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Charity starts with the Burren-based heroes

This article is from page 27 of the 2011-04-12 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 27 JPG

WHEN YOU hear the word Chernobyl, images of the hundreds and thousands of innocent people affected by the tragic nuclear accident quickly spring to mind. Next perhaps, you might think of the scores of Irish volunteers who regularly visit Belarus and, when ever possible, bring young children home to Clare for a much needed holiday and the therapy of simple fresh air.

When you hear about Chernobyl however, you don’t often imagine a cramped warehouse in a quiet corner of Ennistymon and the endless sorting of box after box of donated goods. But that is where much of the real work of the Burren Chernobyl Project takes place, where the ordinary heroes of the charity work round the clock to make it all possible.

Linda Kelleher and Ann Marie Jones work in the Ennistymon office of the Burren Chernobyl Project. After joining the charity just six months ago the pair have been busy preparing for the first shipment of the year to Belarus and organising this summer’s many volunteer trips to orphanages in Chernobyl.

“I just wanted to do something that was of value, something that you could give back to the community,” says Ann Marie.

“I’ve done a bit of voluntary work with charities before. It’s quite fulfilling and it is very rewarding to see all the donations of clothes and bed- ding and everything. I was amazed at how much people will give.”

Both Linda and Ann Marie have been blown away by the generosity of local people who have been donating to the charity. “We made some posters when we got here, it was the first thing we did. We were looking for donations and straight away, within the same week, they were in. People were very generous,” said Linda. “We get a lot of phone calls during the day. Mainly it’s people wondering how they can help and wondering about getting to Gorodishche or Cherven, which are the main two orphanages that we deal with out there. “They want to know how to go there, what they need, how to sort out visas and what they could do there.” Both Linda or Ann Marie have yet to visit Belarus, so they always recommend that a potential volunteer talks to someone who has been over there before they decid to go. In the coming weeks the Burren Chernobyl Project is hosting a number fundraising activities including their big sponsored walk on Easter Monday and a charity concert. “We have the sponsored walk coming up on Easter Monday which we organised and put up posters and do the advertising for that and we also take part,” continued Linda. “We’re hoping to go out ourselves, even over a weekend trip, just to see the orphanages and get a feel for what’s going on. We have had a volunteer come in and speak to us about what actually happens and her knowledge was brilliant; about how it’s very sad and upsetting but it’s very rewarding.”

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