Tag: disabilities

  • Beyond Words

    Beyond Words

    The first association of people with hearing
    disabilities in Romania turns 104 years this November. The Romanian Deaf Mute Association
    was founded on November 9th, 1919, under the patronage of Queen
    Marie of Romania, through the voluntary association of a group of deaf people. Its
    first president was Mr. Alexandru Clarnet, and the executive committee included
    Prince Henry Ghica, the deaf son of the ruler Constantin Ghica. It is a
    non-profit organisation aimed at helping integrate people with hearing
    disabilities in society.




    This autumn, the association implemented a
    project entitled The Week of Deaf Community and Culture. Bogdan Anicescu,
    cultural director of the ANSR, gave us more details about it:




    Bogdan Anicescu:The Week of Deaf Community and Culture is a bilateral initiative,
    implemented by the National Association of Deaf People in Romania in a
    partnership with an organisation from Norway called the International Organisation
    for Democracy and Human Rights. The goal of the project was to showcase a
    cultural dimension of deafness, to shed light on the deaf person as a member of
    a community, of a cultural and linguistic community sharing a different
    language than Romanian, namely the Romanian sign language. Thanks to the
    Norwegian grants and after winning a call for projects under the Timişoara -
    European Capital of Culture programme, we sought to turn Timişoara into a
    Capital of Deaf Culture as well, between September 11th and 24th,
    when the city hosted a number of events devoted to deaf culture.




    The events included a beauty and talent show,
    Miss and Mister Silence, a dance and mime festival, a joint workshop with the
    Norwegian partners on the cultural integration of deaf people, the premiere of
    a short reel called Love without Words, a Silent March in which hundreds of
    deaf people gathered in Timişoara’s Botanical Park and marched through the
    centre of the city, as well as a sign language workshop in which people without
    hearing disabilities were introduced to the basics of sign language.




    Octavian Iacob, the director of the film Love
    without Words, told us about working with deaf characters:




    Octavian Iacob:We had an interpreter who had to stand in front of the actors.
    Many times, this meant the interpreter was positioned next to the camera or
    even inside the frame, so we needed time to adjust the image to what was
    supposed to be in the movie. It was a challenge that we accepted, we loved it
    and I have to praise these people who were so open, so transparent, so willing
    to act. They received exceptional attention during the 4 days of shooting. It
    was extraordinary, a truly new experience that one doesn’t usually find on set
    and, let’s face it, one doesn’t usually find in one’s day to day life.




    Octavian Iacob also gave us a few details about
    the casting process:


    Octavian Iacob:We travelled to Timişoara, we had one day scheduled for casting,
    and several people with hearing disabilities showed up. We had several criteria
    in selecting our cast: there were script-related criteria, the actors had to
    match the description of the characters, then there was the talent these people
    had to have with respect to acting, to learning a text and performing it in
    sign language, we had to see what these signs looked like so as to adjust our
    shooting methods.




    Professional actors were also cast in the short
    reel: Paul Diaconescu and Cristina Velciu guided the public towards the
    original story, towards what the plot was seeking to convey. As for the actors
    with hearing disabilities who took part in the project, the director Octavin
    Iacob also said:




    Octavian Iacob:Not only are they not professional actors, but they didn’t even
    have time for one rehearsal, they only read the script for about two weeks, everything
    was discussed online, via zoom, using an interpreter, which is quite difficult
    in itself. But on the first day of shooting, when I had selected some easier
    scenes, I was amazed to see that they all knew their lines perfectly. The
    interpreter had the text and confirmed to me that almost every word is said,
    and I say almost every word because in sign language the structure is
    different.




    Bogdan Anicescu, the cultural director of ANSR,
    also added:




    Bogdan Anicescu:Love without words is what we feel as well, because we managed to
    implement this activity as part of our joint project, The Week of Deaf
    Community and Culture. The idea goes way back and we wanted a chance to turn Timişoara,
    as part of this project, into a special place able to host the first film of
    this kind in Romania, in which deaf persons and sign language play a central
    part. It is the outcome of the work completed by a small, but ambitious and
    devoted team, and we are glad that we worked so well with the director Octavian
    Iacob, the producer Mirela Muşat and their entire team. It all happened very
    quickly, but the end result is wonderful, especially considering the positive
    feedback from the public with or without hearing disabilities. The message the
    film seeks to get across is that love goes beyond communication barriers, and
    sign language is able to bring people together.




