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Habitat team helps rebuild crumbled Armenian city

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  • Habitat team helps rebuild crumbled Armenian city

    The Grand Rapids Press, MI
    Aug 11 2007



    Habitat team helps rebuild crumbled Armenian city

    Saturday, August 11, 2007
    By Paul R. Kopenkoskey
    The Grand Rapids Press


    WYOMING -- Almost 19 years ago, an earthquake reduced all the
    buildings in an area around Spitak, Armenia, to rubble.

    But the rebuilding efforts tapered off when the Soviet bloc nation
    lost Russia's financial support when it declared its independence in
    1991.

    Humanitarian aid, including a Habitat for Humanity Global Village
    team that recently journeyed to the village of Shatin, continues to
    pick up the slack.

    In the 14 days the team was there in July, stones were stuffed
    underneath a metal roof of one home for insulation and another
    received a new poured cement floor, said Susan Bosovich, leader of
    the 11-member Habitat team. Bosovich made her second trip to Armenia
    with her 22-year-old daughter, Alicia.

    More work still needs to be done, said Susan Bosovich, of Wyoming.

    "But we've cut down that time frame and, labor-wise, that will help
    them live in their homes sooner," she said.

    Bosovich said the Habitat team needed to clear some cultural hurdles.
    Armenians usually want to work at a more leisurely pace, which meant
    that the task-oriented Habitat team had to limit their workdays to an
    average of five-and-a-half hours.

    "The point was not to show our superiority, but to learn their way
    and learn it as efficiently as possible," said Bosovich, 46, an
    educational paraprofessional in the Kentwood school district and for
    Wedgwood Christian Services.

    Bosovich said Shatin is akin to a ghost town.

    Many homes remain empty shells, forcing some to live in metal
    shipping containers that become iceboxes in the winter and furnaces
    in the summer. Water and electricity are limited, and sewer lines are
    inoperable.

    "It's amazing to see these huge cranes that haven't been touched in
    years," Bosovich said.

    But despite the hardships, the Armenians expressed their appreciation
    for the team's help with fresh mulberries, apricots, cherries
    cucumbers and tomatoes during mealtime, she said.

    Working in a Third World nation can open Americans' eyes to the
    reality of how blessed they are, said Bosovich.

    "I'm hoping we'll return next year," she said. "I've made friends in
    Armenia. I want to go back and see them again."
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