Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Flower Gathering In Tsitsernakaberd

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

  • Flower Gathering In Tsitsernakaberd

    FLOWER GATHERING IN TSITSERNAKABERD

    Panorama.am
    27/04/2012

    Today, at 10:00, at the Tsitseranakaberd Memorial the Foundation for
    the Preservation of Wildlife and Cultural Assets (FPWC) has launched
    the symbolic colorful event known as flower gathering.

    FPWC in cooperation with VivaCell-MTS and the Armenian Genocide
    Museum-Institute, organized the flower gathering at the height of the
    Genocide Memorial complex. The event took place with the support of
    many volunteers, organizations and representatives of international
    organizations, schools and university students, who implemented the
    FPWC-initiative and gave a new life to those flowers which were deposed
    on April 24th, next to the Eternal Flame of the Genocide Memorial.

    Every year on April 24th, thousands of people pay tribute to the
    memory of the Genocide victims by bringing flowers to the Eternal
    Flame. A few days later these flowers droop, die and become garbage.

    However, since 2010, for three years the flower gathering event has
    given a second life to these Memorial flowers which are since then
    recycled.

    During the flower gathering event which is part of the Earth Day
    campaign, the stalk of the flowers are chaffed to become compost for
    the development of the memorial gardens, and the flower petals are
    carefully collected, dried and then processed.

    Recycled paper is used in a very symbolic way, such as for thank-you
    letters and invitations to the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute.

    "Although we have initiated this, we strive to make the flower
    gathering an event that with us or without us becomes a beautiful
    tradition and has a continuous character" said the founder of the
    Foundation for the Preservation of Wildlife and Cultural Assets (FPWC)
    Ruben Khachatryan.

    "Besides being a means to pay tribute to the memory of the innocent
    victims, these flowers can serve to our common cause. Memorandums,
    certificates of gratitude, invitations printed on paper made from
    recycled flowers are unique in that they make every single flower
    visible. The flowers reassert the undeniable fact of the Armenian
    genocide perpetrated in the early 20th century and call everyone to
    remember about it, serving as an ambassador to foreigners visiting
    Armenia," mentioned VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X