Tag: George

  • April 23, 2023 UPDATE

    April 23, 2023 UPDATE

    VISIT The international community has a
    duty to support Ukraine, the president of Romania Klaus Iohannis and his Chilean
    counterpart Gabriel Boric said in Santiago de
    Chile. According to Radio Romania’s correspondent, president Boric condemned
    the war and expressed his country’s solidarity with Ukraine. Mr. Iohannis announced that the first Romanian language department in Latin
    America will be established this year at Universidad de Chile. During the
    visit, a memorandum was signed concerning cooperation in emergency situations,
    such as earthquakes and wildfires. Previously, president Iohannis was in
    Brazil, and the last stage of his south-American tour is Argentina.


    SPENDING Romanian authorities are looking at a plan to
    reduce public spending, which will be endorsed by the government in an
    emergency order next week, after the
    measures have been approved in a meeting of the ruling coalition made up of the
    Social Democratic Party, the National Liberal Party and the Democratic Union of
    Ethnic Hungarians in Romania. Both the Liberal PM Nicolae Ciucă and the Social
    Democratic finance minister, Adrian Câciu, promised that salaries and
    investments would not be cut, nor would additional taxes and charges be
    introduced. In the last government meeting, held a few days ago, PM Ciucă called
    on large-scale taxpayers to meet their obligations to the budget, and urged fiscal
    authorities to ensure tax collection.


    REFUGEES Nearly 266,000 Romanian and foreign
    citizens Saturday crossed in and out of Romania, the border police announced.
    According to a news release issued on Sunday, out of the over 112,000 people
    who entered Romania, 8,784 were Ukrainian nationals. Since February
    10, 2022, two weeks before the start of the Russian invasion of that country,
    more than 4 million Ukrainian citizens have entered Romania. Most of them
    transited the country en route to Western Europe,
    but over 100,000 have chosen to stay here. The government of Romania decided
    that private citizens that host Ukrainian refugees will only be refunded
    accommodation and meal expenses until the end of this month. As of May 1, the
    people coming into Romania from Ukraine will receive directly a fixed amount to
    cover immediate accommodation and food expenses for 4 months. The money will be
    paid from the funds of emergency inspectorates. After this 4-month period,
    financial aid will only be provided for accommodation, until the end of this
    year, and the refugees are encouraged to enrol with Romanian employment
    agencies in order to benefit from the same rights and benefits as Romanian
    nationals.


    EDUCATION Trade unions in the public education sector intend to step
    up protests primarily concerning staff salaries, after the Government announced
    plans to cut down budget spending, including a freeze on salaries and hiring in
    the public sector. Major trade union federations in the sector threaten that
    the current school year might be ended sooner than scheduled, as they are
    considering an all-out strike as of May 22. Next Tuesday and Wednesday, they
    will be picketing the government headquarters, and on May 10 a protest rally is
    scheduled in Bucharest. The education minister, Ligia Deca, said she was
    confident solutions would be found to avoid a strike.


    HOLIDAY Christians Sunday celebrated St. George, who is also
    the patron saint of the Romanian Land Forces. According to tradition, St.
    George was a high-ranking soldier in the Roman Army under Emperor Diocletian, who
    was tortured and sentenced to death for refusing to recant his Christian faith.
    St George is one of the most venerated saints in Christianity, and a large
    number of settlements have claimed him as a patron saint. Over 1 million
    Romanians bear his name.


    COIN The National Bank of Romania Monday releases a celebratory
    silver coin on the occasion of the 90th birthday anniversary of the
    great poet Nichita Stănescu. The coins will be accompanied by authenticity
    certificates and presentation leaflets in Romanian, English and French. The 5,000
    coins will be sold for EUR 90 per piece.


