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Strengthening Community Through Presence, Education, and Engagement

Recent visits to Texas, San Diego, and Boston reflected the continued importance of youth outreach, civic education, and cross-regional coordination in Armenian-American advocacy.

In recent weeks, ANCA-WR’s Community Coordinator Garen Jinbachian participated in a series of community engagements in Texas, San Diego, and Boston, each of which served a distinct purpose while contributing to a broader pattern of outreach, education, and relationship-building. Although each visit took place in a different setting and involved different audiences, all three reflected the importance of maintaining a consistent presence within Armenian-American communities and creating opportunities for discussion around civic participation, advocacy, and communal responsibility.

In Texas, participation in the AYF Houston Campout focused on educational sessions with both Juniors and Seniors, offering an opportunity to engage younger members of the community in discussions tailored to their respective age groups and levels of familiarity with public affairs and the Armenian Cause. With the Juniors, the sessions centered on the electoral process, the importance of voting, and the broader idea that civic participation is not separate from community life, but one of the ways in which a community protects and advances its interests. For many younger participants these kinds of discussions help establish a basic understanding of how public institutions function and why political involvement matters.

With the Seniors, the conversations extended into broader questions related to the role of the Diaspora, ongoing developments affecting Armenia, and the significance of organized advocacy in the United States. These discussions emphasized that political engagement requires more than general awareness; it depends on structure, consistency, and understanding how advocacy is carried out in practical terms. One of the key strengths of the Houston visit was that it took place in an environment where youth engagement was already being taken seriously by the local AYF, and ANCA, and reflected the value of combining informal community settings with substantive educational content. The importance of this kind of engagement lies not only in the content of any single session, but the longer-term process of helping younger Armenians view civic responsibility and advocacy as part of organized community life.

The visit to San Diego served somewhat different but equally important functions. The engagement with members of the local Armenian Church Youth Organization (ACYO), and the faithful Armenian-American community at St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church provided an opportunity to speak with the community members in a setting grounded in parish life and intergenerational participation. The discussions included internship opportunities both in the Western Region, and Washington D.C., as well as broader pathways for involvement in Armenian-American organizational and advocacy work. In a community such as San Diego, these visits help reinforce the idea that participation in advocacy is not limited by location and that communities outside the most visible hubs remain an important part of the broader network.

A notable aspect of the San Diego visit was the strong turnaround and level of interest from attendees, with approximately 100 community members present. That level of participation reflected both the community’s attentiveness to issues affecting the Armenians and a clear interest in building stronger ties with organized advocacy efforts. The importance of this visit lay not only in presenting information, but in strengthening a relationship that can continue to grow over time. It also underscores the role that church and youth organizations can play as entry points for civic education, leadership development, and deeper involvement in public life.

In Boston, participation in the ANCA Eastern Region Grassroots Seminar added another dimension to this broader period of engagement. While visits to Texas and San Diego focused more directly on local youth and community outreach, the Boston seminar provided an opportunity to engage in a setting centered on grassroots advocacy, organizational exchange, and regional coordination. Bringing together advocates, community members, and organizers from different areas, the seminar created space for discussion about the practical work of advocacy, the challenges facing Armenian-American communities, and the importance of sustained grassroots structures.

The significance of the Boston seminar rests in its reminder that Armenian-American advocacy operates most effectively when it is not fragmented by geography. Regional work remains important, but so does coordination across communities and offices. Gatherings of this kind allow participants to compare experiences, assess different local dynamics, and better understand how shared priorities can be advanced through organized effort. In that sense, the seminar was not simply a standalone event, but part of the larger process of maintaining cohesion and continuity across the broader advocacy network.

Taken together, these visits reflected several important priorities: sustained youth outreach, ongoing civic education, stronger ties with local communities, and continued coordination with Armenian-American advocates across regions. Each event served a different audience and purpose, but all contributed to the same broader objective of keeping communities informed, connected, and engaged.


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