Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gift Of Knowledge: Activists Donate Books To Libraries In Armenian B

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Gift Of Knowledge: Activists Donate Books To Libraries In Armenian B

    GIFT OF KNOWLEDGE: ACTIVISTS DONATE BOOKS TO LIBRARIES IN ARMENIAN BORDER VILLAGES
    By Gohar Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow.com
    25.10.12 | 10:42

    A group of young activists have visited two Armenian villages situated
    near the country's northeastern border with Azerbaijan to bring new
    books donated to the local libraries through an internet-assisted
    campaign.

    The Tavush region's rural communities of Nerkin Karmiraghbyur and
    Aygepar, situated about 200-220 kilometers from capital Yerevan
    suffered greatly during the war with Azerbaijan in the 1990s. They
    continue to bear the consequences of the conflict even today as the
    situation along the border remains volatile. The two villages have been
    in the news particularly in recent months as major ceasefire violations
    occurred there. Local civilians and infrastructure were also targets
    of Azeri sniper attacks when tensions escalated last summer.

    The idea to donate books to the libraries in the border villages
    first occurred to popular blogger Karen Vrtanesyan.

    After one of his recent visits to the area two months ago he left
    an entry in his Live Journal blog calling for help in supplying the
    libraries in Nerkin Karmiraghbyur and Aygepar with new books as the
    two communities experienced their shortage.

    On Wednesday, a group of young people, who had responded to the call,
    visited the communities, bringing with them about 300 books, including
    encyclopedias, literary works by Armenian classics, etc.

    With internet access increasingly available even in remote rural
    communities of Armenia like Nerkin Karmiraghbyur and Aygepar, local
    schoolchildren often forget about such a prime source of information
    as books. Still, people in the village say their children read much
    more than their coevals in urban communities. The problem, they say,
    is the shortage of books.

    Nerkin Karmiraghbyur's school currently has 120 students. The school's
    librarian Asya Galstyan remembers how they were rescuing books from
    under the ruins after a shelling by Azeri forces that hit the library
    in 1992. She says even now some books they keep bear the traces
    of shrapnel.

    "The library building was destroyed during the years of war and most
    of the books were burned or damaged otherwise. We managed to save only
    a small number of our books," says Galstyan. "Today we even don't
    have most of the books needed by students as part of their school
    curriculum, which, of course, is an obstacle to their education."

    The school of Aygepar attended by 56 students has more books, but
    most of the 3,000 or so books kept in the library, according to the
    local librarian, are ideologically "outdated" as they haven't had
    any new supply since the Soviet times.

    "We have more than 2,000 books that aren't good for use now; dozens
    of the books are related to Marxism-Leninism and no one reads such
    books anymore. At the same time, we don't have a lot of books that
    are needed as part of the school curriculum today," says Aygepar
    librarian Eleonora Vardanyan.

    Blogger Vrtanesyan, who initiated the book donation, says that it is
    not the first time they collect books to be donated to libraries. In
    the past they, in particular, helped school libraries in areas near
    Karabakh.

    "Liberated lands and border villages are of primary importance and
    need prime attention. In the near future we also plan visits to
    other villages situated near the border," says Vrtanesyan, adding
    that besides individuals, among those who donated the books were also
    organizations such as Biographers' Club and ArmenTel.

Working...
X