    SPORTS The Romanian athlete Denis Florin Mihai won the
    bronze in the 55 kg Greco-Roman wrestling category at the European championships
    held in Zagreb, Croatia, after defeating Bulgaria’s Stefan Hristov Grigorov. Before
    the last day of the competition, Romania had won a total of 5 medals, including
    2 gold ones, for Andreea Beatrice Ana, in the 55 kg and Alexandra Nicoleta
    Anghel in the 72 kg categories, and 3 bronze ones, won by Cătălina Axente in
    the 76 kilo, Kriszta Tunde Incze in the 65 kg category, and Denis Florin Mihai.
    At the previous edition, hosted by Budapest, Hungary, Romania won 4 medals, including
    one gold (Andreea Ana – 55 kg), one silver (Nicu Ojog – 97 kg Greco-Roman), and
    two bronze (Alina Vuc -55 kg and Kriszta Incze – 65 kg). (AMP)

  • The domestic universe of poet George Bacovia

    The domestic universe of poet George Bacovia

    On one of Bucharests interwar outskirts, to this day a rather modest neighbourhood of Romanias capital city, lies the small, seemingly insignificant, yet welcoming home of early 20th Century poet George Bacovia.



    Labelled by literary critics a symbolist poet, only to be included in a movement, Bacovia still charms his readers with his simple, sad poems that reflect and grant beauty to despondency. In fact, the sadness in his poetry was a reflection of his fragile and depressive nature.



    Bacovias survival depended mostly on his wife, Agatha, whom we also owe the existence of the small “George and Agatha Bacovia Memorial House. Curator Lelia Spirescu with the National Museum of Romanian Literature in Bucharest told us more about this house and its location on the outskirts of the capital city.



    Lelia Spirescu: “This was a ‘democratic area or neighbourhood, as the poet liked to call it. It was part of the underprivileged, proletarian world, rather than a wealthy suburb. Obviously, it matched his soul perfectly. Well, George Bacovia confessed at some point that most of his memories, both as a child and as a grownup, were tied to the town of Bacău. But it was in this house that he came to live together with and due to his wife, Agatha Grigorescu. She took a loan from the Teachers Association and managed to have this house built in record time, about one month. And she also oversaw the construction works. As I was saying, this place seemed tailored to his soul. George Bacovia was an introvert, a man who kept to himself, prone to sickness, fragile in both physical and psychological terms. He suffered from depression as well. Agatha on the other hand was an optimist, a fighter, all her life. Its true, she had no choice but to be one. She was his pillar of strength, both during his lifetime and after he died. She wanted his literary legacy to last forever, so she donated the house to the state, and it became a museum as early as in 1958, one year after the poet died.



    Although he spent most of his life in Bucharest, George Bacovia was deeply marked by his hometown of Bacău, in the east of the country.



    Lelia Spirescu: “Poet George Bacovia was born in Bacău on September 17, 1881, into a merchant family with a lot of children. Gheorghe Andone Vasiliu, known under his penname of George Bacovia, had 10 siblings. His first contact with Bucharest was in fact in 1903, when he came here to attend Law School, but he quit after the first 3 years. In 1907 he joined the Law School in Iaşi, where he graduated in 1911. He would move back and forth between Bucharest, Bacău and Iași. His wife was born in Mizil, Prahova County, in the south, on March 8, 1895 and her childhood was by no means easy. She lost her mother just days after she was born, and her father died when she was 15. She had 2 sisters, and she was raised by her family. She met the poet George Bacovia in 1916. She graduated from the School of Literature and Philosophy and she taught Romanian language and literature. She would also work as a substitute French teacher. She was a poet, too. She made her debut in 1923 with a poetry volume entitled “Twilight harmonies.



    Agatha provided George with the material and psychological support that he needed so much, and designed the house in Bucharest as a shelter for him and as a home that would reflect her personality as well, as Lelia Spirescu told us:



    Lelia Spirescu: “This house is quite modest, quiet, combining energies that were defining both for Agatha, and for George. The light and brightness of the house makes us think of her optimism, whereas the modesty and the dark tones of the furniture represent George Bacovia. These energies are present in the house to this day. You can feel both of them here when you visit the place.



    With only 3 rooms and a few small utilities rooms, the George and Agatha Bacovia Memorial House is filled with the couples personal items: furniture, books, radio sets, paintings, the violin that the poet used to play.



