Birthright Armenia Erases Borders with Strong Alumni Network

PRESS RELEASE
BIRTHRIGHT ARMENIA
Contact: Linda Yepoyan
April 12, 2007
Phone: 610-642-6633
[email protected]

BIRTHRIG HT ARMENIA ERASES BORDERS WITH STRONG ALUMNI NETWORK

Birthright Armenia has answered the question on how to bring young Armenian
leaders together in both the "virtual" world and the real one, with the
formation of an active alumni network that spans the globe. With nearly 200
sponsored Birthright participants from 13 different countries in its
network, this challenge has been no small feat for the growing organization.
However, by adding new activities to its already successful alumni program,
Birthright Armenia has proven that when it comes to making a difference,
borders should not mean barriers.

The importance of alumni is not a new premise for the nearly four-year-old
organization, as it was founded on a philosophy that only through strong
ties to the homeland would young adults be energized to take on leadership
positions within the Diaspora. In fact, the idea of a strong alumni network
was based on continued youth involvement after completing their initial
volunteer service. The ultimate goal? Keep the youth engaged and
eventually they would become leaders of the numerous diasporan organizations
throughout the world, bridging the gap between countries, languages and
beliefs.

Recent AVC volunteer and Birthright Armenia participant Sophie Malkasian,
who volunteered with Heifer International in the southern region of Armenia,
is one recent example of the success Birthright has achieved with its
alumni. After spending nine full months of her one-year internship in tin
the village of Getap, Sophie personally raised over $28,000 to move her
homestay family in Yeghignadzor to a home of their own. Now Sophie herself,
both living and working in Yerevan, calls Armenia her own home.

Linda Yepoyan, Birthright Armenia’s executive director, notes that while
volunteers are offered significant opportunities to immerse themselves in
Armenian culture through language instruction, havaks, forums, excursions,
and homestays during their initial volunteer service, true success will only
be realized by helping these volunteers fulfill a lasting impact in both the
Homeland and the diasporan communities in which they live. "The biggest
assets we have are our alumni and we are constantly looking for
opportunities to help them channel their energies" she says.

One of the biggest success stories for Birthright Armenia’s program has been
its Continuing Involvement Proposal initiative, where each volunteer makes a
promise to continuously support the Homeland. Yepoyan states that these
"promises" are the result of life-changing experiences. "They feel strongly
about spreading the word to others who may not know about all the
opportunities to do good in Armenia," she elaborates. While every volunteer
is required to complete a Continuing Involvement Proposal, Birthright
Armenia has gone one step further in helping volunteers make their proposals
become reality. By establishing the Alumni Next Step Fund, former
volunteers can apply for monetary assistance up to $2500 for projects
benefiting the Armenian community. The decision-making committee for
proposals is even staffed entirely with Birthright alumni.

Twenty-four-year-old AVC volunteer and Sacramento native Tamara Shahabian
was the first to plant the seed for a future Alumni Next Step project, which
is well underway. Her first art show in the spring of 2006 featured artwork
created by the children of Gyumri’s Aesthetic Center, a school/orphanage
that promotes cultural education and development in children and youth from
4 to 20 years of age. With that show resulting in a huge success, she was
encouraged to start a new non-profit organization called Artworks Armenia
(), which kicked off its inaugural art exhibition and
sale of Armenian children’s art on March 30 in New York City. The show
brought in over $10,000, which all goes back to the children in Armenia.
Since Tamara’s success, there have been several other projects funded,
including Seta Iskanderian’s Project Harmony, a women’s center in
Nagorno-Karabagh.

Birthright Armenia is planning its first official alumni reunion in Armenia
this summer to run from June 29-July 8, 2007. While it will include a
number of excursions, social/cultural events, and educational meetings with
young Armenian leaders, more importantly, it will also include community
service activities throughout the week, including a "leave-behind" project.
This project will give former volunteers the opportunity to give something
back to the Armenian community in a more lasting way.

Recognizing the importance of online visibility, and the need to provide our
growing alumni base a place to keep in touch, Birthright is spending
considerable time redesigning the organization’s Web site
() in order to increase usage from both outside
patrons and alumni. Users on the "new" site will soon be able to post
personal blogs, videos and photos, as well as personal profiles. "The
internet is rapidly evolving how people, specially the younger generation,
communicate. We want to be cutting edge as far as offering the choices that
most of our visitors want to see on our Web site", said Yepoyan.

One of the key ways Birthright Armenia has kept alumni from all its various
sponsoring organizations within reach is through the quarterly Alumni
Newsletter. Not only does it provide information on new happenings within
the Birthright organization and its members, but it has also promoted
continued alumni involvement in the organization’s growth. Similar to the
Web site and the wealth of presentations made by former Birthright
participants fulfilling their Continuing Involvement Proposals, the
newsletter serves as a fountain of inspiration for what others are doing to
help Armenia.

The continuing involvement proposals, alumni reunion, Alumni Next Step fund,
Web site redesign and quarterly newsletter are some of the ways Birthright
Armenia is striving to keep the former volunteers it has sponsored involved
and engage them as community leaders. The organization is serious about its
commitment to the Homeland and the future of its people. "Each alumni
volunteer represents a unique potential ready to be tapped by his or her
community. With our alumni program we just serve as a conduit to keep the
flame within each volunteer warm until they are tapped by their communities
for leadership roles, or they on their own decide to make that commitment to
do more in Armenia like opening a business or repatriating," says Yepoyan.

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.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.artworksarmenia.org
www.birthrightarmenia.org

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS