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  • How An Army Of Bears Is Saving A Town

    HOW AN ARMY OF BEARS IS SAVING A TOWN
    by Nanore Barsoumian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/06/27/how-an-army-of-bears-are-saving-a-town/
    June 27, 2012

    In the town of Berd in northern Armenia's Tavush province, a group
    of women knit little arms and legs, strawberry-shaped torsos, round
    heads, and half-moon ears and snouts. When all the pieces are stuffed
    and attached, plump little bears stare back and smile. These are the
    Berd Bears, a small army of cuddly pals that could change the lives
    of their creators.

    When all the pieces are stuffed and attached, plump little bears stare
    back and smile. These are the Berd Bears, a small army of cuddly pals
    that could change the lives of their creators.

    When Arkansas native John Hart moved to Berd as a Peace Corps volunteer
    two years ago, his mission was to help develop the information
    technology (IT) in the region. He began working at Berd IT, a small
    company with a handful of employees. His job description constituted
    fixing computers and teaching planning skills. As time went on,
    he veered towards working with women's and youth centers.

    Upon his return from the women's centers in Gapan, Meghri, and Goris,
    he approached his co-worker, Anahit Badalyan, with an idea. "I said,
    I think perhaps instead of trying to do women's projects under an IT
    banner, maybe we should start our own, Berd's women's organization-our
    own women's resource center," he told me. Within around three months,
    in February 2011, the Berd Women's Resource Center Foundation (BWRCF)
    was established.

    Around this time, Hart met Timothy Straight, honorary consul of
    Finland and Norway, and the founder of Homeland Handicrafts, an
    organization that supports job creation in rural Armenia, especially
    for women. Hart had a plan. "Unlike the other women's centers that
    were using Homeland Handicrafts projects to develop funds, we were
    thinking of using it to develop membership," Hart explained.

    In March 2011, Straight visited Berd, and met with the two-dozen or
    so women who had assembled at a local school. The women sat around a
    stove at the center of a cold classroom. They showcased an array of
    intricately made crafts, from embroideries to tablecloths to carpets.

    The knitted bear, however, made by a woman named Seta, caught
    Straight's eye. "I distinctly remember saying, 'All of you, one
    year from now, will be doing something related to the teddy bear,'"
    he recalled, as Hart and I sat in a Yerevan cafe, surrounded Berd
    Bears Straight had brought along.

    Bear necessities

    Berd is a mere nine kilometers away from the Azerbaijani border. The
    town was once a regional center, with a population between 12,000
    and 14,000. Today that number has been slashed roughly in half. "The
    conflict came; the border closed; all trade stopped; and the jobs
    disappeared," said Straight. "The choice basically is: become a hired
    soldier at the border and be shot at for $400 a month, or emigrate
    to Russia."

    Women have even fewer choices. They are primarily mothers and wives.

    Some are teachers, post office workers, or nurses. Most, however,
    are unemployed.

    Tapping into their knitting skills made sense in a number of ways.

    First, the budget to teach them new skills was lacking. Secondly,
    knitting allowed the women to work at home. It adapted to their
    lifestyle.

    Tapping into their knitting skills made sense in a number of ways.

    First, the budget to teach them new skills was lacking. Secondly,
    knitting allowed the women to work at home. It adapted to their
    lifestyle.

    Hart realized the impact the bears were having on the women when one
    of the knitters pulled him aside one day and said, "I used to sit at
    home, wondering how I was going to pay for my kid's medicine. Now,
    I sit at home and knit to pay for his medicine."

    Knitting teddy bears was first introduced 10 years earlier as a
    communal pastime by Sister Hannah, a German missionary nun, now 80,
    whose work with Armenians began in her youth in Anjar, Lebanon. The
    Berd women would knit during their get-togethers. After Sister Hannah
    left, the women continued making the teddy bears. "We went from 3
    people making those bears for each other to 30 employed women today
    employed. And we have another 30-40 waiting to be employed if we can
    expand the sales of the bears," said Straight, who added that within
    the past year, up to 400 Berd Bears were sold.

