The initial development of Scouting in Belarus took place within the Russian Scout movement, as part of the Russian empire. A Scout organization was founded in Kletsk, and Scouts appeared in Nyasvizh and other nearby villages. In 1929, American Methodists helped found a Girl Scout organization in Vilna. It lasted until 1929, but by the end of the 1920s, Scouting had been banned by the Soviet Union, and Scout activities ended, with many leaders and members arrested and imprisoned.
An emergence of democratic principles in the mid1980s made possible the creation of alternatives to the communist pioneer organizations. Close connections were formed with Guide and Scout organizations of many European countries when children from areas affected by the Chernobyl accident were invited to summer camps abroad during the Chernobyl Children's Project in 1990. Especially close links were developed with Cyprus, and between Minsk and the Guides of Lincolnshire. In 1992, Cyprus was officially appointed Link country to support the development of Guiding in Belarus, and in June 1993 the first conference of the Association of Belarusian Guides was held in Minsk. Further information
Belarusian Guides
http://www.belguides.com/dlja-pressi/ob-organizacii
The number: 1460
Adults: 135
Children (7-18) : 1325
Scouts in lida video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHRW-oa6gCA
Контакты:Лида: Председатель Совета – Евгений Жвирко тел. +375(29)7822721, zhvirkoevgen@mail.ru, ymcalida@tut.by,
член Совета, координатор ЦРО – Ирина Корчевская тел. +375(29)5840170, Fly_away@mail.by
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