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GOOD PEOPLE GOOD WORKS
Assyrian Aid Society: Restoring the Splendid Spirit of Ancient Assyria - P1/2 (In Assyrian)
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Today’s
Good People, Good Works
will be presented
in Assyrian and English,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
I’ve always had a need
to have a connection
with my culture,
my background,
the people that are still
back in our homeland,
mostly in Iraq.
And so when Assyrian Aid
was established in 1991
and I learned about it,
I became very interested,
because it was a way
for me to contribute
to have that connection
that I needed.
Greetings, elegant viewers,
and welcome to
Good Works.
Today’s show features
the Assyrian Aid Society
of America and
its sister chapter in Iraq,
which work to improve
and enhance the lives
of the kindhearted
Assyrian people.
The organization also
strives to
preserve and promote
the ancient Assyrian
culture and heritage.
The Assyrians are
the indigenous people
of Iraq,
most of the Assyrians,
are Christians.
Mesopotamia,
it means “a land
between two rivers.”
And we are descendants
of those people.
Our capital,
back 3000 years ago,
was the capital of Nineveh.
Since 600 BC,
we haven’t had an area
that we call
our own country.
But it was in the area of
Iraq, Iran, Syria, Turkey,
mostly in Iraq.
So whenever there are
archaeological digs
in Iraq, it’s always
of Assyrian history there.
Assyrians originate
from an area
widely considered to be
the cradle of civilization
and of one of the four
riverine civilizations
in which writing was
believed to be invented.
Dating back to
over 3,000 years ago,
the oldest lens artifact,
known as the Nimrud lens,
was invented
in ancient Assyria.
This lineage of scientific
aptitude and diligence
continues on
in modern Assyrians.
Assyrians are
very hard working people,
and I’d say 99%
of the men that you meet
are going to tell you
they are engineers because
that was the profession,
they’re very disciplined
and they love math.
The women do everything.
When we went to Iraq
this last trip,
I wasn’t surprised to see
that all the schools,
I’d say 90% of the schools,
the principal were women.
Women can multi-task
really easily, and
Assyrian women, I think,
take that to an extreme
and are very strong,
very nurturing people.
First established
in San Francisco,
California, USA
in November 1991,
Assyrian Aid Society
of America works
in collaboration with
the Assyrian Aid Society
of Iraq in direct response
to the needs of Assyrians
throughout Iraq
as well as worldwide.
We, in the United States,
formed the Assyrian Aid
Society of America.
At the same time,
we encouraged to have
Assyrian Aid Society
of Iraq as our
sister organization.
And then we wanted
to go international, and
we formed and organized
Assyrian Aid Society
of Australia,
Assyrian Aid Society
of Canada,
Assyrian Aid Society
of Europe.
We are in the headquarters
in Berkeley, and we have
a number of chapters
in the United States, Arizona,
Los Angeles, San Jose,
in Nevada as well,
in the Central Valley,
Modesto-Turlock area,
and in Chicago
and in Michigan.
The cause that we have
is to supply
humanitarian need
for the needy Assyrians
in northern Iraq.
That encompasses
primarily schools,
needy people,
medical centers,
pharmacies, agriculture,
irrigation, building roads,
building homes
for the displaced people.
We have raised over six
and a half million dollars
to supply the need
for the needy Assyrians
for the humanitarian
necessities in Iraq.
With this six and a half
million dollars,
we have done the job
of well over
thirty million dollars in aid
because our money
goes a long way because
most of our workers
are volunteers.
All our executives,
board members
are volunteers.
We don’t get
any compensation
and that’s why
we can bring the help
to the needy people
on a 92 cents in a dollar.
So we have only
8 cents expenses.
One of the most
important projects of
the Assyrian Aid Society
is to better the education
for children
in northern Iraq.
Our priority number one
is to supply the need
for our young children
so they can survive,
to be safe,
to be socially active
and to be sporty active,
to be active with the arts
and all that.
And plus to continue
their education
and hopefully reach
a higher level of education,
like university.
