Tag: diversity

  • Long-distance hiking and cross-cultural bonding

    Long-distance hiking and cross-cultural bonding

    Via Transilvanica is Romania’ s longest hiking trail. It
    connects sites that have been included on UNESCO World Heritage List. Via
    Transilvanica is also a vital connection between the local communities and various
    aspects of the heritage, including both built and natural legacy, but also the
    immaterial tradition. Via Transilvanica is rated as a most remarkable achievement
    for the Romanian Heritage, so much so that the European Commission granted Via Transilvanica
    the European Heritage Award 2023.


    Anna Szekely is Tasuleasa Social’s executive manager and
    the author of the Hiker’s Guide to Via Transilvanica. Anna told us it is Romania’s
    first long-distance hiking trail, running through the entire Romanian territory,
    north to south-west.


    This long-distance hiking trail was created
    in a bid to show Romania’s entire beauty and ethnic and cultural diversity. It
    was thought out in such a way that the hiker or the cyclist, or whoever comes
    to visit Romania, should discover Romania the way it is. First of all, I’ve
    told that before and I will say it again, it is also very important that we, the
    Romanians, rediscover the beauties of the country as we’re not aware of them
    just as yet. We cut through 400 communities with Via Transilvanica. These communities are very diverse and along the way
    we get to know more than 18 ethnic groups. We’re speaking about a stunning
    cultural and ethnic diversity. The heritage, we come across it everywhere, every
    step we take. Also, we cut through lots of rural areas, of which some are
    almost abandoned. There are villages on the brink of extinction, with a couple
    of elderly people who are still there but we don’t know for how long. And yet, since Via Transilvanica crosses those
    particular regions, the youngsters are invited to return to those areas. The
    rural areas have a tremendous diversity, we can find all sorts of traditions,
    food, we can have our fair share of very impressive culinary and cultural
    experiences.


    On the official site, at viatransilvanica.com,
    hikers even have a blog of their own, they even have an interactive group on Facebook,
    labeled Transilvanica Official Group.

    Anna Szekely:

    There people open the
    page and ask how they can take a hiking trail, they find their hiking companions,
    they also ask technical questions. There are very many useful pieces of
    information, yet most of them can be found in the Hiker’s Guide they can access
    on our website. The guide is translated into five languages. I really love
    speaking about it, as I am the one who wrote it. Together with my women
    colleagues, we documented the entire trail and we compiled this guide where all
    the needed pieces of info can be found, for those who are into taking up a long-distance
    trail. Also, it is downloadable for free. As a rule, we redirect everybody to
    the blog, so they can get info on accommodation, on the trail, of the trail
    map, on the regions, on the areas we cross. We have a verbal description of
    that, but we also have lots of technical data that re very important for a
    trip.


    Accessing the Hiker’s Blog, the tourist can find it easy to
    pick the segment of the trail he wants to take, as the trail is divided by
    days. So, a one, a two-day or a weekend-long hike can be planned, or a
    fortnight-long, or even for the entire trail. Even the organizers themselves
    answer the more technical questions. With details on that, here is Tasuleasa
    Social’s executive manager and the Author of The Hikers’ Guide to Via Transilvanica,
    Anna Szekely.


    There we teach prospective hikers to plan
    their hike in such a way that they should avoid getting lost, also planning
    their overnight stays, we inform them on the places where springs can be found,
    shops, or the emergency numbers. There are all sorts of very useful pieces of
    information. And we did have a great many foreign hikers. We ‘ve had most of
    them this year. We have foreigners from all over the world: from Australia, from
    Canada, from the United States of America, from Great Britain, from Germany,
    Switzerland, Spain, France. They have been very impressed with how the trail is
    marked. Let me also say one of our first foreign hikers was Christine
    Thurmer, who, two years ago, was a thru-hiker for the trail. She is one of the world’s
    most hiked women, with a record of more than 60,000 or 65,000 kilometres she walked
    around the world, on long-distance trails. She was the first woman to have had a
    thru-hike of this trail all by herself. She was the one who provided the greatest
    and the best feedback, for us, saying that through the andesite milestones
    marking every kilometre and which have various sculptures, we practically have
    the world’s longest fine arts and sculptures exhibition.


    Specifically, there are 1,400 such milestones marking a
    truly unusual hiking trail, and a full one, at that, in terms of the experience
    we can have, says Tasuleasa Social’s executive manager and the Author of The Hikers’
    Guide to Via Transilvanica, Anna Szekely. The uniqueness of Via Transilvanca has
    also enjoyed recognition since it was declared the winner of one of the
    European Awards for European Heritage, the Europa Nostra Awards in 2023. The
    Awarding ceremony was held in Venice in late September, with the vice president
    of the European Commission, Margaritis Schinas,
    attending. The public’s award was granted also in late September. So Via Transilvanica
    was the most highly-appreciated European heritage project, for which 27,000 people
    cast their votes in favour.


