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  • Glendale: Bringing in a fresh perspective

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    April 21 2004

    Bringing in a fresh perspective
    Armen Carapetian relishing his role as government relations director
    of the ANC's Western Region.

    By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press


    NORTHEAST GLENDALE - The whiteboard is sitting on the floor in Armen
    Carapetian's office at the Armenian National Committee's Western
    Region office. Carapetian, in his third week as the region's
    government relations director, has not had time to hang it.

    The board is divided into four sections, each with a heading: the
    political system, knowing the issues, organization, and public
    relations.

    "If you can bring that together, it brings you a lot of power,"
    Carapetian said.

    The whiteboard is Carapetian's blueprint for the ANC's new leadership
    institute, a class to teach local Armenian Americans how to be
    political activists. The concept was in the works before Carapetian,
    33, arrived at the ANC's Western Region from Maryland in early April,
    but it did not have his structure.

    The leadership institute is one of a handful of ideas that Carapetian
    hopes to bring to the Glendale-based organization.

    "I want to put organization into this office," Carapetian said. "I've
    already started working to make the office more efficient and
    professional. The issues are constants. There's room for improvement
    within the organization."

    Carapetian's presence alone should improve the organization's
    efficiency just by providing another set of hands. The staff has been
    short-handed for months, and Ardashes Kassakhian has been the de
    facto government relations director since his promotion from that
    role to executive director in December.

    "To have someone who's passionate about the issues like Armen on
    board brings energy to our office and our cause in general,"
    Kassakhian said. "It does free me up. We're able to be in more
    places.

    "On April 24, we always get a high volume of requests to come speak.
    With Armen on board, we can double the number of events we can speak
    at. Until they invent cloning, that's pretty good."

    Carapetian, born in Iran and raised in Maryland, has been involved
    with Armenian organizations since childhood. He protested with the
    Armenian Youth Federation as a teen, and spent a summer interning at
    the ANC's Washington, D.C. office.

    He had his first real activist experience in 1997, when the ANC
    banded with 31 other Armenian organizations to purchase the Mount
    Davidson Cross from the city of San Francisco, so they could use it
    as a memorial to the Armenian Genocide. Because the cross is on park
    land, the purchase needed approval on a citywide vote, and was placed
    on a ballot as Proposition F.

    "I was on the streets, giving people fliers that said, 'Yes on F,' "
    Carapetian said. "It was a good fight."

    He returned to Maryland and started a local chapter of the ANC.
    Within two years, the group successfully lobbied the state
    legislature to adopt a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

    Now, Carapetian is bringing that activist spirit to Glendale, where
    he will serve as the Western Region's liaison to elected officials.
    And he joined the organization at the busiest time of the year,
    during the weeks leading up to the commemoration this Saturday of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    "I've seen an office like this in D.C., but I've never been in a
    position like this before," Carapetian said. "There's a bit of a
    learning curve I'm going through right now. When you're thrown into
    the fire like this, you learn a lot."

    The ANC Western Region's office is at 104 N. Belmont St., Suite 200.
    For more information, call 500-1918.
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