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Helping In Armenia

HELPING IN ARMENIA
By Bobbi Mlynar

Emporia Gazette , KS
helping_armenia/
Oct 7 2007

Jeff Norling went to Armenia on an eight-day humanitarian mission last
month and returned home satisfied with what had been accomplished and
with an utter appreciation of the Armenian people and their country.

"The biggest thing was that any time you help an Armenian out, you
feel like you just became their best friend," Norling said. "That
happens in a lot of places. However, there, you really feel like
you’ve got a bond with that person."

Under those circumstances, Norling made hundreds of friends in
the three villages his six-member team visited during their time
in Armenia.

The team went as part of the Partnership for Peace program. Five
are members of the Air National Guard unit headquartered in Topeka;
a sixth is in the Army National Guard. Maj. Edward Keller coordinated
the effort. Keller, a Topeka police detective, is on a 16- to 18-month
tour of duty as Kansas National Guard liaison for Partnership for
Peace, Norling said.

Capt. Chris Hill, a spokesman for the Kansas National Guard, said
that for the hands-on team, the 190th Air Refueling Wing sent an
optometrist, Lt. Col. William Hefner; a dental technician, TSgt.

Michael Riblett; an optometry specialist, Spec. Olivia Hof; a public
health officer, Capt. Ingrid Trevino; and Norling, a public health
technician. The Army National Guard provided a dentist for the mission,
Maj. Martin Powell.

"There’s been a relationship with Armenia for some time in training
military, understanding the culture, assisting them in learning,
in our particular area, learning the medical aspects," Norling said,
describing the Kansas-Armenia relationship as "like a sister country."

Norling was invited to be part of the program earlier, when he was
to be sent to Armenia to help teach first aid to that country’s
military. Instead, he was deployed for a tour of duty in Iraq.

This year’s mission more than made up for the delay.

"We went to three small villages, all between the sizes of 800 people
and 1,500 people," he said. "They’re in a remote part of the country,
where medical care is not readily available. They do have access to
a doctor, but there’s not adequate access to medicines, dentists or
eye doctors."

The U.S. team brought with them various prescription medicines and
thousands of pairs of eyeglasses, donated through Lions and Optimists
clubs. Those supplies were waiting for the team at Yerevan, the capital
of Armenia, when they landed. The team hauled them along through the
countryside to dispense at the village clinics.

There, they found an abundance of people eager for dental and
optometric attention during the three days spent treating instead
of traveling.

"I can personally say that I assisted in finding and fitting about
250 pairs of eyeglasses," Norling said.

The donated eyeglasses were labeled for distribution according to
their lenses’ prescriptions, so Norling would search through the
boxes to find the appropriate corrective pairs.

"Usually for each patient, you’d have to go through a half-dozen to
30 pairs of glasses to find one that worked," he said. "Some people
were happy to be able to see anything, and they took the first pair
you’d hand them."

At least one of the patients received a pair of "adjustable"
eyeglasses, which hold two lenses that sandwich a gel in-between;
the gel comes from syringes on the temples of the glasses.

"If they’re far-sighted, you fill it up with gel; if they’re
near-sighted bad enough, you crank it the other way and it fixes the
lenses," Norling said.

The patient for those was a man who had not been able to read for 15
years. Norling attributed part of the problem to cataracts and the
other part to having no access to optometric care.

"The moment we fitted him with some of those adjustable glasses,
he was thrilled to death because he finally was able to read the
newspaper," Norling said.

The man’s enthusiasm for reading wasn’t an aberration. Throughout
Armenia, being able to read is a priority.

"They have a 98 percent literacy rate there," he said. "You wouldn’t
expect that in that part of the world, so finding these folks a pair
of reading glasses was important to them."

Norling found the Armenians to be appreciative and sociable.

"Everywhere we went, the people were very forthcoming and very kind,
and they offered up food and drink every time we went anywhere,"
he said. "They were very accommodating."

The heavily agrarian country and its customs interested Norling.

Citizens barter and trade for grains, meats, fruits, crafts and
other needs.

"That’s how they maintain their lifestyle is to trade and share,"
he said. "That was another unique part of their cultures."

They operate on almost a 100 percent cash economy, he added, and
building a house or ranch is done as money is available.

"If they run out of money, they stop the project. Then maybe a year
or two later they have the money and they start back up again,"
he said. "They don’t have a local savings and loan to go to."

He saw evidence of Armenia’s political ties to the former Union of
the Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) as he traveled in cities and
through the countryside.

"You can tell that it’s an old Soviet country by the buildings,"
Norling said. "The government buildings are done up in more of a
traditional limestone, marble, with a lot of arches, all that kind
of stuff.

"But the housing and the apartments and a lot of construction that the
Soviets were involved in … when Armenia declared its independence,
when the country had to fend for itself, a lot of the construction
projects ceased at that point. There are still remnants of that
construction, with cranes sitting around. … There are a lot of
half-built places."

Some of the buildings, though, have been standing for centuries,
and that fact intrigued Norling.

"The country itself is rich, full of history. To walk through these
places and see the architecture and the engineering – they survived
earthquakes, they survived wars, they survived just regular weather
and wear," he said.

"One of the monasteries we went to, built in roughly 800 A.D., still
had monks living there. It overlooked a giant gulch and the rest of
the mountains."

Many Armenians still travel those mountainsides on horseback and on
mules. Although many people in cities do own cars, few in the remote
countryside do.

"In Tatev, that village was so remote that many (people) didn’t have
the means to get out or the money to buy the fare to go," he said.

As the humanitarian team slowly made its way over primitive roads
winding through the mountains and valleys of Armenia, Norling was
struck by thoughts of home and the highways and roads he travels
as a technical trooper for the Kansas Highway Patrol. And he made a
promise to himself.

"I’ll never complain about the gravel roads here in Kansas," he said,
"and I’ll never complain about the highways in Missouri and Oklahoma."

Photo: A National Guard team from Kansas prepares to pull a tooth from
an Armenian patient. From left to right are Tech. Sgt. Mike Riblett,
an Armenian military dentist the team called "George," and Martin
Powell of Norman, Okla., a member of the Army National Guard.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.emporiagazette.com/news/2007/oct/06/
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
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