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Vartan Gregorian Interview on NJ Armenian Radio

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  • Vartan Gregorian Interview on NJ Armenian Radio

    Dr. Vartan Gregorian discusses Haigazian University, Carnegie Projects
    and Armenia - on NJ Armenian Radio


    South Orange, NJ: On Monday June 20, 2005 the Armenian Radio Hour of
    New Jersey had scheduled a phone-interview with Dr. Vartan Gregorian
    about Haigazian University. This year marks the 50th. anniversary of
    Haigazian. The interview branched into Carnegie Projects and concerns
    about present-day Armenia.

    Dr. Vartan Gregorian is the 12th president of Carnegie Corporation of
    New York, a grant-making institution founded by Andrew Carnegie in
    1911. Prior to his current position, which he assumed in June 1997,
    Dr.

    Gregorian served for nine years as the 16th president of Brown
    University.



    Haigazian University:

    I am very impressed by the Haigazian College. I was a student in
    Beirut, Lebanon in 1950's . I have seen spectacular rise in prestige,
    in offering of courses, in status. Also more importantly Haigazian has
    been able to unitethe best qualities of Armenian with the best
    international and universal values.

    It is not a ghetto University, it is a Lebanese University, founded by
    Armenian philanthropy. I admire its leadership, its president. What a
    spectacular job they have done with Haigazian in competing with
    American Universities with Lebanese Universities, with French
    Universities. Haigazian has welcomed competition and excelled in many
    areas. I am very proud of all the donors who have given so
    generously. I am also proud of the faculty. Through
    Haigazian,Armenians have contributed not to the Armenian community of
    Lebanon but to Lebanon and the Middle East as well. Everybody in
    Lebanon wants to preserve Haigazian not only because it is Armenian
    but because it is also Lebanese. Founders of Haigazian and its board
    of trustees expanded the mission of Haigazian; they universalized and
    internationalized Haigazian. Today, not only Armenians have a stake in
    Haigazian; all Lebanese and others have a stake in it.




    Carnegie Projects:

    Carnegie Corporation in New York is very active in education. We are
    involved in higher education in the former Soviet Union and now
    Russia. We support 12 universities. We expanded our efforts into the
    Trans-Caucuses - Armenia,Azerbajian and Georgia - provided the three
    of them cooperate. We are supporting 12 African universities with
    other foundations. We are involved in reforming teacher education in
    America. We help immigrants to adapt to America and protect immigrant
    rights in this country. Trying to engage the youth of America in
    politics rather only in volunteer service.

    I was in Istanbul just two weeks ago with a congressional delegation
    of 18 Senators and Congressman and 10 scholars and participated in a
    seminar dealing with `Radical Islam'. We went to Bosnia-Herzegovina to
    visit our son who is America's liaison with the governing body of
    Bosnia. He is lieutenant commander and he is working with a commission
    that is trying to provide Bosnia with an integrated army.

    Then, I was in Cairo -guest of Aha Khan - visiting the inaugural of
    his 74-acre garden that was built on the location of the 500-year
    garbage dumpof Cairo.

    Tomorrow I am going to Washington. D.C. to receive the Jefferson
    Award, for citizen who have contributed most to public
    welfare. Governor Kean and Lee Hamilton will also be receiving the
    award. In the summer we are going to Aspen Institute to discuss `The
    future of Russia' with 20 Congressman and Senators. Then I may be
    going to Qatar, because I am on the Qatar Foundation Board.



    Armenia:

    Armenia needs jobs. Armenia needs investments. Armenia does not need
    charity. We have a nation full of talent, full of educated people in
    searchof opportunity. If we do not provide opportunity, the
    opportunity will be provided by other nations - from Kazakhstan, to
    Russia, to Australia - I do not want us to do the same mistake we did
    in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, when Armenian nation build all
    their strength outside the boundaries of historic Armenia. We built
    our centers in Venice, in Vienna, in Moscow, in St. Petersburg, in
    Rostov, in Baku, Tiflis, Marseilles, Paris you name it - Cyprus but
    not historical Armenia. That would be a tragedy for us.


    My other concern is to teach Diaspora Armenians and all our friends -
    `If you want to help Armenia then invest in Armenia'. Andrew Carnegie
    said `don't give fish to people who are hungry, give them fishing rods
    in order to make them not dependent but independent; to make them
    self-reliant.

    Another concern I have is that many Armenians don't understand that
    Armenia is their state. It was all right to be corrupt in the Soviet
    Union when they did not believe the state belongs to them - but this
    is their state. Whatever we can do to bring about transparency,
    honesty and jobs - those three are important - with national
    consciousness.

    What also pains me is to see a 99.9% literate nation without a major
    bookstore in Yerevan or other places - that could be bringing in
    international books and magazines to satisfy our nations thirst.

    In closing jobs, jobs, jobs ; opportunity, opportunity, opportunity;
    investment, investment, investment. Those are things Armenia needs and
    those are things we should focus on.


    The Armenian Radio Hour of New Jersey (ARHNJ) may be heard on Sundays
    between 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. on WSOU 89.5 F.M. or via internet
    _www.ArmenianRadioNJ.com_ (http://www.ArmenianRadioNJ.com)
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