    The project is intended to encourage
    larger-scale support for the cultural movement of Romanian deaf people, beyond
    the Association and beyond this minority as such. (AMP)

  • New ministers in Romania’s government

    New ministers in Romania’s government

    Nominated early this week by the main partner in the ruling coalition, the Social Democratic Party, to take over the ministries for family and labour, respectively, the Deputies Natalia Intotero and Simona Bucura-Oprescu were sworn in on Wednesday afternoon.



    The seats had been vacant since last week, when Gabriela Firea and Marius Budăi resigned following a scandal concerning grave irregularities in several care homes for the elderly and the disabled.



    More than 2,000 such centres were checked by the authorities in the aftermath of the scandal, and several of these, mostly in Bucharest, were closed down. In scores of other similar institutions, operations have been discontinued and fines totalling some EUR 2 mln have been issued. Criminal investigations have also been initiated, concerning economic offences or crimes against persons, and two inspectors with the Ilfov County Agency for Social Inspection and Payments have been detained for having failed to properly assess the situation in a care centre for people with disabilities.



    And, after talks with PM Marcel Ciolacu, the two relevant ministers also resigned. Ciolacu said at the time that mayors, county council presidents, chiefs of local institutions and police chiefs having connections with the institutions subject to the investigation must also take political responsibility.



    Similarly, the Social Democratic Partys spokesman Lucian Romaşcanu said other officials should step down following the inspections conducted in the care centres for the elderly. “It only makes sense, at present, to conclude that the responsibility here lies not only with the government, but also with the local authorities. Decisions will certainly be made at Cabinet level, but the culprits at political and administrative level should also take a step back. It is a matter of political dignity,” the Social Democratic official argued.



    For the time being, the new ministers have taken over their posts. Simona Bucura-Oprescu, 43, currently at her 3rd term in office in the Chamber of Deputies with support from the Social Democrats, is the new minister of labour and social solidarity. In a social media post on Monday, she said the law on special pensions, the pensions law and the salary law are the priorities of her ministerial term, with a view to completing the reforms undertaken under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan.



    The new minister for family, youth and equal opportunities, Natalia Intotero, is 47 and is also at her 3rd term in office as an MP. (AMP)

  • Civic mobilisation during the COVID-19 pandemic

    Civic mobilisation during the COVID-19 pandemic


    The pandemic triggered by
    the new COVID-19 caused fatalities all over the world. We are well aware of
    that. But we are also aware of the fact that its tragic aftermath has so far
    favoured the strengthening of human solidarity and cooperation. In Romania, a
    great many non-governmental associations and civic or private initiatives
    support vulnerable areas, as well as the natural persons worst-hit by the
    pandemic’s socio-economic aftermath. A telling example of that is the Emergency
    Fund for Hospitals. It was created as early as the initial stage of the
    COVID-19 outbreak by the Save Romania Children Association. The association has
    for many years now been jointly working with maternities and medical units.
    These days, the money donated by companies or natural persons for the Emergency
    Fund is earmarked to those who have been on the frontline in the fight against
    COVID-19.

    The representative of the Save the
    Children Association, Stefania Mircea:

    The
    Romanian medical system has engaged in the war against the vulnerabilities we
    are familiar with, so it was all the more needed for us to be responsible and
    stay united. Everybody’s lives depend on the medical staff that has been on the
    barricades, and a doctor who is deprived of protection is putting his own life
    in danger, at once jeopardising the lives of the people around him. The medical
    doctor and the medical staff are, unfortunately, the most exposed to that,
    since they do not stay at home. They are on the frontline in the fight against
    pandemic, a scourge that, as we all know, has claimed the lives of so many
    people around the world. Besides, with no protection equipment, with no medical
    equipment, they cannot save us, and they cannot save themselves either. We have
    been receiving demands from medical doctors countrywide who need medical or
    protection equipment. We record their application in a registry and, with our
    donations, we try to reach the destinations where our stuff is most needed.


