. He
    notes that people are often quick to criticize Armenia instead of
    recognizing it as a young country just barely out of communist reign.
    `Instead of criticizing Armenia, we in the Diaspora need to do everything we
    can to ensure its prosperity,' Sevan asserts.

    Volunteers and working professionals such as Laura and Sevan embody exactly
    the ideals Birthright Armenia is striving to instill in all diasporans - the
    idea that true service to the Homeland continues even after leaving Armenia.
    Laura, who is currently working with the Women's Center at Yerevan State
    University and World Vision Armenia in the Building Sustainable Livelihood
    Program, says she hopes to gain insight into Armenia's current political
    situation so that she can work in the future to `support community
    re-empowerment and education to influence decision-makers, locally and
    nationally.'

    Sevan, who is aiming to return to the U.S. fluent in Eastern Armenia, feels
    that since the country's independence from the Soviet Union, the idea of a
    dedicated Motherland has become an increasing influence in the lives of all
    Armenians.  `It has given us a home and a country to call our own after all
    that we have been through as a nation.' Sevan is optimistic that his time
    in Armenia will help him to spread the Homeland to other diasporans.

    Hopefully volunteers such as Laura and Sevan are only the beginning of a new
    wave of dedication and participation in the future of Armenia. As Laura so
    aptly noted, Armenia must become more than a `collection of myths' in order
    to truly bridge the gap. `Armenia has been a very vague yet ever present
    state of being in our family and in my life - you just are Armenian with no
    special criteria and no questions asked. I hope that my visit will bridge a
    history and build a new vision of where our family has come from.'

    Birthright Armenia's mission is to strengthen ties between the homeland and
    diasporan youth by affording them an opportunity to be a part of Armenia's
    daily life and to contribute to Armenia's development through work, study
    and volunteer experiences, while developing a renewed sense of Armenian
    identity. Visit www.birthrightarmenia.org for more information.
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