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Land and Culture Launches 2010 Campaign

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  • Land and Culture Launches 2010 Campaign

    March 2, 2010

    PRESS RELEASE
    Land and Culture Organization
    1435 Old House Road
    Pasadena, CA 91107
    http://www.lcousa.org/


    LAND AND CULTURE LAUNCHES 2010 CAMPAIGN


    On February 6 and 7, the Union International de Organisations Terre et
    Culture (UIOTC)/ Land and Culture Organization (LCO) chapters from the
    France, United States, Armenia, United Kingdom, and Belgium met this year
    in Brussels, Belgium for their annual meeting, held in the offices of the
    European-Armenian Federation. Among the many organizational agenda items,
    the committee discussed the successful completion of its 2009 projects and
    plans for the upcoming 2010 campaign. Also during the weekend, 200 people
    attended a cultural event hosted by the LCO-Belgium chapter in the Haydoon
    in Brussels, where a presentation of LCO projects throughout the years was
    made.

    This summer of 2010, LCO volunteers will be restoring the Church in the
    village of Yeghvart, in the Syunik region, on the Azeri-Armenian border. The
    project began in 2007 and will continue until its completion in 2010 or
    2011. Yeghvart has been subject to several invasions, which has resulted in
    destruction of the village on a number of occasions. Despite the state of
    the Church, LCO initiated and organized a number of baptisms with the
    assistance of priests from Kapan. The remains of Prince Thoros, who was a
    lieutenant and friend in arms of David Beg, are found in the cemetery
    adjoining the Church.

    During the 2009 campaign, over 30 volunteers from Armenia, Canada, France,
    the United Kingdom, and the United States spent their summer in Armenia and
    Nagorno Karabakh on community development projects. After several years, LCO
    volunteers helped in the completion the entire third floor of the Shushi
    Central Regional Hospital in Artsakh. The hospital serves the medical needs
    of the inhabitants of the Shushi region and since the cease-fire was in a
    state of disrepair. LCO helped to renovate patient, delivery, and surgery
    rooms to meet the growing medical needs of the population. In the summer of
    2009, the Shushi Hospital celebrated its opening, and the first surgeries
    were performed by guest physicians from Armenia and France, in the renovated
    rooms.

    Additionally, for the past several years, LCO volunteers worked in two
    villages in the Vardenis region of Armenia, Azad and Shatvan. Located
    southeast of Lake Sevan near the road that leads to Kelbajar, the villages
    are mainly populated by Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan. LCO-USA repaired
    the schoolhouses in the villages. "Before, Armenia felt quite distant to me.
    But living with "native" Armenians, I found a home, I found my people in a
    village called Azad", said 2009 volunteer Anoosh Gasparian from London.
    During its campaign in the village, the ruins of a 17th century church were
    discovered in Azad. LCO will start the restoration process of the church in
    2011.

    The Armenia Chapter of LCO has conducted the "Faith and Heritage" program
    for the last eight years. Its mission is to stimulate and encourage the
    youth of Armenia to safeguard and preserve, along with their Diaspora
    brethern, the heritage left in their care.

    For over 30 years, LCO has been one of the earliest volunteer groups in
    Armenia and Karabakh working to restore, renovate, and rejuvenate the
    historical monuments and sites of our nation. It has performed this mission
    through its summer campaigns, by volunteers of every age from the Diaspora
    and Armenia.

    To help our mission or join in our summer volunteer program, you may reach
    us at www.lcousa.org and www.landandculture.co.uk.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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