    Hoping for job security

    "Tim, is this project going to continue?" the women occasionally ask.

    "They don't believe that it will continue," Straight said. "They
    don't believe that it's something permanent, that it's something
    that will provide an income through time. They worry about this
    disappearing because everything else in their grown-up lives has:
    the Soviet Union disappeared; their jobs disappeared; many of their
    houses disappeared-in the villages at least." Straight feels the
    pressure to provide them with a sense of permanence, but he is also
    realistic. "We can't know that we are going to be able to sell another
    500 or 1,000 teddy bears in the next three months," he said.

    However, Straight is doing his best to secure orders. Almost two months
    ago, Berd Bears was launched on Kickstarter, a crowd funding website,
    by the initiative of New Jersey resident Laura Bilazarian.

    Within the first 24 hours of being on the site, they had already sold
    $5,000 worth of Berd Bear products. By June 26, with only a few days
    remaining on the site, they had passed the $11,000 mark. The prices
    start at $55, which includes overseas shipping, and go up to $100 plus,
    for a design-it-yourself bear. "We've done a Chicago Bears uniform,
    bears wearing different uniforms, national costumes, and flags,"
    noted Straight.

    "You need to believe in the story behind this teddy bear," he
    continued, pointing at one of the teddy bears displayed on the table.

    "It is an excellent teddy bear. It is a high-quality teddy bear, but
    the maker is what makes this teddy bear special. It's an amazing story,
    about an amazing group of women, and the series of coincidences that
    led people to Berd..."

    "It is an excellent teddy bear. It is a high-quality teddy bear,
    but the maker is what makes this teddy bear special.

    About half of the profits go to the knitters, who get paid 440 drams
    an hour, or $160 a month if they work full-time, which-in Straight's
    words-"in a village in Armenia today, is quite a decent salary."

    Around 15 percent of the profit supports BWRCF projects, such as
    reproductive health and domestic violence awareness. A percentage
    covers raw materials, including the imported joints and eyes that
    meet safety standards.

    Straight envisions a contract with an upscale toy store in the U.S.,
    with a steady flow of orders. "This is not about sympathy, this is not
    about feeling sorry for these women, or feeling sorry for Armenia,"
    he said, adding that his purpose is to empower the Berd women. "If
    an upscale toy store in the U.S. were to latch on to this and make
    it a permanent thing, and order 1,000 bears every three months,
    that's when my job is done. It's all for the women, so that they can
    go and have a happy life. I would really like them to have their own
    customers in Australia, Europe, and the U.S."

    >From stuffed teddy bear to a TV show

    Straight's efforts to popularize the bears took on a new form
    when he approached his friend and animator Vrej Kassouny. "We have
    environmental issues in Armenia, and we have job creation issues-can't
    we just combine those somehow? Can you make an animated television
    series that has these teddy bears as the heroes of this television
    show?" he remembers asking Kassouny.

    "Nobody is doing environmental education on Armenian television.

    There's very little of it in the schools," added Straight. For him, it
    was a win-win situation: Kassouny's show would provide environmental
    education to children; the show's characters (the Berd Bears) would
    become popular; and the Berd women would be employed.

    Kassouny agreed. He created the characters of Archo and Arsho, two
    bears; Gargar the crow; Meghou the honeybee; and Titer the butterfly.

    Now the phase of finding funding for the show's production is being
    strategized. There already have been interested parties in Russia,
    France, and the Middle East. If all goes according to plan, the Berd
    women will have a lot on their plate-in a good way.

    "We will need to start making these bears, and the honeybee, and the
    butterfly, and exporting them to those countries. It's going to be
    dizzying for the women in Berd," smiled Straight.

    To learn more about the Berd Bears visit them at www.BerdBears.com
    or support them on Kickstarter.

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/525757888/berd-bears-old-world-meets-new
    (they will be featured on Kickstarter until July 1, 2012).



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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