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Land And Culture Organization Continues Its Mission In Armenia

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  • Land And Culture Organization Continues Its Mission In Armenia

    LAND AND CULTURE ORGANIZATION CONTINUES ITS MISSION IN ARMENIA

    Armenian Reporter
    http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?objectid =FA81E764-3FF3-752C-28B575EF1F0A54F7
    October 22, 2008
    Armenia

    Local volunteers in Syunik help restore monuments

    Land and Culture organization volunteers cleaning up the Vorotnavank
    monastic complex.

    SISIAN, Armenia - Concerned about the progressive destruction of
    historical Armenian monuments and sites throughout the world, a group
    of young French Armenians founded the Land and Culture Organization
    (LCO) in France in 1977. Realizing that Armenian architectural
    monuments were defenseless against the ravages of time and people, the
    LCO set out to help restore and preserve them. Soon after its creation,
    the LCO opened branches in the United States and England. After the
    devastating earthquake in Armenia in 1988, LCO started working in
    Armenia and in 1994 officially registered a branch in the homeland.

    The organization has organized summer programs which they call
    campaigns, where volunteers from all over the world travel to locations
    where Armenian ancestral sites can be found. They work in the area
    of architectural preservation, land cultivation, and community
    development. These summer campaigns serve as an opportunity for
    Armenians to come together to discover their ancestral roots and expand
    their cultural horizons. They also put their common ideals into action.

    This past summer, the LCO organized its Faith and Heritage Youth
    Campaign in Sisian and Goris in the Syunik region of Armenia. The
    Youth Campaign had been the late Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian's vision
    and this year's campaign was held in his memory.

    During these LCO campaigns, young men and women travel to monasteries
    and other national historic monuments to clean the surrounding areas of
    the monument. They are joined by young volunteers from local villages
    to bring the historic monument to a presentable state. This year's
    campaign included about 50 young volunteers from Yerevan and other
    regions of the country who were then joined by volunteers from local
    villages near the sites.

    The Faith and Heritage Youth Campaign visited the 7th-century
    St. Gregory the Illuminator Church in Sisian, including the
    Karadaran, an open air repository of ancient khatchkars (stone
    crosses), gravestones, and rock carvings where they conducted a
    clean-up. They also worked on a 7th-century mausoleum in the village
    of Aghitu. According to organizers, the site was completely cleared
    of wild, overgrown weeds and vegetation. The group also spent time
    at the Vorotnavank monastic complex, where they cleared the site of
    garbage, filling large garbage bags with rubbish, and also cleared
    away overgrown thorns and vegetation.

    The volunteers also cleared the entire area surrounding the Shake
    Hydroelectric station. The young people were amazed at the incredible
    amount of garbage in the area but were able to secure promises from
    local representatives that they would be disposed of properly.

    These dedicated young volunteers also worked on the site of a monastic
    complex from the Middle Ages in the steep ravine by the river Vorotan
    before traveling to the city of Goris where they visited the local
    church, the ancient caves of Goris, and the local museum of geology.

    The Land and Culture Organization will continue to organize these youth
    campaigns on a yearly basis ensuring the clean-up and maintenance of
    national historical sites and at the same time giving young Armenians
    the opportunity to take part in a worthwhile cause while discovering
    their roots..?
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