Tag: Greek-Catholic

  • April 17, 2023

    April 17, 2023

    Easter – The majority Orthodox Christians and the Greek Catholics in Romania are today celebrating the second Easter day, which marks the beginning of the Bright Week. The celebration of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, the biggest celebration of the Christian world, is the only one to which three days are dedicated. This week everything is under the sign of light, the symbol of Christs Resurrection. The usual greeting has been replaced since Sunday with a greeting-confession “Christ is risen! He is risen indeed!” which expresses faith in the Resurrection.



    Budget – The Romanian government will analyze during this weeks meeting the ministries’ proposals to reduce expenses from the state budget. Cuts in goods and services, trips and purchases are expected. The measures were requested by the Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă, as the budget deficit in the first months of the year is higher than anticipated. The PM emphasized, however, that there will be no reductions in salaries and investments. In his turn, President Klaus Iohannis has given assurances that there is no hole in the budget and that salaries will not be cut.



    Refugees – More than four million Ukrainians have entered Romania since the beginning of the war, according to data from the General Border Police Inspectorate. The vast majority of Ukrainian citizens left Romania for other destinations. Around 4,400 Ukrainians applied for asylum in Romania. They benefit from all the rights provided by the national legislation.



    Weightlifting — The Romanian athlete Andreea Cotruţa won three gold medals in the 55 kg category on Sunday at the European Weightlifting Championships in Yerevan. Cotruţa won gold in the snatch event with 91 kg, also won the gold in the clean and jerk with 110 kg, and in the overall she won gold with 201 kg. Romania thus won 11 medals after two days of competition, six gold, of which three obtained by Mihaela Cambei (49 kg category) and three by Andreea Cotruţa (55 kg category), three silver and two bronze. Romanias target is to win four medals and six rankings on places 4-6.



    Ukraine – Kyiv will seek to obtain the reopening of transit for its food products and grains via Poland during the discussions taking place today in Warsaw, the Ukrainian Agriculture Minister Mikola Solski announced after Poland and Hungary announced bans on some imports from Ukraine, Reuters reports. The Polish farmers have denounced the fact that a large part of Ukrainian grain and other products is not distributed to the rest of the European Union, but remains in the country, causing a reduction in grain prices. The president of Polands ruling Law and Justice party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, announced on Saturday, at a government meeting, that he had made the decision to stop imports of Ukrainian products to avoid a crisis on the domestic agricultural market. Minister Solski said that the transit of food products through Hungary and Slovakia was not affected. He also stated that he would have additional discussions in Romania on Wednesday and in Slovakia on Thursday.



    Rescue — The Romanian border policemen participating, on the Coast Guard ships, in a mission within the Joint Maritime Operation THEMIS 2023 under the auspices of the Frontex Agency, have rescued, together with their colleagues from the Coast Guard in Italy, in several missions carried out in the Mediterranean Sea, 181 foreign citizens in danger. On March 23, the Romanian border police took 150 migrants, all men, on board the Coast Guards maritime patrol boat, from a ship belonging to their colleagues from the Italian Coast Guard. The men were given medical assistance and were later taken over by the authorities of the Italian Republic. On April 8, the Romanian border policemen rescued 31 people in danger, including minors, and provided them with medical assistance. (LS)

  • April 6, 2018

    April 6, 2018

    GOOD FRIDAY– The most important events in Christianity are the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, whose life and teachings are the foundation of Christianity. Today, Orthodox and Greek Catholic believers the world over, including Romania, a mostly Orthodox country, are marking Good Friday. Good Friday, the Friday before Easter, commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus. This is a day of mourning in church, a day when Christians meditate on Jesus suffering and death on the cross.




    SECURITY MEASURES – Over 50,000 employees of the Romanian Interior Ministry have been mobilised to maintain public order, safety and security across the country at Easter. Gendarme and police troops will be chiefly deployed around churches and other religious institutions. 250 thousand people are expected to attend more than 700 public events that will take place in Romania in the next four days. Traffic police, equipped with more than 300 traffic radars and backed by helicopters, will be monitoring traffic on Romania’s motorways at Easter.




    ROMANIAN ACADEMY – Historian Ioan-Aurel Pop, the rector of the Babeş-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca (north-western Romania) was elected president of the Romanian Academy. He received 86 of the 148 votes that were cast during the General Assembly of the Romanian Academy. The newly elected president, who will have a four-year term in office, will take over the position 15 days since his election. The elections for four positions of vice-president and one of secretary general will be held on April the 20th. The former president of the Romanian Academy, Ionel Valentin Vlad, passed away in December 2017.




    MARCH – The “Eudoxiu Hurmuzachi” Institute for the Romanians abroad, an institution subordinated to the Ministry for the Romanians Abroad jointly with the Lauder-Reut Educational Complex will be staging a March of Holocaust survivors dubbed “Let’s learn together’, in Poland, over April 9-13. The event, which has an educational character and is aimed at teaching students a dramatic episode in history, involves the participation of young people from 52 countries. The Romanian delegation includes students from Romania and the Republic of Moldova.




