Planting trees in Armenia
Amenia Tree Project Builds Bridges
By Eric Diekhans
Wedged between Turkey and Azerbaijan, many American wouldn’t be
able to find the small, land-locked country of Armenia on the map. But Armenia Tree Project
has become a model for environmental stewardship and international bridge
building.
Activist Carolyn Mugar was in Armenia during the very dark days
of the early 1990s, following the collapse of the Society Union. It was a time
of war and an energy crisis, as well as the aftermath of a terrible earthquake.
There was no water, no heat, and no light, and people were denuding the
landscape to heat their homes, even cutting down trees in city parks. Mugar saw
that even if Armenia survived these crises, the mass deforestation would bring
about an environmental catastrophe.
But Mugar had a vision of a better tomorrow, that led her to
found Armenia Tree Project. “What Armenia needed was hope,” says Jeanmarie
Papelian, Executive Director of ATP.
Mugar, believed planting trees was a very visible way to give
hope to desperate people. In the 28 years since its founding, ATP has planted
and seven million trees, serving the Armenian people, offering jobs and raising
the standard of living, and protecting the global environment.
ATP doesn’t just plant trees and move on. Its team in conjunction
with local workers it hires, cares for the trees and makes sure they thrive.
Education Builds Bridges
Environmental education has become another major focus for ATP.
“We felt that it was really important for the next generation of Armenians to
be better stewards of the environment,” says Papelian. “We reach thousands of
students every year, not only in Armenia, but in many parts of the diaspora.”
The educational program is called Building Bridges, and engages
youth in Armenian schools and churches. Youth groups even travel to Armenia,
where they visit an ATP education center, where they are paired with students
from a local school. They receive a lesson, do an educational activity, and
then they all plant trees together.
Churches are a central part of the Armenian Diaspora community,
which is spread all over the world, and congregations have become deeply
involved in this work. “Any Armenian you meet will tell you that Armenia was
the first country to adopt Christianity as its national religion in the year
301,” says Papelian. “We’ve had great
success in spreading our message through churches. I’m always invited to speak
at coffee hours and to Sunday school classes.”
Papelian likes to share Gensis 1:29 with her audience. “I have
given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth, and
every tree with seed in its fruit.”
Collaborations
Armenia Tree Project has collaborated and been inspired by other
environmental organizations around the world. One nonprofit they’ve worked with
is the Jewish National Fund, which plants forests in Israel.
In 2019, ATP co-hosted an international forest summit at the
American University in Yerevan in connection with their 25th anniversary. “We
talked about the challenge of reforesting Armenia,” says Papelian. “The country
is currently at about ten percent forest cover. Ideally, experts say, it should
be twenty percent.”
During the summit, ATP brought in representatives from the Jewish
National Fund, and from the Green Belt Movement in Kenya, to talk about their
approaches.
The three countries have very different climates but, according
to Papelian, “there are still lessons to be learned about engaging the local
community and how to take action on their own, because it has to be a bottom up
approach.”
Armenia Tree Project is eager to share its vision beyond the
Armenian community. “Invite us to come and talk about Armenia Tree Project,”
says Papelian. “You don’t have to be Armenian to appreciate that anywhere in
the world where people are planting forests will benefit all of us.”
If you want to get even more involved, you can visit Armenia to
explore ancient Christian monasteries and churches, eat delicious food, and
visit an ATP site, where you can make a difference by planing your own tree.
Eric Diekhans is a fiction writer, video
producer and editor, and a passionate cyclist. He’s a member of Lake View
Presbyterian Church in Chicago, where he has served as an Elder and Deacon.
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