    Lelia Spirescu: “He loved drawing and music to the same extent. It was actually for drawing that he won his first prize ever, in 1899. That year was a landmark for him in 2 respects, because in 1899 he made his debut with the “Literatorul magazine run by poet Alexandru Macedonski, and also he won a top national place in a still nature drawing competition. He was also keen on music, which was actually his first love. He found music in his middle school years, when he played in the school orchestra and even got to conduct this orchestra with such talent that his music teacher advised him to go to the Music Conservatory. He didnt, he eventually chose poetry, but he remained loyal to music as well. His favourite instrument was the violin, and I think no other instrument could have resonated better with his emotions.



    After Bacovias death, the building and items in it were declared a “public utility collection managed by the poets wife and son, and in 1966, when the house was donated to the government, it was turned into a memorial museum. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • June 10, 2019 UPDATE

    June 10, 2019 UPDATE

    MINISTERS The new ministers of Justice, European Funds and of the Romanians
    All Over the World, were sworn in on Monday in the presence of Romania’s
    president Klaus Iohannis. At the end of last week, president Iohannis signed
    the decrees through which Ana Birchall was appointed Justice Minister, Roxana
    Manzatu became Minister of European Funds and Natalia Intotero took over the
    Ministry for the Romanians All Over the World. Iohannis turned down a proposal
    that Titus Corlatean took over the seat of Deputy Prime Minister for the
    Implementation of Strategic Partnerships, so far held by Ana Birchall and
    called on Prime Minister Viorica Dancila to nominate somebody else for that
    position. The president blames Corlatean for the disastrous situation in the
    2014 election, when he was Romania’s Foreign Minister and tens of thousands
    Romanians from abroad were unable to cast their ballot.












    GOVERNMENT The first meeting of the government of the Republic of Moldova,
    an ex-Soviet Romanian-speaking country, led by pro-European Maia Sandu, took
    place on Monday in spite of the Constitutional Court having invalidated the new
    cabinet’s investiture. Two high-ranking officials, including the police chief
    were sacked during the aforementioned meeting. In another development Maia
    Sandu has given assurances the government will succeed in unblocking foreign
    funding, particularly from the EU. The government meeting was hosted by
    Parliament because the members of the fresh cabinet have been denied access to
    the government building, which is presently controlled by the incumbent Prime
    Minister Pavel Filip, who is continuing his activity defying the latest
    Parliament decisions, including the investiture of the new cabinet. The
    Democratic Party has invited all Parliamentary parties to a political dialogue,
    mainly the Socialist Party and the ACUM bloc with a view to identifying
    solutions for overcoming the present political crisis. A close ally of the
    controversial politician and businessman Vladimir Plahotniuc and designated by
    the Court to take over the prerogatives of the country’s president from the
    pro-Russian leader Igor Dodon, Pavel Filip announced the dismantling of
    Parliament and called for snap election in September.






    TALKS Romania’s minister delegate for
    European affairs, George Ciamba, on Monday held talks with Gent Cakaj, the
    incumbent minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs of Albania during the
    latter’s visit to Romania. The two ministers reviewed the stage of Albania’s
    preparations for opening accession negotiations with the EU, the bilateral
    relations between the two countries and the latest developments in the Western
    Balkans. George Ciamba reiterated Romania’s staunch support for Albania’s EU
    accession announcing Romania’s readiness to assist Tirana in the accession process.














    DRILL Around
    8,000 military from six countries (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria,
    Romania, Hungary and the US) are taking part until the 24th of June
    in the Saber Guardian 2019 multinational exercise. The exercise is led by US
    Army Europe and the Romanian Land Forces and is hosted by Bulgaria, Romania and
    Hungary. Its main aim is to highlight the cohesion, unity and solidarity
    between partner and allied states in the face of any possible form of
    aggression, in particular through rapid mobilisation and deployment of troops
    anywhere in Europe. Shooting exercises are held at the shooting ranges in
    Cincu, Borduşani, Babadag, Smârdan and Râşnov.



    (translated by bill)