    POISONING – A Russian military research base has been identified as the source of the nerve agent used for the poisoning in Salisbury, The Times newspaper reported. The source of the military-grade poison was revealed in a British intelligence briefing for its allies, and was used to persuade world leaders that Russia was responsible for the attack. Britain blames Russia for the poisoning on UK soil of the former double agent and his daughter with what it says was a Soviet-made military-grade nerve agent, something that Kremlin denies. More than 150 Russian diplomats from 28 countries, Romania included, have been expelled. Russia has also retaliated by expelling Western diplomats.




    CONVICTION – South Koreas former President Park Geun-hye has been sentenced to 24 years in jail after she was found guilty of abuse of power and coercion, the BBC reports. The verdict was broadcast live and represents the culmination of a scandal which rocked the country, fuelling rage against political and business elites. Park was also fined 17 million dollars. She was found guilty of 16 out of 18 charges, most of which related to bribery and coercion. The former South Korean president has previously accused the courts of being biased against her has denied all wrongdoing.




    HANDBALL – The Romanian women’s handball team CSM Bucharest are today meeting on home soil the French team Metz, in the first round of the Champions League quarter finals. In the three other matches, the defending champion, Gyor of Hungary will meet Buducnost Podgorica of Montenegro, FC Midtjylland of Denmark will face Vardar Skopje of Macedonia, and Ferencvaros Budapest of Hungary will take on Rostov-Don of Russia. The winners will qualify for the Final Four tournament. We recall that CSM Bucharest won the Champions League in 2016. (Translated by Elena Enache)


  • April 11, 2015

    April 11, 2015

    Orthodox and Greek-Catholic Christians from around the world, including Romania, today celebrate Holy Saturday, the Easter Eve. In Jerusalem, a divine liturgy is performed, a unique Orthodox ritual in which the Greek Patriarch of Jerusalem comes out of the tomb of Jesus Christ carrying lit candles and offers light to believers. In his Easter address, the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church, Daniel, says that “in a world marked by instability and insecurity, Christians must search for the joy brought to us by the union with Jesus Christ and must share this joy with those who suffer, through prayer, solidarity and relief.”



    Most Romanians choose to spend their Easter holidays with their families, and their majority estimate they will spend for the Easter lunch similar amounts to those earmarked in previous years, according to an IRES opinion poll. Data indicate that three quarters of the interviewees will attend the Resurrection Mass, although 9 in 10 Romanians define themselves as religious people. As for the traditional dishes, half of the respondents say they will have home-made lamb dishes, Easter cake and wine. The poll was conducted during April 4 to 6, on a sample of one thousand people, with a 3 per cent margin of error.



    Crown Princess Margareta of Romania and Prince Radu will be in Chisinau on Easter night, to attend the Easter Vigil, the Royal House of Romania announced. During the visit to Chisinau, the two will have a meeting with the Speaker of the Moldovan Parliament, Andrian Candu, with the Mayor of Chisinau, Dorin Chirtoaca, and with the president of the Science Academy of the Republic of Moldova, Gheorghe Duca. This is the first time in 73 years that the Royal Family of Romania will be present in the Metropolitan Cathedral in Chisinau. In October 1942, King Mihai and Queen Mother Elena attended the mass occasioned by the opening of the restored cathedral. This was the last visit of King Mihai and Queen Mother Elena to Chisinau.



    Expo Milano 2015, themed “Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life” will open on May 1st, and Romania will be represented by a pavilion whose theme will be “In Harmony with Nature,” the Romanian Foreign Ministry announced. The 2015 Universal Exposition will last for 6 months, during which the 145 participating countries will have a chance to illustrate their own solutions to the food and energy challenges that the world is facing, and to suggest answers for the global problems related to the provision of healthy food for all mankind while also preserving biodiversity and the environment.



    Panama City is hosting a Summit of the Americas, marking a historic rapprochement between the US and Cuba. Little before the opening of the Summit, AFP reports, the American President Barack Obama and the Cuban President Raul Castro greeted and exchanged a few words. The US and Cuba decided to normalise relations in December, after decades of tensions dating back to the Cold War. In 1982, Cuba was included by the US Department of State on the list of countries that support terrorism, on grounds that it provided assistance with Marxist insurgence, and diplomatic relations between the two countries were discontinued in 1961. The Summit of the Americas brings together 35 heads of state.



    Romanian tennis player Simona Halep, no. 3 in the world, ranks second in the WTA polls for the best player and the best shot in March. American Serena Williams, world leader and winner of the Miami tournament, after defeating Halep 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 in the final, won 52% of the votes. Halep comes second with 40%, and Spain’s Carla Suárez Navarro ranks third, with 8%. In March Halep won the Indian Wells, the first Premier Mandatory title in her career. This year Halep has also won the tournaments in Shenzhen and Dubai.