One of the
Assyrian Aid Society’s
landmark achievements
in education
is the translation
of all current textbooks
for all grades into
Assyrian for students.
We have schools
in northern Iraq.
We realized
that there is a need
for our children to
keep our language going
and to learn our language
and to study
most of the subjects,
at this point
it’s all the subjects
in Assyrian.
So we took on the task
to translate the books
into all the science,
the math books,
history books, everything
into Assyrian, and so now
the schools that we fund,
which are 54 schools and
close to 5,000 students
in northern Iraq,
study the curriculum
in our language.
To supplement
the improvement
in school curriculum,
the Assyrian Aid Society
also facilitates
accommodations and
provides transportation
for students
living in remote areas to
offer them an opportunity
to receive their education.
One other project
that we do fund
is a dormitory
for university students,
it’s at our headquarters
in Duhok.
And it’s free of charge.
It’s a way for parents
who live in,
villages far away
to feel comfortable that
their students are staying
in a safe, secure place.
We have vans
that they go and pick up
those children
and bring them to cities
like Erbil, Dohuk
or wherever the schools
they are attending.
And then they continue
with their education.
And in dormitories,
we supply them
with the breakfast, lunch
and dinner, uniforms,
computers, books
and all the supplies
that the student needs,
and support them
so they can continue
their education because
they are the future
of our nation.
The Assyrian Aid Society
of Iraq also
works with local
charitable organizations
to assist the practical
and social needs
of youth and women.
We have established
2 childcare centers
for the mothers that
they want to work and
they don’t have any place
to have their children
taken care of.
And they always
have a need
for a place to meet,
a cultural center
to either meet
or have social events
and a place
for our young people
to be after school, and
there’s classes taught there
or some sort of
sewing classes or
you know that kind of thing.
We call it cultural center
to house all those needs.
In terms of healthcare,
Assyrian Aid Society has
established and maintains
pharmacies and clinics
in areas such as Sarsing,
Alqush, Tellisquf,
Batnaye, and Karemles,
providing
accessible and affordable
medical services
to those in need.
There are
very remote villages
that our people live in,
hardly any paved roads
and the medical need
is really dire, and so
we’ve funded pharmacies
to be built in these areas,
so that when there are
small medical needs,
they are able to access one.
And in those pharmacies,
there are the people
who work in them, are
able to give vaccinations,
do small things like that
would be really helpful,
and for them
not to have to travel
long distances.
We have had situations
where children, especially
have had medical needs
that they aren’t able to
tend to in locally there,
and we’ve brought them
either here or to Jordan
or to Syria to have them
have surgery or anything
that they would need to do.
We supplied
all of our neighbors,
the Kurds, the Sunnis,
the Shabak,
all the minorities,
that if they needed help,
we offered them
if they can have
some of our medication,
and use them
for a better purpose
that we do.
There are numerous stories
of how the assistance from
the Assyrian Aid Society
has saved and changed
lives for the better.
It is such heart touching
moments that motivate
the passionate
and dedicated volunteers
in their noble work.
We had many occasions
whereby, for example,
we brought
a 2 year old child,
he had a hole in his heart,
2 years ago,
and he was given
only 2, 3 years to live.
We brought him over here,
we had open heart surgery
for him, he recovered
and now he’s about
5 years old, 4 years old,
and he’s doing very well.
In the bombing,
a family had 3 sons,
they had lost their legs,
their arms, their limbs,
we brought them over here,
and we had to put
artificial arms and legs
for them.
But when they went,
they walked
with their own feet,
they used their own arms,
prosthetics arms and legs.
That’s our reward,
that is our self-satisfaction.
We see the fruit
of our labor,
where we really
help our people, and
they get the help they need
in order to survive.
For more information about
the Assyrian Aid Society,
please visit:
assyrianaid.org
Join us again next Sunday
for more about
the accomplished
Assyrian culture
and the laudable works of
the Assyrian Aid Society
here on
Good People, Good Works.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
The World Around Us
after Noteworthy News.
Let us rejoice in
Heaven’s love and grace.
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