Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Birthright... Armenia?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Birthright... Armenia?

    BIRTHRIGHT... ARMENIA?
    By BEN HARTMAN

    Jerusalem Post
    http://www.jpost.com/Features/InThespotlight/Article.aspx?id=233919
    Aug 15 2011

    Birthright Armenia includes excursions around the country, visits to
    cultural, historical sites, meetings with local Armenian youth.

    A small, ancient people, dispersed across the world, hounded by
    genocide and tragedy, with a successful global Diaspora that remains
    loyal to its ancestral homeland. Sound familiar? Though it's not too
    difficult to make a compelling comparison between Armenians and Jews,
    the Armenian Diaspora's "Birthright Armenia" program is both somewhat
    inspired by and radically different from the Jewish world's highly
    successful Birthright Israel program.

    Founded in 2003, the program brings young people between the ages of
    20 and 32 with at least one Armenian grandparent to the country for
    visits ranging from two months to a year.

    According to the organization, the experience is meant to foster a
    deeper connection to the country, and to allow for a longer, more
    hands-on trip than a whirlwind visit could offer.

    Since it was founded, the program has hosted over 500 Armenian Diaspora
    youth from over 25 countries.

    Sevan Kabakian, country director for the program in Armenia, says
    participants spend a minimum of two months to a year, volunteering
    around 30 hours a week.

    "They basically participate in the life of the country, so their
    days aren't spent doing what a tourist would do, but what a typical
    countryman would do; going to work, and then going home at the end
    of the day," he says.

    After participants' work days are over, he continues, the program's
    services kick in, including language classes provided by a series
    of teachers and tutors, customized to fit the students' needs. It
    also provides lecture forums where they are introduced to different
    aspects of the country, from economic and environmental issues to
    meetings with government officials.

    Much like Birthright Israel, Birthright Armenia includes excursions
    around the country, visits to cultural and historical sites, and
    meetings with local Armenian youth.

    Back stateside, the organization's executive director, Linda Yepoyan,
    runs the program with a staff of five, including herself.

    Originally from Pittsburgh, Yepoyan came to Armenia as a young student
    following the devastating earthquake of 1989, and lived there for
    the next two years through independence from the Soviet Union in 1991
    and fighting with Azerbaijan.

    Asked if the organizers ever considered making the program a 10-day
    trip like Birthright Israel, which would be a less intense experience
    but might attract more participants, she says that "one of our mantras
    is immersion, and the longer the stay, the deeper the roots."

    She also doesn't want people to leave Armenia with "a Disneyland,
    superficial understanding of what life is like here."

    While they don't receive financial support from the Armenian
    government, they do receive what she refers to as moral support, as
    well as easy access to government and military officials for lectures
    and round-table discussions with participants.

    Yepoyan describes Armenia as having "a lot of development to go. It's
    not in its infancy anymore, but still in its teen years." Still,
    she adds, "there's something here in the water and here in the air;
    you just cant make a trip here to Armenia and not get roped into it."

    The program's founder, Edele Hovnanian, says that when the initiative
    was begun in 2003, she contacted Birthright Israel to ask permission
    to use the name and received approval.

    She also met with some people from the Israel program, who explained
    the ideas and principles behind it.

    Hovnanian, whose family owns a well-known construction company in
    the United States, says her family's foundation pays for about half
    of the program's $500,000 annual budget.

    The rest is raised in the Armenian Diaspora, which she says has many
    foundations but not to the extent that the Jewish Diaspora does.

    She describes how many young Armenians went to the country after
    independence in 1991. While they often had a romantic view of the
    country beforehand, "they would often come back disappointed, and
    I thought it was important to have a generation that grew up with a
    very realistic view of Armenia."

    According to Hovnanian, "there are a ton of programs that take kids
    to Armenia for short-term purposes, but that is a very different
    experience than what we do. We want you to stay in homes, live there
    at least two months and really immerse yourself in the community,
    and take the local transportation."

    PARTICIPANTS ARE also required to fill out an exit survey, outlining
    how they'll contribute to the Armenian community back home.

    When asked if the program takes a political point of view, like the
    pro- Israel view put forward on many Birthright Israel programs, she
    says, "I can see the importance of what they're trying to accomplish,
    which is to explain [Israel's] point of view and only [Israel's]
    point of view. We don't do that, so some would say we're apolitical,
    but as a longer program, it's a lot harder to control the experience.

    Birthright Israel is more strict about schedule, and that can only
    happen if you're on a short program."

    She did say, though, that it is important for participants to learn
    the Armenian point of view - for instance, in regard to issues like
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan.

    As opposed to a standard studyabroad program, Hovnanian says her
    program is "much more like the Peace Corps with a very clear intent
    - you live in any country for three to four months, you're going to
    bond with the country and those people. We want you to identify with
    Armenia, and when you get back to the Diaspora and people ask you
    what its like, you won't just say it's just post-Soviet corruption
    or non-democratic... they can become ambassadors for the country of
    Armenia. I don't think that Armenia does a good job of public relations
    for the country abroad, so these young people become ambassadors... on
    a real human interest level."

    Greg Bilazarian, 27, is one participant who has gotten hooked on
    Armenia, and has found himself leading a somewhat unexpected late-20s
    sojourn in the country. Bilazarian is also one of the relatively
    rare young people eligible for both Birthright Israel and Birthright
    Armenia, having been born to a Jewish mother and an Armenian father.

    He grew up with and is familiar with both diasporas, and even spent
    a few years in Hebrew school - though following a summer family trip
    to Armenia, he made the decision to be baptized into the Armenian
    church at age 12.

    He spent several years working as a TV reporter in Gainsville, Florida,
    and later in Toledo, Ohio, before deciding that he was done with the
    profession and wanted to try something new.

    His decision to go to Armenia, he says, rather than being a
    heart-warming, back-to-his-roots story, came about because he
    was looking to take a professional sabbatical and had heard about
    Birthright.

    Much like young Americans who have moved to Israel, Bilazarian
    describes his new surroundings as a close-knit country with a good
    nightlife, where he hardly ever goes for a stroll downtown without
    bumping into people he knows.

    Also like in Israel, he says that in Armenia, "people are always
    answering their cellphones in public and smoking everywhere. In every
    cab, immediately they ask you if you're married."

    While he notes that the standard of living is definitely much lower
    than in the States, the people are incredibly friendly, and the
    country is fascinating and beautiful. He calls the experience the
    greatest time he's had in his life.

    "It's an amazing place. I go through every emotion every day, really
    high and really low," he says.

    Bilazarian admits that finding a job he loved was the single most
    important factor in having a positive experience.

    Despite choosing a professional sabbatical from the media world,
    he has found himself working again in media - for an organization
    called The Civilitas Foundation, where he has joined a team of young
    people aiming to launch a new media project.

    He originally only planned to come for a short period, but the company
    offered him a one-year contract, and he decided to stay.

    Though he may not have come out of any Armenian roots romanticism,
    he says his time in the country has had a significant effect on him.

    "It definitely has helped build a stronger connection [to Armenian
    roots] and a stronger picture of what it means to be Armenian,"
    he says.

    "Here you really get to see the country and the culture and how it
    really is, instead of just the middle-class and wealthy Diaspora. I
    certainly feel closer to the country, and I'll always have that sort
    of a bond."

Working...
X