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Glendale: Languages added to abuse hotline

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  • Glendale: Languages added to abuse hotline

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    Aug 12 2004

    Languages added to abuse hotline

    Armenian callers looking for help for domestic violence will be
    routed to Glendale YWCA.

    By Darleene Barrientos, News-Press


    GLENDALE - An abused woman seeking help shouldn't be required to
    speak English to get it.

    That's the conclusion officials with the Los Angeles County District
    Attorney's office came to when they decided to add Armenian, Tagalog,
    Japanese, Thai and Khmer to the options of languages spoken on the
    county's Domestic Violence Hotline.

    Since the county has always offered English, Spanish and Korean,
    along with Mandarin, Cantonese and Vietnamese, the Glendale YWCA was
    tapped to offer telephone operators who can speak Armenian to victims
    of domestic violence.

    "This area is just diversifying more and more," said Carol Baker,
    director of crime prevention and youth services for the district
    attorney. "We have lots of new communities, lots of different
    cultures. They're large enough so they can be very insular, but
    domestic violence cuts across all cultures. Language shouldn't be a
    barrier."

    Women looking for help can call (800) 978-3600 and ask for an
    Armenian speaker, who will listen to the caller and refer her to the
    nearest shelter or service center. The Center for the Pacific Asian
    Family will field calls for Asian languages, including Tagalog or
    Korean.

    Spanish, Armenian, Korean and Tagalog are the four languages besides
    English most spoken in Glendale homes, according to the Glendale
    Unified School District.

    About 35% to 40% of Glendale's population is of Armenian descent and
    the city is believed to have the largest population of Armenians
    outside of the home country. But Armenian families are scattered
    throughout Los Angeles County, in areas like Hollywood, Pasadena,
    North Hollywood, Van Nuys and Montebello, YWCA case manager Tamara
    Tombakian said.

    Many Armenian women looking for help are surprised to hear someone
    speaking their own language, Tombakian said.

    "They don't realize there is organizations of people who will
    actually help them," she said.

    But being able to understand and be understood is so important to
    someone who is being abused.

    "Something as delicate as this - family issues, cultural beliefs - I
    think if we miss a lot of that emotion, if we miss a lot of the
    experience that person has gone through, you don't get the exact
    emotion," Tombakian said.

    "It also inhibits the caller. If they're trying to speak a language
    that's not their primary language, they're trying to think about how
    to say what they've gone through instead of trying to get support."
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