Great Romanians: Our doctors (my Granny is better)!

Some time ago I decided I was entitled to bitch about Romania. I have earned my right to complain. I am a good citizen, I am a tax payer, I support my country and proudly represent it. There are so many things I would change about Romania that it would take an Encyclopedia to list all of them.

Today I am not going to complain, but speak highly of a group of Romanians who have earned my respect and gratitude over the past 3 weeks. My Granny, who survived tuberculosis (at the age of 22) has been very sick lately. She got pneumonia. The only lung hospital in Bucharest is Marius Nasta Hospital. I took her to a private clinic first, and then they told us to go to a remote place I barely found (I am not good with orientation) called something funny with a Z (later found out Marius Nasta is the general name).

The second we arrived I wanted to turn around and leave. The building, the patients, everything about that hospital was creepy. I felt we were entering a war camp. I immediately realized it was not about my likes and dislikes, but about my Granny’s health, so we entered.

That was the moment when I realized that the poor conditions of the Romanian hospitals they keep talking about on TV should not always make the headlines, but the kindness and respect and dedication of the staff should! I was amazed to see how well my 90 year old dear Granny – who is practically blind and can barely move and hear – was treated. Wonderful doctor Iacobescu (a small big hearted woman in her 40’s) actually listened and cared about what was going on with my Granny. She suggested treatment, gave me the option to either take her home or stay with her in the hospital. The nurses went the extra mile to protect her and help her.

As I promised myself, I need to contribute, even if it is in a very small way, to the renovation of the hospital. And I will! Romanian medical staff are wonderful and I thank them for getting my Granny back!

Bunesti, Crit, Saschiz, Viscri – the Saxon Villages in Romania

bunesti, crit, saschiz, viscri, romania

bunesti, crit, saschiz, viscri, romania

Romania is the country of infinite beauty.

While visiting the Saxon villages between Brasov and Sighisoara I felt time stood still and kept  its distance, staring at me. I felt the eyes of history and the soul of fate were dancing around me in circles, twirling and whispering to attract me to the ruins and old churches that seem to have been Poe’s inspiration.

I have visited so many enchanting places in Romania, from the Muddy Volcanoes to the dazzling Carpathian mountains and Black Sea coast, from the old fortresses in Transylvania to the modern Peles Castle in Sinaia, but no other place in this amazing country we were blessed with made me more proud and sad than the breathtaking villages of Bunesti, Crit, Saschiz and Viscri.

I felt proud because – to wrap the entire history and tradition of these places in one sentence – Romania is the only country in the world with more than 40 fortified churches either still functioning or under decay. Still standing – a few, in advanced state of decay – most. And that is why I was sad. Anyway, to see the bright side:

“In 2006, The Prince of Wales bought and restored two 18th Century Saxon houses in the Transylvanian villages of Malancrav and Viscri to help protect the unique way of life that has existed for hundreds of years and promote sustainable tourism.”… more on the Saxon village of Viscri on Wikipedia.

My photos from Bunesti, Crit, Viscri, the Saxon Villages near Sighisoara, Romania.

Another great photo collection from the Saxon villages near Sighisoara, with explanations in Romanian.

If you are into old villages that look like ghost towns, old statues and old cemeteries, fortified churches that only you and probably another generation will still have the chance to visit cause they are in decay, dark landscapes, silence and ruins, come to Romania and visit the Saxon villages in Transylvania!

Dracula Is Dead by Sheilah Kast and Jim Rosapepe

Last night I had the great pleasure of meeting Jim Rosapepe again. Unfortunately Sheilah was not there. I sent her my best and I hope to see her again soon.

Jim scheduled a Dracula Is Dead signing at Humanitas bookstore, starting 19:30. Of course he was already there when we arrived at 19:30, talking to his old friends, collaborators and some press.

Since 2001 when I was still teaching Jim Romanian I’ve only met him once, in Herastrau Park where he was walking alone on a beautiful Sunday afternoon and I was with my 6 year old daughter. Adara is 9 now.

I read Dracula Is Dead with JB and Adara in Poiana Brasov, on our Easter vacation, and the mentions of Wordland and our family made us really proud. Being mentioned in a book is something that does not happen very often, so not only that I am proud that my family and my company are mentioned in Dracula Is Dead, but that the book depicts Romania in her early postcommunist years. Reading Dracula Is Dead gave me the same feeling I had when I was looking at the pictures my Nenicu took of all the churches Ceausescu was destroying. He took photos of all of them, so we can have at least memories of what this country was before communism.

In my opinion, Jim and Sheilah’s book is a sympathetic memoir about people, places and facts from post revolution Romania. The most beautiful memories of my life are related to the period they describe in the book: getting married, having my daughter, starting my business. Jim and Sheilah were with me when I got married, when I buried my father, when Adara got her christening and they also encouraged me start the language school. As Jim was so modest last night and said that he couldn’t recall his support in starting Wordland, here is the proof!

JIM ROSAPEPE's RECOMMENDATION LETTER

JIM ROSAPEPE's RECOMMENDATION LETTER

2 more things: 1) I was not the only one to bring my child to meet Jim and share warm feelings and friendship with him! I saw a couple (I only know the guy, probably met him while working with Jim on one of his projects, I have the feeling he was an IT guy) with their very young baby in a pram. They were very happy to meet Jim again, I could tell J. 2) I had 4 copies of Jim’s book with me. He asked me whom did I want him to make them out for. As I was hesitating, Jim signed one for me, one for Adara and when I said that the others should be for “dear friends” he made one out in Romanian! He hasn’t changed a bit!

