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  • Glendale: YMCA to aid in listening to hotline calls

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Aug 11 2004

    YMCA to aid in listening to hotline calls

    Help provided in Armenian


    By Naush Boghossian
    Staff Writer


    GLENDALE -- The Glendale YWCA has long served English-language
    speakers who have called Los Angeles County's Domestic Violence
    Hotline, but it is now reaching out to Armenians across the county
    who need their help.
    Anybody in the county who calls the hotline -- (800) 978-3600 -- and
    chooses to receive assistance in Armenian will be routed to the YWCA.

    The 24-hour hotline, which is administered by the District Attorney's
    Office, struck a partnership with the Glendale YWCA to take calls in
    Armenian in an effort to expand the number of languages the hotline
    serves.

    "We don't want language to be a barrier when somebody wants
    assistance. We want them to be able to contact the hotline regardless
    of the language they speak and be able to talk to somebody live who
    can help them find safety and shelter," said Mark Delgado, field
    deputy for the district attorney's bureau of crime prevention and
    youth services.

    The YWCA was selected because the city of Glendale has the largest
    Armenian population in the United States.

    The hotline also began serving callers Monday in Tagalog, Khmer,
    Japanese and Thai, but translators for those languages will be based
    in other areas.

    Lida Soulikhan, the program coordinator for the YWCA's domestic
    violence outreach, said the hotline's service is very important,
    because the lack of English skills is a barrier for immigrants
    seeking help.

    "When people talk in your own language, it's a key to your heart --
    especially for Armenians -- and you trust them better and start
    opening up to them," she said.

    And there are many Armenians in Los Angeles County who are not
    getting the help they need, Soulikhan said.

    "We know that there is a huge amount of domestic violence, but we
    have to bring down that cultural wall," she said. "The cultural
    belief for Armenians stops them from sharing what's happening within
    their four walls. They don't know these services, but when it's
    explained to them in Armenian it makes a huge difference."

    The hotline has served callers in English, Spanish, Korean,
    Vietnamese Mandarin and Cantonese seven days a week, receiving an
    average of 394 calls a month during its first year. Last year, the
    hotline received more than 1,350 calls a month.

    The annual cost of operating the hotline is $10,000, which is funded
    by private donations. Donations can be made payable to the California
    Community Foundation, attention D.A. Victim and Crime Prevention
    Initiatives, 445 S. Figueroa St., 34th floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071.
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