In Homenetmen, she inspired fellow Scouts as a khmpabed and traveled to Armenia in 1998 and 2002 to participate in the worldwide jamborees. In 2006, she would return to the Homeland, this time through the AYF, AVC, and Birthright Armenia, to spend the summer working with children at the Naregatsi Art Institute in Artsakh and the Khnko Aper Children’s Library in Yerevan. In 2007, she went back for a second consecutive summer, this time as director of the AYF Armenia Internship Program.
Upon her return to the U.S., as she explored career opportunities, Maral interned at the ANCA. In time, she met and married a true kindred spirit—Tigran Avetisyan—and they, together, embarked on a journey of faith and fulfillment that was sadly cut short on April 13, 2015.
In addition to supporting the ANCA’s educational and youth development programs, Maral’s family has shared her powerful legacy of devotion to community and cause through their support for her beloved Camp Haiastan, and most recently through the establishment of a soccer field in the village of Arajamugh in the Republic of Artsakh.
Ara and Haikanouche Melkonian and Ara Melkonian’s sister, Seta Melkonian-Mangassarian, recently participated in the dedication ceremony for the outdoor sports facility, built through the efforts of the Armenian Cultural Association of America Artsakh Fund. Noting Maral’s lifelong commitment to the children of the Armenian homeland, Artsakh Fund Board Member Hovsep Avakian explained, “We seek to do everything we can so that the youth of these border villages can grow fully, in a free and unfettered environment. These villages are essentially Artsakh’s gatekeepers and thus require constant attention. At the same time, through such charitable projects, we bind our diasporan communities more closely to the life of liberated Artsakh.”