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ATP News
September 20, 2007
Leitner Family Support Links ATP With Yale Forestry
School
By Jason Sohigian
James and Sandra Leitner have been supporting
Armenia Tree Project for more than 10 years, and they played an
instrumental role in the organization’s relationship with
Yale University’s Global Institute of Sustainable Forestry |
When Armenia Tree Project pursued a partnership with Yale
University’s Global Institute of Sustainable Forestry, the organization
first contacted James and Sandra Leitner because they were active supporters
of the school and sponsored expeditions for students to work with the
Green Belt Movement in Kenya. In fact, when Sandra Leitner was meeting
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Wangari Maathai for lunch at Yale, she made
a point of telling the Green Belt Movement founder all about ATP’s
programs in Armenia.
Jim has degrees in Economics and Russian Studies and he supports
Yale’s forestry school because of its international environmental
focus, and also because he knew that forestry programs were more challenging
to fund than more traditional areas such as law and economics. “These
are people who are not always well paid, but they are trying to make the
world a better place,” Jim explained. It was a similar interest
that attracted them to ATP and its reforestation programs in Armenia.
Last year, ATP received a $100,000 grant from Conservation
International to work with Yale to develop a sustainable forestry manual
for Armenia. This two-year program is intended to give ATP the resources
and training to teach people in Armenia about using forests in a more
sustainable manner, protecting the resource for future generations.
Jim and Sandra Leitner of New Jersey were instrumental in
creating the relationship between ATP and Prof. Chadwick Oliver, director
of the Global Institute of Sustainable Forestry, and the program has been
off to a strong start. Yale graduate student Zachary Parisa spent this
past summer in Armenia working with volunteers and Armenian forestry students
to complete an inventory of the forests between Dilijan and Margahovit
Village, where ATP is working in northern Armenia.
In addition, the Leitner Family increased their generous
support of ATP to $125,000 in 2007. “We learned about ATP’s
founding by Carolyn Mugar after the trees were used for fuel in Armenia
during the embargos related to the Karabagh war. We thought it was important
to replace the trees that were utilized for that purpose,” emphasized
Sandra. “We stayed involved after seeing all the important work
being done by ATP to improve the lives of the Armenian people through
preservation of the environment.”
“We feel that all aspects of ATP’s mission are
inextricably intertwined and equally important. The combination of programs
in tree planting, environmental education, and poverty reduction address
both the immediate and long-term needs and interests of the country and
people,” she explained further. “We were delighted to attend
the concert for the organization’s 10th anniversary at Garni Temple
in 2004, but it has been ATP’s consistent, diligent, and growing
work that led us to increase our commitment. There is more to accomplish
and thus a greater need for support.”
Jim is a member of Yale University’s Investment Committee
and the President’s Council on International Activities at the university.
Earlier this year, Jim and Sandra were awarded the St. Gregory the Illuminator
Medal of Honor by Catholicos Karekin II.
Sandra--whose maiden name is Shahinian--has long-standing
ties to the Armenian community, and her paternal grandparents were great
patriots and believers in the nation of Armenia. “Their first trip
back to Yerevan in the 1960’s had an impact on me as a child,”
noted Sandra. “Partly due to their influence, I spent my junior
year of college at Yerevan State University, learning Armenian and deepening
my connection to the Armenian nation which I still feel today.”
Sandra grew up immersed in the Armenian community, and her
family’s connection with St. Leon Armenian Church in Fair Lawn,
New Jersey goes back to 1990. “We derive great satisfaction from
our volunteer work with other families who have an interest in preserving
the church for the next generation and encouraging their children to stay
connected to the church,” stated Sandra. “We are in the midst
of a building campaign to add an education and sports complex to help
accomplish that goal.”
Sandra was elected to the Diocesan Council of the Eastern
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America in May. Jim and Sandra are the
proud parents of three children--Allegra, Evan, and Olivia--who are, respectively,
students in law school, college, and high school. The Leitners also support
human rights programs at Fordham Law School and the Yale School of Nursing.
“It is important to us to try to leave the world a better place,”
they concluded.
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