Tag: Saints Constantine and Helen

  • May 21, 2022

    May 21, 2022

    MFA. The Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs contacted, at
    the level of Secretary of State for European Affairs, the Hungarian Ambassador
    to Romania and conveyed their concern over the statement posted on Facebook on
    Friday by the new President of Hungary, Mrs. Katalin Novak. In the statement,
    she assumes the status of representative of all Hungarians, no matter where
    they live, inside or outside the borders of Hungary. The Bucharest Ministry of
    Foreign Affairs says that, according to international law, a state cannot claim
    its rights of any kind in relation to the citizens of another state. The
    primary responsibility for observing the identity rights (ethnic, cultural,
    religious or linguistic) of Romanian citizens of Hungarian ethnicity rests with
    Romania, as a state of citizenship. Hungary, as a related state, can only be involved
    in strengthening cultural ties.







    Gazprom. The Russian energy corporation Gazprom announced today that it has stopped supplying natural gas to Finland due to the refusal of the Finnish system operator to pay in rubles. The Finnish company, on the other hand, has stated that it can obtain gas from other suppliers so that it could continue to operate normally. We recall that Gazprom asked European customers to pay in rubles for Russian gas, following the sanctions imposed on Moscow for invading Ukraine. In late April, the Russian giant shut down gas supplies to both Poland and Bulgaria. On Thursday, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said that half of Gazprom’s 54 client companies had opened ruble accounts with Gazprombank.

    Bridge. The suspended bridge over the Danube in Braila,
    southeastern Romania, will be rendered operational in December this year,
    according to the Romanian Minister of Transport, Sorin Grindeanu. 65% of the
    works have been completed in almost five years since the start of the project.
    The bridge will be 2 kilometers long, 200 meters high and 31 meters wide and it
    will have four lanes. It will be the largest bridge in Romania and the third in
    Europe in terms of central opening and length. The construction is the most
    expensive of its kind in Romania after 1989, its estimated value standing at 500
    million euros.




    Refugees. According to the General Inspectorate of the Border Police,
    the number of Ukrainian citizens who entered Romania on Friday increased slightly
    compared to the previous day. In 24 hours, at national level, 8,823 Ukrainians
    entered through the border crossing points. Since the start of the Russian
    invasion in the neighboring state, on February 24, over 985 thousand refugees have
    entered the country. Of these, only 4,349 applied for asylum in Romania.
    Currently, the occupancy rate of the accommodation centers of the General
    Inspectorate for Immigration is almost 45%.








    Feast. The Patriarchal Cathedral of Bucharest celebrates its
    patron saints, today, on the feast of the Holy Emperors Constantine and Helen. Celebrated
    in the Orthodox Christian calendar on May 21, Constantine and his mother,
    Helen, were the first Christian emperors. St. Constantine the Great ruled from
    306 to 337. In 313, he issued the Edict of Mediolanum (Milan) – the first
    official recognition of Christianity in the Roman Empire, ending the persecution
    of Christians and guaranteeing freedom of faith and worship. Empress Helen, the
    mother of Constantine the Great, had a major contribution to the flourishing of
    the Church throughout the Empire – thousands of churches were opened or built,
    and the Holy Cross on which Jesus was crucified was discovered in Jerusalem and
    many places of worship were built at the Holy Places. On the feast day of
    Saints Constantine and Helen, over 1.8 million Romanians celebrate their name
    day.


    Tennis. Romania will have no less than seven representatives in
    the women’s singles events at Roland Garros. Mihaela Buzărnescu managed to get
    on the main board of the Parisian competition as a ‘lucky loser’, after losing,
    on Friday, in the last round of the qualifications to the Swede Mirjam
    Bjorklund 6-1, 6-3. In the first round, Mihaela Buzărnescu will face the
    American Madison Brengle. Simona Halep (19 WTA), champion at Roland Garros in
    2018 and finalist in 2014 and 2017, will take on the Croatian Ana Konjuh in the
    first round, and Sorana Cîrstea (27 WTA) will play against the German Tatjana
    Maria. Gabriela Ruse (52 WTA) will have a difficult match against the Belgian
    Elise Mertens, and Irina Begu (62 WTA) will have to deal with the Italian
    player Jasmine Paolini. Irina Bara (114 WTA), coming from qualifications, will
    face the Kazakh Iulia Putinţeva. Ana Bogdan (91 WTA) will have the hardest match,
    though, against the Belarusian Victoria Azarenka. (MI)

  • May 20, 2018 UPDATE

    May 20, 2018 UPDATE

    Embassy relocation – The Romanian authorities have announced they will finalize in one month at the latest an analysis related to the relocation of the Romanian embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, the Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Meleşcanu announced on Sunday. He said the results of the analysis would be forwarded to all Romanian political decision makers including to President Klaus Iohannis. Minister Meleşcanu considers normal the recalling of the Palestinian ambassador to Romania but hopes that diplomatic relations between the two sides will continue. Announced for the first time by the Social Democrat leader Liviu Dragnea, the government’s intention to relocate the Romanian embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem caused unprecedented disputes between the governing coalition and President Klaus Iohannis, who is supported by the Liberal opposition.



    Regional policy – The European Commissioner for Regional Policy Corina Cretu will pay a 2 — day visit to Romania as of Monday to discuss sustainable urban development. On Monday Commissioner Cretu will participate alongside PM Viorica Dancila and the minister for European funds Rovana Plumb in a conference devoted to urban investments hosted by Bacau, in the east. Commissioner Cretu will also visit the astronomic observatory in Bacau that benefited from European funds. On Tuesday Corina Cretu and minister Plumb will participate in a dialogue with the citizens at the Vasile Alecsandri University of Bacau. In a communiqué issued ahead of her visit to Romania, Commissioner Cretu said that more than one billion Euros would be invested in urban development in Romania.



    Tennis — World’s no. 1 player, Romanian Simona Halep was defeated Sunday by Ukrainian Elina Svitolina (4 WTA) 0-6, 4-6 in the final of the Rome tournament. Halep will still preserve the first place in the WTA ranking to be published on Monday and will be top seed at the upcoming Roland Garros tournament to start on May 27, which is the year’s second Grand Slam tournament.



    Gymnastics — The president of the Romanian Gymnastics Federation Andreea Răducan was included in the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame as part of a gala that took place in Oklahoma City, in the US. She will remain in the history of world gymnastics as the gymnast who was stripped of her all-round gold medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympics after testing positive for a banned stimulant, pseudoephedrine, that her doctor had given her for a cold. Andreea Răducan is Romania’s 11th representative to be included in the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame in the past 25 years after Nadia Comăneci, Bela Karolyi, Ecaterina Szabo, Teodora Ungureanu, Daniela Silivaş, Simona Amânar, Octavian Belu, Lavinia Milosovici, Gina Gogean and Aurelia Dobre.



    Religious celebration — The majority Orthodox Christians and the Greek Catholics in Romania will celebrate Saints Constantine and Helen on Monday, May 21. As many as 1.8 million Romanians bear the two saints’ names. Emperor Constantine is known for the Edict of Milan of 313, which gave Christianity a legal status being a religion tolerated by the Roman Empire after centuries of persecution. His mother, Helen, commissioned the building of churches in Bethlehem and on the hill of Golgotha where the Cross, on which Jesus Christ had been crucified, was discovered. (news translated and updated by Lacramioara Simion)