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.
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.
Assyrian people
are very open.
If you come to their village,
they insisted that
you come to their home
and stay there,
stay with them and eat,
constantly drink tea,
and they’ll just
open their home to you
as if they’ve known you
forever.
It’s all Assyrians all over,
it’s not just
in the home country.
Greetings, elegant viewers,
to Good People,
Good Works.
Today we continue with
part 2 of our two-part
series featuring
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.
Since its establishment
in 1991,
the Assyrian Aid Society
has been at the forefront
of Assyrian refugee relief
work, providing services
to those displaced
from their homeland.
Within Iraq.
We try to help as much
as much as we can.
We try to help when
we have other Assyrians
in the neighborhood
countries like Syria and
Jordan, Armenia as well.
There were a lot of people
that had to
move from there areas
that they normally lived in,
to the north and
had no access to services.
So it was a village
rebuilding
to provide them shelter.
And when people of need
come to our pharmacies
or come to dorms
to ask to stay there,
we never ask them
where you’re from,
what village you’re from,
what church you’re from,
or any of those things.
All we know is that
we help all our Assyrians,
our Assyrian brothers
and sisters, and that’s
really important to us.
All the refugees
need to be attended to.
And they should be helped
so they can
live a normal life
like you and I,
at the place
of their choosing, whether
it be United States,
whether it be Australia,
whether be Canada,
whether be any country
in Europe.
The whole idea is
to live peacefully,
among other peoples
in a place.
Assyrian Aid Society funds
reconstruction programs,
education programs
from pre-school
through college,
as well as medical projects
that have included
shipments of medicines
and supplies,
free medical clinics,
and facilitating
life-saving surgeries.
A lot of times
when we are doing work
in a certain village,
you’ll find people say,
“I’m from there,” or
“I still have relatives there.”
And so they have
this passion to give more
for that particular project.
When I was there,
immediately I felt like
I had been there all along,
and I knew these people
all my life.
But I had just met them,
right there.
And so when we’d
go to all these villages
it was the same thing,
we were just so welcomed
with open arms.
They’re all very happy
with their lives.
They just, it’s just rough,
they don’t have the means
to live comfortably.
And so we hope
that we make some dent
in their life
to make it better for them.
But as we were leaving
one day,
one of these old women
who was just hugging me
the whole time said
“You’ll just go and
forget us, just like
everybody else does
when they come here.”
It was really hard
for me to leave.
I actually have come back
and I’ve tried
working really hard
to not forget those words
and to do more.
I hope that every Assyrian
would be able to go back
at least one time
in their lifetime,
to go see that area
in the north and
to be around our people,
and I think that would be
a great experience for them,
just like it was for me.
Assyrian Aid Society
not only provides
humanitarian assistance,
it also actively works
to preserve the ancient
Assyrian culture
and its rich heritage.
The base of our language
is Aramaic.
It’s a Semitic language
and it’s very similar
to the Hebrew language,
it’s read right to left.
Our organization,
Assyrian Aid Society
helps all Assyrians.
Sometimes Assyrians
are also known as
Chaldeans and Syriacs.
As you know,
every nation’s voice
and every nation’s sign
is indicated by their artists
- their musicians,
their poets, the writers,
the singers and the artists
because they are the ones
that they display
the history and the custom
of that nation
by introducing the nation
through their art.
It’s music that
has been passed down
through generations.
Some of it actually
has been just
through word of mouth
and hearing it, let’s say,
at family gatherings
and things like that.
And so some of
these composers
had then tried to put that
in more of a formal setting,
where it’s written so that
it could be preserved.
One of our chapters
in the central valley,
in the Medassa Turlock
area, the president
of that chapter
there is very much
into the arts
and our musical heritage.
And so in the past 4 years,
he’s been very involved
in promoting
and bringing out
the past composers
and musicians, so
it’s been really wonderful.
Through various events
and fundraisers,
the Assyrian Aid Society
is able to introduce
various aspects
of the Assyrian culture
to the public as well as
reinforce the bond within
the Assyrian community.
There’s a great center there
called the Gallo Center
and they have 2 auditoriums
that are just beautiful
and so we have been
doing our fundraisers,
our events
in the Gallo Center, and
it’s been really successful.
So in those events
we represent
not only the music
but also our art.
There’s a lot of artists
that depict our heritage
as well as
our traditional clothing.
A lot of times
we are either wearing it
in the events
or represented somehow.
This scarf was actually
designed and made by our
LA chapter organization,
and you’ll see
the Assyrian Aid Society
on the side there.
But this is Assyrian writing,
and it’s by well-known
poet named Ninos Aho,
and you read it this way.
And it comes
in different colors.
And so they use this as
part of their fundraiser
that they had, it was
called “Art and Artists,”
it was a night
of poetry, painting, and
this was one of the poems
that was read that night.
Part of its efforts toward
cultural preservation
is through the production
of a documentary, which
tells the fascinating history
of the advanced Assyrian
people and their
important contributions
and inventions
which are still applied
in modern day society.
“The Assyrian Legacy”
narrated by
George Kennedy who is
an Academy award winner,
actor in Hollywood,
plus Mr. Henri Charr
who is a professional
director, filmmaker
for the last 30 years.
So we got together
in order to display the
identity of the Assyrians
and all the humanitarian,
and art,
and scientific displays
and the inventions
that they had to show that
who Assyrian were and
what kind of contribution
they make to our
civilization and mankind.
For example, the wheel,
the building of the city,
irrigation, navigation,
merchandising,
merchants, trade,
the music, jewelry,
that they start working
with precious metals
like gold and silver.
And so they make
quite a bit of contribution
to our civilization.
Numeric, the clock,
the 60 seconds in a minute,
60 minutes in an hour,
24 hours in a day,
7 days a week.
Astronomy and many
scientific discoveries
that they were made
to our civilization
and to mankind that
we are even using it today.
What we are trying to do
is save, really,
a civilization
from becoming extinct.
And this is a civilization
that is really the history
of all mankind, it’s called
the cradle of civilization.
It’s where most of our
modern day mathematics
and science comes from.
So I think
it is really important
to get the word out to the
international community
that you’re not just
saving our history.
It’s really
the whole world history.
The Assyrian people
living in Iraq
as well as abroad
are harmonious people
who share the same
high-minded aspirations
and sincere wishes
as all of humankind.
We hope to live in peace
among our neighbors
and to be able to practice
our own way of life,
to practice our religion,
our traditions, our culture
and we’re hoping
that the outside, the
international community
will be able to
help us to do that.
And really,
that’s all we ask for.
There’s nothing else
we’d like more.
A democratic,
free Iraq for all,
not just for us but for all.
I am grateful to you,
for your interview, and
to your television station
to give us this opportunity
of explaining who
the Assyrian Society are
and what
the Assyrian people are.
To my brothers and sisters,
I bid you goodbye
with a happy heart.
Thank you.
We thank Ms. Mona Malik
and Mr. Pierre Toulakany
for sharing your
deep knowledge about
the gentle Assyrian people.
May the noble work of
the Assyrian Aid Society
continue
in evermore success.
For more information about
the Assyrian Aid Society,
please visit:
assyrianaid.org
Considerate viewers,
we enjoyed having
your presence today for
Good People, Good Works.
Coming up next is
The World Around Us
after Noteworthy News.
May your life
be filled with goodness,
nobility and peace.