Armenian Families Still Feel Impact Of 1988 Earthquake
This shantytown in Gyumri is still occupied 26 years after a massive earthquake destroyed much of the town.
Some 600 families who lost their homes in the earthquake still live in makeshift residences.
This family has built a permanent structure around a mobile trailer.
A resident of a shantytown in Gyumri
The 1988 earthquake was so severe that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev formally asked the United States for humanitarian help -- the first such request since the end of World War II.
Within a few weeks, 131 countries contributed over $500 million, with the United States and much of Western Europe sending rescue equipment, search teams, and medicine.
But the aid effort was not enough to rebuild thousands of destroyed houses.
Most who lost their homes have either found new places to live or moved elsewhere. But some of those who remain in Gyumri are elderly people living in cabins and wagons allocated by the Soviet authorities after the earthquake.