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  • Fresnans helping to feed Armenia

    Fresnans helping to feed Armenia

    Nonprofit's program provides wheat seed in 326 villages there and in
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    By Dennis Pollock / The Fresno Bee
    11/25/06 05:08:26

    Seeds planted in Armenia are reaping a harvest of praise for a Fresno
    nonprofit and the farmers it has helped.

    Hovhanness Galoyan, a wheat grower from the Armenian village of
    Karnut, was recognized recently by the government of Armenia for his
    farming efforts that were assisted by the Fresno-based Armenian
    Technology Group Inc (ATG).


    And a tally by the Fresno organization shows that its 14-year-old
    program to provide wheat seed has reached farmers in 302 villages in
    Armenia and 24 villages in the neighboring Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    "It is a moving experience to be able to put bread on the Armenian
    table," said Nubar Tashjian, the group's president.

    The wheat grown in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of the
    collaboration is for domestic use, said Varoujan Der Simonian, the
    organization's executive director. The region was plagued in 2000 by
    famine and has struggled to rebuild its farming industry in the years
    following the breakup of the former Soviet Union.

    At an Armenian International AgroForum Conference in Yerevan, Galoyan
    was awarded a gold medal for accomplishments that included achieving
    wheat yields three to four times higher than the country's average.

    Working with the Fresno group, Galoyan mastered the production of
    high-quality certified wheat seed. He is a member of the Seed
    Producers Support Association founded by the Armenian Technology Group
    in 1998. The association has 47 members who specialize in growing
    high-quality wheat, alfalfa, corn and barley seeds appropriate for
    different growing zones in Armenia.

    The seed project drew praise from Davit Lokyan, Armenia's minister of
    agriculture.

    The Armenian Technology Group Seed Multiplication Program has been
    funded through: The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign
    Agricultural Service and its Food for Progress program. The Lincy
    Foundation. The Bertha and John Garabedian Charitable Foundation in
    Fresno. Pilgrim Armenian Congregational Church in Fresno.
    Organizations and individuals in the United States.

    Retired University of California Extension agent Roger Benton, a
    longtime adviser with Armenian Technology, said he was pleased to see
    farmers getting the recognition.

    "They are the backbone of Armenia's rural economy," Benton said.

    "ATG farmers worked so hard to help feed the nation and their
    families. I remember particularly when our seed growers literally
    saved thousands of people from possible starvation and famine by
    supplying clean and treated seed to over 12,000 farmers to plant their
    winter wheat in 2000.

    "May God bless them all."

    Mekhitar Grigorian, an agronomist working at the Ministry of
    Agriculture in Armenia, wrote his recollection of the day the seed
    project was launched in 1992 by a group of Americans who used "their
    bare hands and shovels" to plant the seed on a cold, snowy day,
    kneeling as they worked with the soil.

    "I will never forget that day, and I feel honored that I was part of
    those fine people, who cared so much for us and farmers in Armenia,"
    Grigorian wrote.

    The Armenian Technology Group began its assistance to Armenia after an
    earthquake there in 1988.

    Its projects have included fertilizer production, farm equipment
    manufacturing and assistance to the honey-bee, and wine-grape
    industries.

    The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559)
    441-6364.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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