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AVC Volunteers' Efforts Go Beyond Their Capabilities

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  • AVC Volunteers' Efforts Go Beyond Their Capabilities

    PRESS RELEASE

    Armenian Volunteer Corps
    62 Hanrapetutian St. Apt 108
    Yerevan, Armenia
    Contact: Anoush Tatevossian
    Tel: (374 10) 540037
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianvolunteer.org


    Volunteers' Efforts Go Beyond Their Capabilities

    YEREVAN, June 26, 2006. A protest three weeks ago in front of the Russian
    Embassy in Yerevan marked Armenia's first public condemnation of the growing
    xenophobia in Russia towards the Armenian Diaspora and other immigrant
    groups living there.

    The June 5th protest, in response to an escalating number of crimes and
    murders over the past 6 months, prompted President Robert Kocharian to step
    up pressure on Moscow on Friday, June 16 to increase efforts to quell such
    attacks and take preventative measures. The protest represented a theme
    of growing frustration in Armenians within the Republic and worldwide
    regarding the issue.

    A theme of lesser notice at the protest, however, was the growing role of
    the Armenian Diaspora's volunteer efforts in their homeland. The Armenian
    Volunteer Corps (AVC), an organization that brings Diasporans to Armenia to
    volunteer throughout the country, was a main organizer of the event and
    represented a majority of the protestors. Volunteers expressed their
    disgust of the events in Russia by standing in line in front of the embassy
    with anti-xenophobia signs and by giving interviews with the media.

    Since January, the AVC has brought 22 volunteers to Armenia, many of them
    young people coming to the country for the first time to assume various
    roles including teaching English in villages, working with organizations in
    Yerevan, and helping out at orphanages and with reforestation efforts.
    Volunteers also have the opportunity to take Armenian language lessons and
    travel to Armenia's churches and historic sites through the Birthright
    Armenia organization, which supports the volunteers with financial
    assistance.

    Past volunteers have come to Armenia from countries all around the world,
    however the majority of them are from the US, Canada, and Western Europe.
    Since the AVC's founding in 2000, over 100 volunteers have given their
    services to Armenia. "I've been able to lend my capabilities to different
    organizations and people here, and in return I've gotten to know my homeland
    like my own family," said Nick Bazarian, a volunteer from Vermont who came
    to Armenia in February after deciding to take a semester off from college.

    For those who work with the volunteers, benefits go further than the amount
    of work or service the volunteers accomplish. According to AVC's director
    Anoush Tatevossian, "Sometimes it's the ideas they bring and the
    interactions they have with people that ultimately have a greater impact on
    the development of society. Their experiences outside of Armenia are shared
    with people in day-to-day interactions and help people think outside the
    box."

    The June 5th protest was one such example of this as the volunteers
    organized themselves according to past protest experiences in the US and
    Canada, forming a line in front of the embassy and equipping themselves with
    signs and ready voices. The protesters then marched to the Armenian Foreign
    ministry where they remained for 45 minutes. Civic actions such as this
    protest have proved a success with the recent discussions between Kocharian
    and the Kremlin.

    Open protests of this kind in Armenia are generally rare, unattended, and
    usually unorganized without sponsorship of the state. Protests are also
    generally reactive rather than proactive, with people taking action after
    the fact rather than before it happens, thus limiting the potential to
    create influence. Noted protest organizer Arsen Kharatian, "These
    volunteers come to Armenia with the intentions of physically helping their
    homeland, but they end up influencing people and institutions in ways they
    don't always realize. They are a unique and positive resource for
    Armenians."
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