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Civilitas Foundation: It Is Harvest Season in Armenia

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  • Civilitas Foundation: It Is Harvest Season in Armenia

    PRESS RELEASE
    The Civilitas Foundation
    One Northern Ave. Suite 30
    Yerevan, Armenia
    Telephone: +37410.500119
    www.civilitasfoundation.org


    IT IS HARVEST SEASON IN ARMENIA

    by Hayk Petrosyan, Civilitas Foundation Programs Coordinator

    It is harvest season in Armenia. The Civilitas Foundation rural development
    team makes regular visits to villages to monitor Civilitas rural development
    programs. Each trip produces stories about the dilemmas facing individual
    farmers and Armenia's rural economy in general.

    We used the first really cold weekend in Yerevan to gear up with warm
    clothes and some chips and fruit, and took off towards Goris with a plan to
    visit two communities - Harzhis and Bardzravan. Both communities are
    included in the Civilitas Dairy Production Enhancement project that began
    with support from the Ekserciyan family of Argentina.

    These communities will be beneficiaries of milk refrigeration units by the
    end of February 2010, thanks to Polish Aid and in collaboration with the
    Armenia-based Strategic Development Agency. This means our donor, Polish
    Aid, a Polish government aid agency, will pay for a milk refrigeration unit
    for each village, so that farmers can store their milk there for several
    days until the purchasing company makes its regular weekly or semi-weekly
    trip to collect the fresh milk. Without such a refrigeration unit, it
    doesn't matter how many cows a dairy farmer has, he (or sometimes, she)
    won't be able to support a family, because two days worth of milk will go
    bad waiting for the purchasing agent to show up. With such a refrigeration
    unit, not only will they see their income increase, they'll be able to make
    (interest-free) payments on the refrigeration unit, so that the same funds
    can eventually be used to help another village.

    This is an interesting project but it raises a lot of questions that are
    difficult to answer: Like, what do you do with a community that can stand on
    its feet with your assistance but would have a hard time surviving without
    the `incubating' circumstances initiated by us? A bank would never approve a
    loan for these types of communities where the payback period is so long that
    the amount loaned is seriously devalued, where there is no interest paid,
    where there is no collateral even in the equation.

    After all, the village of Bardzravan, with several old churches and
    settlements, only has a population of 127 in 36 households.

    We were told that Bardzravan has a breathtaking view of the Vorotan gorge
    and a beautiful church right on the edge of the cliff, so the first thing we
    did was visit the place before it was too dark. The view was really
    magnificent with the Tatev monastery on the other side of the gorge and
    several villages looking at you from the other side.

    We met Zaven Babig at the church, bringing calves home from pasture.

    Zaven Babig lives in Bardzravan with his wife. He had five children. He says
    he's happy in the village but the younger generation does not want to stay
    in the community, they all want to have jobs in the cities.

    The number of kids in the school decreased from 54 to 8. We turned down his
    invitation to dinner and left, thinking that 8 kids in a school is a really
    scary reality. Can you imagine your whole school is only 8 students? All
    grades together do not make one normal sized class.

    On our way out we met the principal of the school and the mayor. On my
    comment that 8 kids must be a hell of a reality to live with, he corrected
    me, with pride, that it's not eight, it's eleven, as if that makes a lot of
    difference. The mayor started to tell us about the recent activities in the
    community -- how they got together and fixed the water lines or cleaned up
    the community. He was really hopeful that the milk refrigeration center
    would help enhance dairy production from raw milk to cheese production.

    He was full of initiative and ready to work to develop his community that
    has 11 kids in the school and a potential for development of milk
    production.

    With mixed feelings, the Civilitas team set off towards Goris, understanding
    that the dilemma of assistance to communities on the edge is still a
    question without a solid answer. We know what the Civilitas Foundation
    answer is: to look for a donor to help make it possible for them to survive,
    and even thrive. No hand-outs, but a hand-up, as a wise man once said.
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