    A bank account has been
    opened for this emergency fund. Prospective donors can use it, and they can
    also use a text message for that. So far, the donated sum amounts to roughly
    500,000 Euros. Of that, around 135,000 Euros have been spent for medical
    equipment and materials. 35 medical and patients’ care units as well as 74
    family doctors’ offices in 17 counties have benefited from the aid provided by
    the Save the Children Association. Medical ventilators, a portable echography scanner
    kit, disinfection devices, cleaning and disinfection kits for hospital wards
    and operating theatres have been donated, as well as gloves, bonnets, hospital
    booties, overalls, visors. Three incubators for premature babies have also been
    donated, as well as disinfection solutions. But the most impressive aspect of
    this campaign was the mobilization of the laypeople. Of the total sum of money
    that has been donated, 92,000 Euros have been donated by natural persons.

    Stefania Mircea:


    It is so
    impressive to be able to see how laypersons have understood that solidarity was
    most needed. Even one of the medical doctors we have worked with has launched
    an appeal to his patients, and people donated various sums of money, ranging
    from small sums to bigger sums, in a bid to help the medical system. It is so
    impressive. So often we have heard that the crisis we are going through is
    tantamount to going through a war. That is why the need to be humane was so
    great. In times of crisis, people are quick to help the others and from the
    bottom of our heart we thank those who have
    offered their support so far, also making an appeal to the people, to continue
    to get involved and donate, no matter how much or how little, and under what
    form.


    The elderly, especially the
    needy and the lonely, have also been among those most exposed to danger during
    the pandemic. The SNK Association, through its Seneca Ecologos and Seneca
    Publishers, Romania’s first green publisher, during the pandemic, has been
    doing what it has done before: promoting responsibility, this time towards the
    elderly, through Our grandparents,
    which is one of their programs. The program kicked off under the slogan We
    provide safe donations and deliveries of food and hygiene products for the
    vulnerable elderly people. Initially, the project was thought out for only one
    month, but its scope turned out to be broader afterwards as, providing help for
    the elderly, the people working with the Seneca Association have also
    discovered other categories of vulnerable persons, day labourers, single
    mothers, people who have been made redundant or furlough employees. That is why
    donations were most needed, made by companies or natural persons.

    The representative of the SNK Association, Anastasia
    Staicu:

    For the first
    month, we approached 85 grandparents, while at the moment we provide help for
    700 people in 24 counties and more than 30 localities. We have also reached the
    outlying areas. We offer our help in Bucharest, that’s for sure, but we also
    try to reach various areas countrywide, the less accessible places. For the
    first month alone, the project was implemented using the Association’s
    financial resources. Then we spread the news we would like to carry on, so more
    people joined us, thousands of people of the Declic community, all of them
    donated sums of money. And their donations overwhelmed us. The sum amounted to
    as much 80,000 Euros, or thereabouts and with that sum we can provide help for
    some 700 people every month. We work following a weekly plan, and we do not
    have only individual cases. For instance, we also help 250 people placed in 15
    elderly care homes in Giurgiu ( in the south). Also in Giurgiu, we offered
    packs to child care centers and to care centers for people with disabilities.
    Everything we have received helps us a great deal, so that in turn we may carry
    on with our help.

    Every week, SNK volunteers deliver
    three self-contained packs, with food and hygiene products: milk, bread, potted
    tomato sauce and vegetable stew, carrots, lemons, toothpaste, soap and kitchen
    towels. As for the project itself, it may continue as soon as the state of
    emergency ends and restrictions are gradually eased.

    Anastasia Staicu:

    We shall carry
    on as much as we can afford it,
    resource-wise. Also, we shall do that as long as the state of alert is in
    place. However, in a couple of months’ time we hope solutions can be found at
    state level. All private aid initiatives, for the time being, are a shield
    protecting those who are most vulnerable in times of crisis, but we keep our
    hopes alive that, later on, the authorities will also intervene to do their
    job.

    Until then, one of the most
    sensible gains of this extremely difficult period is provided by the solidarity
    private donors have shown so far.