IOCC in Georgia: Displaced Families Facing Harsh Winter
INTERNATIONAL ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN CHARITIES (IOCC)
110 West Road, Suite 360, Baltimore, Md. 21204
Tel: (410) 243-9820 - Fax: (410) 243-9824 
Web: www.iocc.org - E-mail: news@iocc.org
For immediate release
October 24, 2008 
IOCC in Georgia: Displaced Families Facing Harsh Winter 
(Tskvarichamia, Georgia) -- The leaves have already changed in 
Tskvarichamia, a mountain hamlet about 15 miles above Tbilisi. For the 
16 families taking shelter in a modest building, this is not a herald of
 the harvest, but rather, an ominous reminder that winter is coming and 
they are not prepared.
At dusk, two mothers, their children and an elderly couple sit on the 
front porch and explain to an aid worker that the rest of the families 
have gone to the authorities to protest their living conditions and to 
demand that they be moved to Tbilisi. "We feel cut off up here," says 
Nanna, carrying her small son on her lap. "It is cold and we cannot 
properly care for our children." She and her husband were farmers in the
 village of Kemerti in South Ossetia, and like many who were displaced 
by this summer's fighting between Russian and Georgian forces, they fled
 with little more than the clothes on their backs.
The group that had gone to Tbilisi return, and seeing the visitor 
immediately launch into a litany of complaints. They have no kitchen 
utensils. Blankets were delivered but the mattresses are no good. Above 
all, the building was formerly used as a summer camp for children and 
there is not enough insulation from the cold. "We may be blocked up here
 from other areas in the winter and our children have to go to school, "
 says one woman. 
Inside the building there is a strong smell from toilets that are backed
 up. In the hallway, there is a list of government phone numbers such as
 "how to find a missing relative." The hallway leads to a series of 
bedrooms with thin walls and blankets draped over windows. 
The group moves from room to room, eager to show the aid worker 
mattresses atop rusty springs and thin blankets that were delivered in 
August. Some speculate about their neighbors, Ossetians who fled to 
Russia. "We had good relations with them because of the mixed families,"
 says one woman. She believes that those families got an offer to go 
back to South Ossetia, where Georgians can no longer return.
International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) has been providing 
continuous assistance to thousands of displaced people who fled to other
 parts of Georgia, as well as Russia, since the August conflict began. 
Through a new $200,000 grant by the Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster 
Assistance (OFDA), IOCC will help 2,000 individuals get through the 
winter by providing stoves, fuel for cooking and heating, bedding, 
winter clothes, and cooking supplies. IOCC is cooperating with the 
Georgian Orthodox Church and local authorities to identify and assist 
families in 20 displacement centers in and around Tbilisi, including the
 families of Tskvarichamia. 
These families want to return to their villages in South Ossetia, a hope
 that is fading as the months pass on. "The hardest feeling," says Elsa,
 a 32-year-old mother of two, "is to not know what has happened to 
everything that we built and worked for." 
To help in providing emergency relief, call IOCC's donation hotline 
toll-free at 1-877-803-4622, make a gift on-line at www.iocc.org, or 
mail a check or money order payable to "IOCC" and write "Conflict in the
 Caucasus" in the memo line to: IOCC, P.O. Box 630225, Baltimore, Md. 
21263-0225.
IOCC, founded in 1992 as the official humanitarian aid agency of the 
Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas 
(SCOBA), has implemented over $275 million in relief and development 
programs in 33 countries around the world.
Media: Contact Amal Morcos at 410-243-9820 or (cell) 443-823-3489.
Families who fled the fighting in South Ossetia last August face a harsh
 winter. A new grant allows International Orthodox Christian Charities 
(IOCC) to help 2,000 individuals with stoves, fuel for cooking and 
heating, bedding, winter clothes, and cooking supplies. (photo credit: 
IOCC Baltimore)
Winter is coming and supplies that were delivered last August to 
families that were displaced by the Russia/Georgia conflict are no 
longer adequate. International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) is 
working with local authorities and the Georgian Orthodox Church to help 
families get through the winter. 