    It is
    a great honor for us to enjoy international recognition, with that coming from the
    European Commission itself, and we keep our hopes alive we can live up to everyone’s
    expectations. I invite anyone from abroad or from Romania to come over and become
    familiar with the beauties of the country as they do their hiking, since it is
    one of the best and soundest ways to know the highs but also the lows of a
    country. This the best way to know and love Romania.


    Through its 1,400-kilometer-long trail, Via
    Transilvanica crosses 400 de localities and 10 counties, being divided into
    seven cultural historical regions. The trail connects 12 sites included on
    UNESCO’s World Heritage List. The construction of Via Transilvanica lasted for
    about five years, being completed with the support of 8,000 volunteer workers.

  • Day of the Mediterranean

    Day of the Mediterranean

    In November 2020, the 42 Member States of the Union for the Mediterranean declared the 28th of November as the official Day of the Mediterranean, to be marked annually, calling upon the entire Mediterranean community and everyone who identifies with the Mediterranean to celebrate the lasting legacy of this age-old agora of cultural dialogue, wisdom and humanism.



    The Day of the Mediterranean provides a yearly opportunity to promote intercultural exchanges, celebrate cooperation, embrace diversity and strengthen ties between our two shores. We celebrate our shared identity, common heritage and love for the Mediterranean.



    It is a reminder that our similarities largely overcome our differences and that we all share a Mediterranean identity



    The Day of the Mediterranean aims to create an annual unique momentum to provide visibility to the positive cooperation stories in the region. It is also a reminder that we all share a Mediterranean identity, the cultural dimension being an important component of who we are and where we come from.



    It provides an opportunity to launch projects and initiatives as well as to hold events, roundtables, exhibitions and festivals across the region to strengthen ties between our shores, promoting intercultural exchanges and embracing diversity.

  • Romania, recommended by Prince Charles

    Romania, recommended by Prince Charles

    Prince Charles encourages Romanians to spend their holidays in their home country and to rediscover its “incredible riches. In a roughly 5-minute long video presented on Tuesday at his residence in Valea Zălanului (central Romania), he describes the country as ‘admirable’ and ‘astonishingly diverse’. The clip by the British journalist Charlie Ottley, producer of the documentary series Wild Carpathia, is designed to support the Romanian tourism industry.



    Prince Charles mentions that he first came here 20 years ago, and that the country has held a special place in his heart ever since. Speaking about the diversity of the country, he lists the Danube Delta, the largest and most pristine wetland in Europe, the forests, springs and monasteries of Bucovina, Moldova and Maramureş, the hills of the Apuseni Mountains and the wilds of Harghita, the precious collections in Bucharests museums and the wild beauty of the Iron Gates Gorge on the Danube, the castles, mountains and Saxon villages of Transylvania and the remote valleys of Banat and Crişana.



    Such a huge wealth of natural and cultural diversity under a single flag is quite remarkable, the Prince of Wales adds, and is one of the features that make Romania a unique and special corner of Europe.



    His Highness urges Romanians to rediscover their country and to take pride in their nature, wildlife, cuisine, traditions, and culture. He explains that, amid the first major pandemic in contemporary history, people are experiencing moments of profound change, uncertainty and anxiety, and many countries have closed their borders.



    While deploring the devastating effect this situation has had on the travel industry, on hotels and restaurants that employed millions of people, Prince Charles argues that staying at home offers many wonderful opportunities to explore and discover. “Now is the ideal time to rediscover one’s roots and reconnect with one’s heritage. I have every confidence that Romanians who do so will find much to delight them and to give them the greatest pride in their country, the heir apparent to the British throne says.



    The Prince voices his regret that the coronavirus pandemic has prevented him from traveling to Romania this year, as he does regularly, and mentions in the video that the 15th Century Wallachian ruler Vlad Țepeș is among his forbearers, which explains why part of him feels at home in Romania.



    Producer Charlie Ottley, who in turn says he loves Romania more than any country in the world, has reinforced this message, calling on Romanians to spend their holidays in their home country and their money in Romania rather than abroad, so as to support domestic tourism.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • World Radio Day 2020

    World Radio Day 2020

    Like other broadcasters across the globe, Radio Romania International also celebrated World Radio Day on 13th February. First established by UNESCO in 2011, this celebration was an opportunity this year to promote the idea of diversity.



    RRI aired a special show hosted by Radio Canada International together with other international partners, such as Radio Romania International, Radio Prague International, Radio Poland and Swissinfo. Journalists from these stations discussed various issues related to diversity, whether in the newsroom or on airwaves.