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Marusya and Mother Mariam in New York |
Letter from the Executive Director, Marusya Chavchavadze
Travels with Mother Mariam
Last summer in Georgia, I spent time with Mother Mariam and saw the progress she has made with AFG’s help at her orphanage for street children in Dzegvi. We talked about her hopes to start the Bediani project, to build facilities to take in more street children and to set up a medical facility at Dzegvi. She wanted to meet and thank her American Friends "…for your great love and for trusting in us and our activities." I invited her to come here. To my delight, the Patriarch of Georgia gave her permission to make the trip.
Her faith that God will help her do her work is unshakable. So are her spirits and good humor which saw her through ten days while I drove and she navigated through five states on a grueling schedule of receptions and meetings. From the moment she arrived at JFK, where she was mistaken for an Iranian by Immigration and whisked off to be fingerprinted, Mother Mariam kept up her strength by nibbling on Cherchkhela (walnuts dipped in grape resin and flour), food carried by Georgian soldiers into battle for centuries. After ten days I told her that if we only had another week, we could raise more money and her response was "If we had another week, I would be dead."
One is surprised to discover that Mother Mariam is only 34 and Abbess of a convent in the center of Tbilisi, where many Georgians in desperate need seek help. In spite of her young age, she has remarkable wisdom in finding solutions to overwhelming problems. She is a unique ambassador for Georgians because she speaks truthfully about their actual living conditions during this transitional period. "Everybody (in Georgia) was kind and good before this turmoil started….Civil war, ethnic conflicts in Abkhazia…and unemployment had a tragic influence on the whole nation…In short, it showed us that we were not a good as we thought we were. But on the other hand, we also have examples of amazing selflessness and heroism, and they are not rare, but evil is always more visible."
My admiration for her and her work was re-affirmed by seeing how other Americans reacted to her. Her AFG friends who met her described her as deeply spiritual, pure, impressive, practical, intelligent, realistic, mischievous and joyful.
On her return to Georgia, Mother Mariam wrote to thank AFG, "It is with great joy that I recall the days spent in the United States. I will never forget those memorable meetings, special attention and kindness delivered towards me during the visit." She also told me that she has already purchased three houses, two cows and two calves in Bediani and started building a medical facility for the children at Dzegvi. With our help her work in Georgia continues!
To find out how you can help offer hope and some relief to those Georgians in need, see our appeal.
I would like to especially thank the following people who gave receptions or shelter to Mother Mariam during her stay in the United States: Anne and Constantine Sidamon-Eristoff, Xenia Woyevodsky, Princess Irina Bagration, Damian and Efrosyni Robinson, Sharon Gans, Misha and Keti Popkhadze, Mamuka and Maya Tsereteli, Haycock Elementary School children, Lily Yeh, Charles and Gay Lord.
Marusya Chavchavadze
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Abbess Mariam, known to her friends here as Mother Mariam, visited the United States on a whirlwind tour from March 5 to 13 to raise funds for her Dzegvi Orphanage and the Bediani Shelter Project and to personally thank the supporters who have made these programs possible. "Everywhere I went I felt kindness and the willingness of heart to assist me", Mother Mariam said, "I wish God to favor them and give them the possibility to do more and more kindness in their life." AFG has been supporting Dzegvi Orphanage which takes in children from all religious and ethnic backgrounds since 1996. We have been providing funds for the renovation of buildings used for the education and housing of 100 or more street children in addition to much needed clothing and books. The Bediani shelter was started in 1998 with Mother Mariam’s vision of a series of residences for homeless elderly and single mothers. This will be a self-supporting settlement that will also provide housing and rehabilitation for emotionally and physically handicapped who can no longer be supported by their families. Mother Mariam has stated that these shelters would not exist today without the ongoing financial assistance that has been provided by AFG. These additional funds will enable her to extend the housing for adults and children and to arrange workshops for teaching useful skills. At two receptions, one in New York City and one in Washington D.C., Mother Mariam spoke about the return of Monastic life, the revival of religion and the phenomena of street children who are refugees or been abandoned in these desperate times of unrest and unemployment. At Haycock Elementary in McLean, Virginia, the children who had been providing toys and books to the Dzegvi Orphanage sang for her. In Philadelphia Mother Mariam visited with Lily Yeh and the Village of Arts and Humanities where art is used to heal and empower neglected and impoverished children. Her favorite interview took place in Washington with inter city teenagers at Children’s Express who are studying to be journalists. She spoke to large congregations at St. George Greek Orthodox Church in Clifton, New Jersey and at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church in Bethlehem, Pa. She spoke to the Russian community at the Tolstoy Foundation Center and Residences in Valley Cottage, NY This deeply spiritual and inspiring young woman who captivates everyone she meets with her twinkling black eyes has boundless energy and enthusiasm tempered with serenity and grace. Anne Sidamon-Eristoff, the kind hostess of the large reception in New York City summed it up by saying "Mother Mariam is a truly remarkable young nun with amazing power and conviction, a kind of purity of spirit which is rare and wonderful."
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