Tag: country

  • The cultural-tourist route of open-air museums in Romania

    The cultural-tourist route of open-air museums in Romania

    The cultural-tourist route of open-air museums in Romania, developed at the national level and recognized by the Ministry of Entrepreneurship and Tourism, has been launched in Romania considering the large number of tourists who showed interest in these objectives. Developed at the initiative of the County Museum of Ethnography and Folk Art in Baia Mare, the tourist program offers tourists a foray into traditions, in 11 tourist and cultural sites in Romania’s ethnographic heritage.

     

    Monica Mare, the manager of the Maramureș County Museum of Ethnography and Folk Art from Baia Mare says that the idea was born out of the need to promote museums, being a good opportunity to capitalize on the heritage of traditional Romanian architecture:  “The idea of ​​the project initially started with eight museums. We have also created several leaflets on which one can find a map with these museums. If you are in Bucharest, you can start the route from there, from the Dimitrie Gusti Village Museum in Bucharest, which is probably the most visited among the ethnographic museums in Romania, and after that, you can head towards the center of Romania. Tourists can go through the Golești Museum, after that they can reach Brașov, then Sibiu, where they can go to the ASTRA Museum, then travel to Transylvania, to the museum in Cluj and get closer to Maramureș, where they will find two ethnographic museums included in the route, the Village Museum from Baia Mare and the Maramureș Village Museum from Sighetu Marmației, respectively. Also here, in our area, in Oraș Country, in the vicinity of Maramureș, we have the Negrești Oaş Museum, and if we cross the mountains, to Bukovina, we find the Bukovina Village Museum. It depends on how much time the tourist has to visit and we thought that this route can be fully covered or the visitor can choose, in a first phase, a few museums in the area of ​​interest and after that we can arouse their curiosity to reach other areas of the country.”

     

    All open-air museums develop projects throughout the year, but especially in the warm season, which is the high season for visiting. You will be able to see folk craftsmen at work and you will be able to buy items they have created. Moreover, you’ll even be able to participate in the crafting art of the artisans:  “The Baia Mare Village Museum also has such programs. Throughout the year, we organize fairs, and we also have a souvenir shop, where we try to capitalize on the work of the Maramureș craftsmen. The other museums in the country also have such stores. Craftsmen need to be promoted. For the traditions to be passed on to future generations, the craftsmen must understand, especially the younger craftsmen who take over the crafts, that one can live from one’s craft and it is our duty, as ethnographic museums, to support the craftsmen, to make them known. Together with the centers of traditional culture, which have records of these craftsmen, we try to promote them at the travel fairs we participate in, and in the activities carried out by the museum.”

     

    As soon as you enter the Maramureş-style gate of the Baia Mare Village Museum, you are transposed into a world of the authentic Maramureş village, says Monica Mare, manager of the Maramureș County Museum of Ethnography and Folk Art:  “If the Museum in Sighet only preserves objects of traditional architecture from Maramureș Voivodeship, the Village Museum in Baia Mare takes you to the Maramureş villages from all four ethnographic areas. We call them countries: Codru, Chioar, Lăpuș and Maramureș Voivodeship. You can visit a house in Lăpuș, with its thatched roof. You can go inside and see how people used to live, where the fire was made, you can see the oven, or how the baby was rocked in the cradle, or what the guest room looked like, where the most beautiful textiles and the dowry chest were kept and where people met at major life events. The oldest monument we have is our little church, a monument from 1630, which is placed on the hill, as are most of the churches in the Maramureş villages, and practically the museum was formed around it. It was the first monument brought here to the Village Museum. It makes our village alive. The village on the hill, as we call it, is alive, because services are still held in the church on the big holidays and on Sundays. There is a whole community that comes here to worship.”

     

    Another tourist asset promoted at Baia Mare’s Village Museum is the oldest house as part of the museum’s heritage, dated 1758.

    Monica Mare: “The team I coordinate for the time being can boast the fact that, although the years are complicated and the budget is tight, as usual, last year we succeeded to open, for the public, a new traditional architecture asset we transferred to our museum. A house from Chioar Country, a very beautiful one, typical for the Chioar Country style, which we placed in the vicinity of the church, is also from Chioar Country. The blue of the house is so very specific for Maramures, it can be visited by tourists. Also, from Maramures Country we boast the Petrova House, where the founder of the Romanian School of Stomatology, Gheorghe Bilașcu, was born, and these are but a few of the landmarks we offer so you can pay us a visit. I am just saying, “Come on, come to Maramures !” Visit the Village Museum in Baia Mare and all the museums included in the Romanian open-air museum’s ethnographic route! ”

     

    We found out from the manager of the Baia Mare-based Maramures County Ethnography and Traditional Art Museum, Monica Mare, that the available prospectuses are in Romanian and English. At the main assets as part of the visiting circuit there are plaques with a QR code for additional info, which direct you to the site of the institution, where translations are available in the most widely-spoken languages. In another move, children and youngsters can participate in a treasure hunt. They will be dared to cut themselves off from their own cell phones and visit the musem in a different manner. Also, the bigger museums lying along the cultural-tourist route of open-air museums in Romania have a wide range of promotion materials. The Museum in Sibiu, for instance, has Astra App, an application offering guidance, audio guidance included, in several of the most widely-spoken languages. (LS, EN)