VIVA MUSIC

Most of the music I personally like falls into one of the following categories: new wave/EBM/dark/electro/synthpop/futurepop/industrial/aggrotech/gothic or others, more or less known or more or less related. I have been a Depeche Mode fan for 23 years, and I am still devoted to the best band in the universe.

In 2008 I decided to share my passion for music with friends and fans of the music I like. My company, VIVA MUSIC (music promoter based in Bucharest, Romania) is my second business after WORDLAND (language and business training, started in 2001).

One of our goals is to stay true to the dark/electro/gothic scene, and never compromise. VIVA MUSIC team enjoy organizing every concert and always go the extra mile for the bands and their fans. VIVA MUSIC is not committed to making anyone rich, but to sharing the richness and beauty of an exclusive scene with friends, true fans, and  true music lovers. VIVA MUSIC is committed to representing the bands, collaborators and sponsors fairly and honestly. VIVA MUSIC is an honest and reliable tax payer, and we commit to supporting the economy of ROMANIA, the country we proudly represent.

I am very happy and I feel professionally accomplished looking back at 3 extremely successful music events VIVA MUSIC has organized so far: MELOTRON, the FIRST ROMANIAN DARKFEST, COVENANT.  We are planning on bringing only electro/dark/gothic acts to Romania.

Here are a few links to the music we promote:

In strict confidence: silver bullets; zauberschloss; manchmal; wintermoon; my despair

Covenant: bullet; final man; like tears in rain; call the ships to port

Melotron: liebe is notwehr; das hertz

Diary of dreams: the wedding; the curse; butterfly: dance!; menschfiend; son of a thief

And one: military fashion show; enjoy the unknown

Aesthetic perfection: the great depression; the siren; the ones; spit it out

Agonoize: for the sick and disturbed

VNV nation: Illusion

Reforming the reform in the Romanian education system

Reflections of a mother and business woman

Yesterday, I read a very interesting interview by Losangelista with Omar Wasow, tech analyst famous for teaching Oprah how to use the Internet. While Liz focused her questions on specific details related to the reform in the US education system and technology applied in the process of learning, the main subject of the interview raised quite a few questions and frustrations in my “sometimes unhappy to be Romanian” mind.

The education reform in Romania is something that every new government pretends to take very seriously but, for sure, (we’ve seen it happen so many times so far after the so called revolution in 1989) they have all failed. However, they make changes that definitely make things even worse then they had been before. In fact, we can call reforming the reform a general rule in Romania.

All newly appointed leaders apply changes for the sake of changes and don’t think of the long or short term consequences. Well, as a dictionary entry, reform means changing things for the better. Little do the Romanian legislators know not only about the meaning of these words, but about what is better for the Romanian population. In order to succeed in bettering something, they would first need to understand the actual situation and identify the actions that trigger improvement. Not just decide that changes have to be made to show that “they care and they are taking action”. Well, to put it in a practical perspective: our leaders do not produce great reform, but great piles of useless documents!

Liz asked me about the budget cuts in our education system. Well, apart from budget cuts, I think at least 4 other issues are worth mentioning: 1. there is no legal framework or incentives for private companies/individuals to get involved into the process of education, 2. nobody is legally responsible for the quality of education in Romania, 3. there is no assessment for the performance of teachers or institutions, and 4. there is no shared responsibility between the state and the community as regards the quality of schools (for the community to have the school they want and deserve).

In Romania the education system is not focused on producing good specialized engineers, doctors, waiters, etc. Under the law, it focuses on teaching the same things in the same way, using the same old routine methods to a large number of future voting citizens, without bothering to test or assess the performance or results of each teacher.

It is mandatory for children to go to kindergarten at 3 years of age, to school at 6 and to highschool at 17 in Romania. Parents have no option and no right to decide. Parents have no negotiating power and there are no other alternatives as there are no private schools (except for the American and British private schools that cost 20,000 Euro +/year while the average salary in Romania is 200-300 Euro/month). Expats and rich Romanians send their children to the above mentioned schools.

Apparently, there are no dropouts in Romanian schools. As education is for  free, and all parents have the obligation by law to force their children to go to school, the statistics are fixed to show almost no dropouts (communist reminiscence). In reality, children of poor people don’t have the chance to at least see the door of a classroom once in their entire life. But hey, who cares if a John Doe from the Romanian countryside (who is sentenced to taking over his father’s sheep from early age anyway) gets any education???

In the US, an entire school staff in Rhode Island got fired due to low student achievement results. That is really interesting. Just imagine, as in Romania the performance of teachers is never assessed, how many of the Romanian teachers are totally incompetent? For the time being, as their wages is so low, they are always on strike and asking for things from the authorities. I can understand that. Everybody can. But who is responsible for the fact that my daughter said that very soon she needed to pin a few days a month in her school calendar under the heading “strike”? And that is not a joke, it is a fact noticed by a 9 year old as a natural recurrence in her life! A fact that makes my daughter think that teachers on strike is a normal state of facts in Romania, and in her life.

Another thing that really kills the education in Romania is the new obsession for offering “alternatives”. This buzz word was born a few years ago when an evil politician decided that we need to offer to our children as many sources of learning as the parents cannot afford!!! So, although there is an “official” schoolbook for every subject, the teachers are forced to recommend 5 other books because the Romanian Ministry of Education cannot decide which one is the right one!!! What is the story behind this enormous amount of manuals that my daughter carries to school? Hmmm…Countless contracts for publishing these manuals, awarded to the same companies, always owned by a politician who assigns his siblings to take care of the matters, so they still have a good public image and they are not involved in business with the Romanian state!!! So this is how you can make easy money in Romania: you have someone you know recommend a new book to be studied in school, and you are awarded the contract to publish it. In about 1,000,000 copies…I’ll let you do the maths.