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20 years on record: FAR has been about changing lives of Armenians

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  • 20 years on record: FAR has been about changing lives of Armenians

    Fund for Armenian Relief
    Press Release
    Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR)
    Press Office
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Tel: (212) 889-5150; Fax: (212) 889-4849
    email: [email protected]
    web: www.farusa.org
    blog: farusa.wordpress.com
    _________________________


    2 0 years on record: FAR has been about changing lives of Armenians

    More Armenians doctors are offering better care to more people. More
    Armenian orphans have the chance get an education. More Armenian
    children who were once neglected or abandoned now have the help and
    support they so desperately need. More young Armenians have a chance
    to better their careers. These marks of progress prove that the Fund
    for Armenian Relief is making a difference to many Armenians .

    In 2008 - 20 years since FAR's founding - the organization was able to
    continue and even expand its mission, all thanks to the resilience and
    dedication of its supporters, who stood by the organization through
    challenging economic times. The recently released FAR 2008 Annual
    Report chronicles all of these achievements by highlighting not only
    the cumulative successes of last year's work and achievements, but
    also those special partnerships that made our work possible -
    partnerships with donors, fellow organizations, supporters and
    volunteers.

    The report details how last year, nearly 30,000 people in
    Nagorno-Karabagh and the surrounding region saw their lives change
    with FAR's help. Six years of hard work on the Humanitarian Assistance
    Program in Nagorno-Karabagh (HAPNK), which was funded by the United
    States Agency for International Development (USAID), has brought new
    homes, health centers, clean drinking water and employment to those
    whose lives had been torn apart by years of war.

    People like Shmavon Petrosyan and his family have seen their lives
    transformed ever since FAR restored the house that had been crumbling
    around them due to the fighting.

    And for those in the village of Astghashen who for years lived without
    any place to access medical care, HAPNK's work may mean the difference
    between life and death.

    Now, a new medical center serves 2,000 people in the region.

    FAR also continued to forge ahead with its tireless efforts to support
    children, helping the most vulnerable Armenians like Kostas and Nadya,
    find the love and support they need. Abandoned first by their abusive
    father, then later abused by their mother, the two were sent to live
    with their grandparents who eventually could no longer care for
    them. With help from FAR's Homeless Children's Center, the two were
    placed in the loving care of a foster family.

    Considered by many to be the only safe haven in Armenia and Karabagh
    for at-risk children, the Center has rescued homeless children and
    those who are victims of abuse and neglect since 2000, offering them
    everything from temporary shelter and intervention services to legal
    assistance. With the support of the Helen and Ed Mardigian Family
    Foundation, the organization helped nearly 1,000 at risk youth in 2008
    - more than even before.

    The annual report, which can be downloaded from FAR's website,
    www.farusa.org also shows how FAR's other long-standing and ongoing
    programs, like the Gyumri Information Technology Center (GTECH) is
    helping to transform a region by offering post-graduate training in
    electrical engineering, computer chip design and development and web
    technologies.

    The success of GTECH is gradually reversing the economic decline from
    which Gyumri has suffered since the devastating 1988
    earthquake. Highly skilled graduates are staying in the region, using
    their skills to invest in their homeland and building a growing middle
    class.

    Natives like Kristina Zayimtsyan, who saw their homes reduced to
    rubble in December of 1988, are now part of a movement to strengthen
    their hometown. Kristina almost died in the earthquake when the walls
    of her school collapsed around her. Now a student at GTech, she is
    focusing on using web design as a way to move closer to her dream of
    becoming a designer.

    "Our city has a future and I believe in it," she attests. "We, the
    youth, will shape the future of Gyumri."

    The report also reveals how more healthcare workers in rural areas
    enhanced their skills through the Continuing Medical Education Program
    (CME), which offers customized training from prominent doctors in
    Yerevan. This sort of opportunity is crucial to enhancing medical care
    in Armenia, especially in remote rural areas.

    For a doctor like Armenuhi Rstakyan, who has always been devoted to
    her hometown community, she can now better serve her patients - both
    Armenians and Georgians - in the Javakhk region of Georgia. As a
    gynecologist, Armenuhi provides necessary medical care at the
    Maternity Welfare Center in the town's regional hospital.

    She faces obstacles daily. In addition to there being no light, no
    water, and very little equipment, Armenuhi is isolated from the
    advancements in her field. CME changed that. After a month of training
    with leading specialists at the Maternal and Child Health Protection
    Research Center, she learned about the latest technologies and modern
    operating techniques in her field. She networked with leading
    specialists, participated in English language lessons and in computer
    literacy courses. Now back home, Armenuhi can better serve her
    patients, impart her knowledge to her colleagues and ultimately spread
    the benefit to an entire community.

    Beyond these, FAR's work encompasses even more. It impacts the arts
    and sciences, education, the elderly and the destitute. The report,
    which details all, shows how the work of the FAR family provides the
    foundation for lasting social and economic change by making broad,
    sweeping changes while at the same time touching recipients in deeply
    personal ways. And it is only through the continued commitment of this
    dedicated network of FAR's supporters and volunteers that the
    organization each day in solidarity builds a stronger Armenia.

    # # #


    About FAR
    Since its founding in response to the 1988 earthquake, FAR has served
    hundreds of thousands of people through more than 220 relief and
    development programs in Armenia and Karabagh. It has channeled more
    than $265 million in humanitarian assistance by implementing a wide
    range of projects including emergency relief, construction, education,
    medical aid, and economic development.


    For more information on FAR or to send donations, contact us at 630
    Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016; telephone (212) 889-5150; fax (212)
    889-4849; http://www.farusa.org; e-mail [email protected].

    -- July 21th, 2009

    Fund for Armenian Relief | 630 Second Avenue | New York | NY | 10016
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