  • Today’s Romanian state and the Romanians living abroad

    Today’s Romanian state and the Romanians living abroad

    The
    word diaspora is a compound made of two Grek words, dia, about, across and spora,
    dispersion. Diaspora has become a portmanteau word for all the communities who
    ended up living outside the borders of their countries of origin. As for the
    Romanians, 2021 saw a record high in terms of population exodus figure for the
    last 30 years. On paper, living outside the country are roughly 5.8 million
    Romanians. However, a different line of research points to 9 million. The number
    of Romanians leaving abroad cannot be clearly accounted for, because most of
    them do not have legal documents or do not declare their residence. Italy is
    the top country among Romanians’ residence options. Spain and Germany follow
    suit, in descending order. Many other Romanians live in the United States,
    Great Britain, Portugal, France, The Netherlands, Canada, Australia and New
    Zealand. According to their age brackets,
    most of them are 25 to 45 years old.


    But why this exodus? What becomes of those who leave?
    What are the implications of their leaving, for Romania? We sat down and spoke
    about the Romanian diaspora with Claudiu Tarziu. A former journalist, Claudiu
    Tarziu is, at the moment, a senator for the Alliance for the Union of
    Romanians, an opposition party. Mr Tarziu is the president of the Commission on Romanians Around the World.

    Claudiu Tarziu:

    Obviously, all those who leave
    Romania to work abroad do that for a better pay and for better living conditions.
    The Romanians are not happy with what they are being offered, career-wise and in
    terms of personal and family development opportunities. It is absolutely clear
    Romania is unable for offer jobs for which the pay range lives up to the level
    of specialization they might need, and is also unable to offer jobs for the
    unskilled people. There are a couple of areas where things have been sorted out
    a little bit, and I’m speaking about constructions and farming, but even these
    sectors have seen a setback as of late. In agriculture there still are big
    problems because we’re dependent on the weather outside, on severe weather
    changes, on what God gets round to giving us and we do not have irrigation systems,
    we do not have the ability to till the land at the highest professional standards,
    there are many other reasons for that. Also, the construction sector is ailing because
    construction materials have seen price hikes (also because of the war in Ukraine,
    but not only because of that) prices increased because of the liberalization in
    energy prices and that is how we have seen a setback in those areas where things
    kind of got sorted out and where profit could still be obtained, so better
    salaries could be offered. That is why Romanians leave, mainly because the pay
    range fails to meet their expectations, which are legitimate, I daresay, but
    not only because of that, but also because of the living standards in Romania,
    in their broader acceptation. I’m speaking about personal safety in the street,
    the red tape, the education and the healthcare system.


    What do the Romanians living abroad lack and what does
    the Romanian state do to bring them back?

    Senator Claudiu Tarziu:


    What do Romanians living abroad miss?
    What do they most miss? First of all, they miss the families of those who left
    the country, secondly, they miss a protection offered by the Romanian state, a
    protection they are entitled to, as bearers of Romanian citizenship. The Romanian
    state does not have, unfortunately, a strategy for the Romanians living outside
    the country’s borders, temporarily or permanently, neither does it have a
    strategy to help the Romanians living in the historical communities or the Romanians
    in the economic exile ( the so-called diaspora), or the Romanians from abroad
    who want to return to Romania, to do that, nor do they have a strategy for
    those who want to remain abroad and preserve their national identity and
    protect their rights and freedoms there where they live. The Romanian state
    seems to have abandoned those Romanians, all of them, roughly 6 million Romanians
    are officially registered as having left Romania and having their domicile or
    residence abroad, specifically, one million Romanians with their domicile
    abroad and more than 5 million Romanians with a foreign residence, but they may
    not have official registration, there is more of them with no legal documents,
    just as the State Secretary with the Department for the Relation with the Romanians
    Abroad, there are 8 million of them. In earnest, the Romanian state does not seem
    to be interested in those Romanians living outside its borders, it offers them
    only palliatives. A couple of cultural programmes, here and there, of very little value,
    several official visits of high-ranking dignitaries every now and then, but
    apart from that, absolutely nothing. Those Romanians are contacted only during
    election campaigns, when the parties are in need of their electoral support. It
    is something inconceivable and it must change, as fast as possible.


    The
    Romanians’ exodus also means, by default, the exodus of highly-skilled professional
    categories we are now forced to import from other states.

    Senator Claudiu
    Tarziu:


    In order to help the Romanians
    who want to return to the country, not only a couple of measures need to be
    taken, but whole packages of measures. A true national strategy is needed to
    that effect, since it will have to target all aspects of the social life, not a
    mere one or two of them. We cannot bring back our brothers living outside our
    country’s borders (if they want to do that) unless we, in Romania, provide a
    climate which is fit for a dignified life. A climate which is appropriate for everyone’s
    personal development, so they can have a new family, so the newborns and the
    infants can have access to the best educational standards. So there’s a lot for
    us to change in Romania Romana and we also need to develop certain programs dedicated
    to Romanians outside the borders, whom we also need. It is not only them who need
    us, if they want to return to Romania, but it is also us who need them. (EN)