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An Unlikely Christmas Gift To Vanadzor Orphanage

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  • An Unlikely Christmas Gift To Vanadzor Orphanage

    AN UNLIKELY CHRISTMAS GIFT TO VANADZOR ORPHANAGE
    by Tom Vartabedian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/11/18/an-unlikely-christmas-gift-to-vanadzor-orphanage/
    November 18, 2012

    Every so often, a story comes along that is bound to warm the cockles
    of your heart, especially during Christmas.

    Children at Vanadzor Orphanage in Armenia show their appreciation
    over an early Christmas gift from a group of American hikers.

    You may not know Leon Tokatlian, but to the hiking world throughout
    the northeast, he's like the man in the mountain-Armenia's answer to
    Sir Edmund Hillary, who successfully climbed Mount Everest in 1953
    while blazing a trail for others to follow.

    In some ways, Tokatlian is cut from the same cloth. He spends his days
    and weeks hiking mountains and taking other climbers with him. The
    last we heard, he'd scaled some of the more prominent peaks in the
    world, including Nepal, Peru, Mongolia, and Ecuador.

    And just for conditioning, he hops atop Mount Washington in New
    Hampshire twice a month to keep in shape for his other climbs. If
    a journey of 10,000 miles begins with a single step, then climbing
    mountains and scaling the greatest heights of this universe is his
    stairway to paradise.

    Thus begins this story. A group of his odar hiking buddies were
    looking to chart new inroads and their journey took them to Armenia.

    No doubt, Tokatlian was an influence in this destination, given his
    active ethnic upbringing.

    While meandering throughout the country, their journey took them to
    the Vanadzor Orphanage. They found the orphanage needed help very
    badly and upon their return to the states, the hikers decided to band
    together and make a Christmas donation to the facility.

    One of those climbers was Mitch Manseau, and the orphanage's plight
    left an indelible mark upon him and the others.

    "The day before leaving Armenia and traveling to Georgia on a Southern
    Caucasus tour, we visited the orphanage in Vanadzor in north-central
    Armenia," he reports. "The management and staff were doing the maximum
    for these children with slim resources and even sending some of the
    students to the university."

    Manseau continued, "The youth were endearing and seemed part of a
    very extended, warm family. The older kids were big brothers and
    sisters to the younger ones, and all were learning life-supporting
    skills and academics on which to build strong futures."

    The orphanage at Vanadzor was established 15 years ago with 30 orphans,
    beggars and children abandoned by their families.

    According to the orphanage statute, healthy children from infants to
    16-year-olds find a home and school there. Currently, there are 116
    children, many of whom are enrolled in secondary and high schools.

    Several boys were called to the national army in recent years.

    While touring the orphanage, these hikers received an earful from
    the guides. There's a dire need to expand, build a sports gym, and
    increase the number of bedrooms and workshops.

    "It truly opened our eyes," said Manseau. "When we returned home,
    we volunteered to help out this orphanage with a combined Christmas
    gift in the name of our climbing federation. Turns out that it's a bit
    complicated to get dollars there and requires some banking activity
    best accomplished by bundling."

    According to Manseau, the group's treasurer will combine donations
    into a single contribution and work it through channels to arrive at
    Vanadzor before Christmas.

    It's that time of year when charity hits home. The best gift we can
    give is to help others in need, whether it's to an orphanage in Armenia
    or some other worthy cause in our midst, like Camp Haiastan, Project
    SAVE, ALMA, or any number of our Armenian schools and churches. The
    list is endless.

    Money aside, provisions are just as tangible. For years, St. Gregory
    Armenian Church in North Andover, where I belong, has adopted a
    charity called House of Hope, to which parishioners bring clothing
    and non-perishables.

    Our children play an important part in this project. Not only do they
    conduct individual drives, but a representation will be on hand to
    make the disbursement.

    It teaches them the importance of sharing and the gratitude they
    receive surely outweighs the sacrifice. Whether it's Vanadzor or
    elsewhere, if you are not poor enough to take charity, you are rich
    enough to give it.

    Persons wishing to help the Vanadzor Orphanage can send a check to
    NHFC, P.O. Box 974, Plymouth, NH 03264.

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