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Real Medicine Foundation Changing Lives In Armenia

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  • Real Medicine Foundation Changing Lives In Armenia

    REAL MEDICINE FOUNDATION CHANGING LIVES IN ARMENIA
    By Karine Chakarian

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/06/05/real- medicine-foundation-changing-lives-in-armenia/
    Jun 5, 2009

    The images are arresting; A great-grandmother cradling her toddler
    grandson, the rolling of bread dough, the sheer force of the baker's
    movements felt through the photographer's lens, a cross resting on
    a grave.

    On June 12, 2009, the humanitarian organization Real Medicine
    Foundation, will present A Journey to Armenia, a photography exhibit
    fundraiser featuring the work of Sara Anjargolian, Vahe D'Ala and
    Sevag Vrej. The artists' images will be on display for one night
    only. Proceeds will benefit major renovations of a primary care clinic
    in Shinuhayr, one of the most poverty stricken areas in the Syunic
    region in Armenia.

    Founded in May 2005, Real Medicine Foundation (RMF) began as
    pediatrician Dr. Martina Fuch's mission to help the tsunami victims
    of Southeast Asia, and has grown to become an emergency relief
    organization with clinics and projects in fourteen countries around the
    world. Its mission is all encompassing, focusing on the individual as
    a whole by providing long term medical, social, economic and support.

    Below The Poverty Line

    Nairy Ghazourian was first introduced to Dr. Fuchs in April of
    2008. Moved by the amount that had been accomplished in the brief time
    that the organization had been established, she approached her with
    the idea of establishing a primary care clinic in a rural village in
    Armenia. "She [Dr. Fuchs] had built the Foundation based on passion
    and a keen drive to improve the lives of mankind throughout the world,"
    Ghazourian, who is now RMF's Country Director for Armenia, states. "If
    you can inspire people to believe in a cause and feel the same passion
    toward it as you do, then you are able to create an army of great
    ambassadors, and the work will get done and the project will succeed
    no matter how great the challenges or obstacles life throws at you."

    The challenges with the clinic in Shinuhayr are monumental. The
    decision to focus on the rural town near the border of Karabakh,
    where 90 percent of the population lives below the poverty line,
    was congruent with Real Medicine Foundation's mission.

    As a direct result of their extreme poverty, Shinuhary's clinic and
    the residents it serves do not have access to pivotal resources such
    as drugs, medical supplies and even the most rudimentary of medical
    equipment.

    According to Ghazourian, an assessment of the country was the catalyst
    for the decision to focus on Shinuhayr.

    Expert observation found that patients of the village who are in need
    of specialized care are forced to make a five to seven hour drive to
    Yerevan, Armenia's capital, because of the clinics current state of
    disrepair and lack in resources. Besides the time commitment required
    for the trip, the trek is virtually impossible for a number of reasons,
    including expense, and potentially dangerous road conditions due to
    harsh winters.

    The renovated clinic will serve the town's population of 3,000, as well
    as act as a referral site for the additional 5,000 residents from its
    neighboring seven villages. Immediate plans for the 14,000 square foot
    clinic are to rebuild the roof, which show signs of hazardous mold. In
    addition to roof reparations, other vital expenditures will be applied
    towards repairing the damaged foundation, floors, and installing
    water, gas and sanitation systems, as well as the provision of basic
    medical supplies and pharmaceuticals, training of health care staff,
    implementation of community health education outreach programs and the
    addition of an ambulance that word transport critically ill patients.

    Images Of An Ancient Civilization

    Lord Byron once wrote, "It was in Armenia that the flood first abated
    and the dove alighted." To the volunteer fundraising committee of A
    Journey to Armenia it seemed fitting that captured moments preserved
    in time of life in Armenia would provide a glimpse into this world
    described by Lord Byron. And it is this ancient land and its people
    that is captured poignantly through the lens of photographers
    Anjargolian, D'Ala and Vrej.

    The photographer's eclectic backgrounds, and unique but complementary
    visual style, depict stories of the crossroads between old and
    new; an elderly woman tends her sheep near an ancient graveyard,
    a grandfather walks in the hills with his young grandson, mist and
    fog shrouding them, a sea of colorful sun dried laundry blow like
    flags against a clear blue sky.

    Photographer Sara Anjargolian's inspiration for contributing to the
    exhibit stemmed from her exposure to the state of Armenia's health
    care system while living there for several years during the early
    part of the decade. Woman with Rooster, her image of an elderly
    woman sitting alone on a bench in a church courtyard, a rooster in
    her arms, perhaps most starkly captures the dire circumstances of
    the people who live within the region. The photo was shot in the
    town of Meghri in the Syunik region, the exact area that the primary
    clinic will serve. Anjargolian states that the rooster was the woman's
    sacrificial offering to God for the sick granddaughter that awaited
    her at home. "When I consider what's going on in the image... I can't
    help but consider whether this woman would be sitting there had she
    and her grandchild had access to a primary health-care clinic in
    their region," says Anjargolian.

    Champagne, Celebrity and Cause

    On the evening of June 12, the doors of A&I Photography Gallery
    will open to a champagne reception and hors d'oeuvres catered by Mi
    Piace, Sandella's Cafe and Felafel Arax. Guests will mingle with the
    photographers, dignitaries and celebrities like actor Ken Davitian
    (Borat, Get Smart). "For $500 you get a picture worth a thousand
    words," Davitian says with a smile. "And I'll take a picture with
    the picture. Now you'll have two pictures that are worth 1000 words,
    each for 500, which makes the original picture only $250."

    Davitian trades on his trademark humor to honor a cause that is close
    to his heart. The exigent need for healthcare in these poverty stricken
    areas is a matter he is all too familiar with. His father was raised
    in a rural village in Armenia where poverty ran rampant.

    It is the alleviation of this poverty which Real Medicine Foundation
    is working towards accomplishing. "Our goal with this project is
    not just to build a primary care clinic but to empower the people
    of Shinuhayr and its surrounding villages," states Ghazourian. "To
    equip them with all the tools necessary so that they can continue to
    provide for themselves and sustain what we help them build."
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