Young activists from the nongovernmental organization Piligrim, together with the Mountain Sports Club, and with
support from the UN Volunteers Program, organized a campaign to protect the unique natural and historical
monuments of the Absheron peninsula. Their efforts focused on the northern coastal areas around Dubendi and
Nardaran. The project took place between July- December 2000.
The project aimed to call attention to the pollution caused by the dumping of industrial waste from the oil industry and
significance to Azerbaijan: in addition to being a picturesque seashore with sandy beaches, this area contains caves
The surrounding landscape has been disfigured and deformed by the transportation of oil by sea and by the building
sandy beaches with their litter. The beautiful beaches have been covered with broken bottles, rusted metal, waste
and toxic materials. Countless birds and other wildlife of the region have died. Such conditions pose a serious
century Amburan Lighthouse with garbage, ruining a beautiful area where tourists could meet.
Absheron was also the land of our ancestors. Evidence of human habitation on the Absheron peninsula dates back
uncovered Bronze and Iron Age structures including old caravansarays (inns) and ovdans (underground storehouses
for drinking water). The petroglyphs on the rocks of the Dubendi coast are the most extensive and well preserved in
Azerbaijan after those of Gobustan.
Such unique monuments of nature and history must be saved today. Otherwise, it will be too late.
In order to protect this region, members of the organizations Pilgrim and Mountain Sport Club have cleaned the
area's beaches and historical monuments. In preparation for their work, all of the participating members received
“eco-training” through the School of Wild Nature. They have created places for people to relax and made signs
urging people to protect the environment of the Absheron Peninsula. All the waste and garbage has been removed.
It should be noted that a cleaner environment was not the only result of this project. Our thirty young volunteers from
Baku, and an equal number of people from these village areas, gained extensive knowledge of the natural and
archaeological monuments of the Absheron Peninsula.
By working on this project, all of the participants gained a degree of personal satisfaction by participating in a socially
useful activity, while at the same time they learned much about their history and increased their range of interests.
Activities such as this one allow us to achieve more effective results as we attempt to protect unique natural and
historical areas.
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