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  • Rural Development Program Weekly Update

    Rural Development Program
    The Armenia Fund
    Contact: Sose Amirkhanian
    Tel: + (3741) 56 01 06 ext. 107
    Fax: + (3741) 52 15 05
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.himnadram.org/villages

    08 February 2008

    Rural Development Program Weekly Update

    Yerevan, 08 February, 2008: This week we bring you a batch of good news
    concerning the Aknaghbyur community (Tavush region) development initiative
    that will become a reality thanks to the support of the Armenian community
    in Switzerland. This was also the week when we finally wrapped the filming
    process on the first vocational training DVD and are currently busy putting
    it together with the technical assistance of Armenia TV.

    We are excited to add a new feature to our weekly updates - meet the people
    section will focus on individuals who are involved in the Rural Development
    Program: people who have helped bring a project to life and individuals who
    live and try to build their lives in the border villages will both be in our
    spotlight. This is also something that we want to dedicate to everyone who
    cares and supports the Program. Today's meet the people is dedicated to Ms.
    Shakeh Havan who is currently sponsoring the renovation of the community
    library of Azatamut.

    AKNAGHBYUR DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE LAUNCHED

    The Swiss Armenian community was one of the first to believe in and embrace
    the idea of comprehensive development in Armenia's border villages. What's
    more, the community has committed to supporting a whole chain of improvement
    initiatives in the community of Aknaghbyur, one the six villages included in
    the Khashtarak cluster.

    The first two projects in the pipeline will address the most pressing issues
    of drinking and irrigation water. With the Swiss Armenian community's
    support, we will now order the technical designs for the initiatives that
    will see a full scale rehabilitation of the obsolete water network.

    In the village book of thousand and one problem, the water issue would
    probably be the most mentioned one. Most of the problems come from the
    continuous lack of maintenance of pipes that mostly date back to the middle
    of the previous century. In the transition period, the problem was the
    absence of maintenance funds (or any other funds, for that matter) in the
    local administration budgets. Now, when the system is more or less in place
    and it is possible to direct some local funds for the maintenance it is
    often too little too late as most water pipelines, whether for drinking or
    irrigation purposes, are simply beyond repair.

    Obviously, the burden of replacing an entire network is beyond the reach of
    any local administration budget and it is up to an external source to solve
    this problem. The Armenia Fund has a long history of being an efficient
    problem solution mechanism and the Rural Development Program will continue
    in the same vein. Rehabilitation of the infrastructure is one of the
    cornerstones of the Program. We believe that normally functioning and
    efficient infrastructure is essential for creating a positive environment
    for development.

    The Swiss Armenian community also decided to support the parallel
    realization of three small projects in Aknaghbyur - all directed at tackling
    the information gap issue between the villages and their urban peers. The
    projects will see the local library equipped with an up to date computer and
    a printer. It will also receive a TV and a DVD player and an annual
    subscription to newspapers.

    These projects will also bring an immediate and visible change into the
    lives of the people of Aknaghbyur and contain the promise of the more
    profound changes yet to come.

    MEET THE PEOPLE: SHAKEH HAVAN

    So - meet Shakeh Havan. In 1999, she moved to Armenia from the US with her
    family. She now runs (a very nice) Artbridge bookstore café in downtown
    Yerevan. Shakeh truly embraced the vision behind the Rural Development
    Program and was looking at ways to support it. When the Armenia Fund
    launched the rural library improvement initiative she knew she found a
    perfect match and was constantly aboard the project that would breathe new
    life into the libraries of Azatamut and Lusahovit.

    Books are an inseparable part of her personality, her business and the
    charity work she does. Other than the children's literature book featuring
    the best works of 9-14 year olds that she published, Shakeh has for years,
    on her own initiative and in collaboration with publishers, gathered books
    at reduced prices and distributed them to the regions of Armenia.

    `I believe books should be bought and not received as charity items, says
    Shakeh. The best we could do for people who do not have access to the
    bookshops of Yerevan and can not afford books at market prices is give them
    a chance to choose and buy books at a price they can afford to pay.

    I don't want any foreign country to impact my culture, says Shakeh. We need
    to project our cultural development ourselves. We need an action plan.

    When you renovate a school and leave the rest of the village in ruins, it
    will have no lasting impact. You can not refurbish a library and leave it at
    that. The Armenia Fund cluster idea attracted me, says Ms Shakeh, because it
    embraces development in all its aspects and each input, every project is
    reinforced by the other. I'll be learning from this process.

    People keep saying `No one read books any more', adds Ms. Shakeh. But, the
    library can act as a community center. With the needed training and support
    the librarians can create the right atmosphere and we can create the place
    where the community gathers to discuss literature, art and social issues. I
    say the library needs to have a computer, a television set and a good
    collection of DVD-s, newspapers and magazines, even backgammon games, why
    not? It is not about fixing the walls, and putting more books on the
    shelves. The place needs to be alive and if 3 out of every 10 visitors read
    a book, then this project is a winner.'
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