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Fundraiser for FAR's Gyumri Information Technology Center Successful

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  • Fundraiser for FAR's Gyumri Information Technology Center Successful

    Fund for Armenian Relief
    Media Release


    FOR IMMEDIATE 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
    _________________________

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    Fundraiser for FAR's Gyumri Information Technology Center Successful
    Nine years ago Elena Sarkissian and her brother Patrick
    Sarkissian visited the city of Gyumri in Northern Armenia with the
    Hayastani
    Kidak Society (former Young Professional Trips) of the Fund for
    Armenian Relief
    (FAR) - What they saw there, from the
    destruction of the 1988 earthquake, led them to seek proactive ways to
    make progressive change possible for Armenia while getting the word
    out to
    Armenian-Americans, encouraging collective action.
    Their efforts culminated in the creation of GTech Committee
    three years ago - a board actively focused on fundraising and
    communication
    efforts to support FAR's Gyumri Technology Center ("GTech"). Ms
    Sarkissian, as
    chair, along with her brother and eight committee members of all
    professional
    backgrounds are the core energy center behind donor events,
    multi-media
    marketing promotions and GTech's distinct branding.
    Most recently, Ms Sarkissian and the GTech Committee (Talene Baroyan,
    Greg Bazarian,
    Martha Mensoian, Patrick Sarkissian, Shant Madjarian, Marina Sarian,
    Rafi Hovsepian,
    Melanie Dadourian, and Kirk Hourdajian) spearheaded a fantastic
    fundraising event
    - "GTech: The Future of Hye-tech" -
    for friends, colleagues, Armenians and non Armenians alike at Soho
    House in
    Manhattan's Meatpacking District. Their aim, achieved successfully,
    was to
    spread the word on the GTech cutting-edge IT education, its benefits
    to
    Armenia's labor force, and the progress of its graduates since 2005,
    the
    school's first operating year.
    As Patrick Sarkissian put it in the evening's opening
    remarks, "There is a brain drain in Armenia, and we need to help
    Armenia keep
    its talents at home." His words conveyed a concern to create a middle
    class in
    Gyumri and Armenia by giving opportunities to young talent to advance
    and
    practice their professions in their hometown region.
    To follow, the committee presented a USAID video, edited by
    committee member Melanie Dadourian, on Gyumri and GTech. With emphasis
    on high
    unemployment rates even now 20 years after the earthquake and the
    subsequent
    loss of college-educated professionals from the region, the importance
    of
    keeping up a post-graduate IT professional school competitive with
    current
    global market trends shined through.
    Mr. Sarkissian is clear about the Committee's role in making
    the necessary changes: "Our goals are to expand the program and build
    a
    permanent, self-sustaining IT school with hundreds - if not thousands
    - of
    graduates who will substantially contribute to the revitalization of
    Gyumri and
    in return Armenia at large. We are working towards achieving
    self-sustainability within the next three to five years."
    Elena Sarkissian's dedicated efforts as chair are key to
    keeping a school like GTech alive. Students' tuitions are primarily
    donor
    funded, and events such as these spread the word of GTech's mission,
    successes,
    and needs. Without Ms Sarkissian's ability to gather new and concerned
    individuals to the cause, many talented students would lose this
    lifetime
    opportunity.
    In closing remarks, Ms Sarkissian encouraged guests to get
    to know 16 current students whose pictures and biographies the
    committee
    displayed around the room. Bringing individuals in New York up close
    to
    individuals in Gyumri created a special connection bridging two
    worlds. Her
    heartfelt words expressed how everyone's involvement helps these
    students help
    Armenia progress.
    "GTech - The Future of Hye Tech" was no ordinary event.
    Elena and Patrick Sarkissian's unique brand of initiative not only
    focuses on
    fundraising but communicates new ways to get involved. They have
    opened up
    unique avenues by which Armenian-American professionals can connect
    their talents
    and energy to the talents of their less-fortunate Armenian
    peers. Thanks to
    these untiring efforts, Gyumri's talented youth now has more
    opportunity than
    ever to advance and practice their professions in their own hometown,
    materializing once-impossible dreams.
    # # #


    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.
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