Tag: SOS Save the Danube Delta’s flora and fauna Association

  • On the Danube Delta under a different light

    On the Danube Delta under a different light

    The ‘Dimitrie Gusti’ national village museum in Bucharest is
    among the must-see objectives in Romania’s capital city. This green spot on
    Bucharest’s map is renowned for its fresh air and village households dating
    back to the 17th-18th centuries. In recent years the
    museum has played venue for numerous cultural events, from photo and painting
    exhibitions to concerts and various workshops for children. An association
    entitled ‘SOS Save the Danube Delta’s flora and fauna’ has been staging
    workshops for children on the museum premises for a year. These workshops allow
    children to learn everything about the Delta and its wildlife. Here is Delia
    Popescu, project coordinator with the aforementioned association with more on
    the issue.


    We have been present here on a
    weekly basis staging children events on Saturdays. Through these activities we
    have been trying to teach them about the Delta, about what this delta means for
    Romania and for us as a people and why we need to preserve its wildlife. All
    these events have been tailored as games and playing activities for a better
    assimilation of knowledge. We are glad that kids are attending these events on
    a constant weekly basis.


    Delia Popescu has further elaborated on the children activities
    and workshops staged here at the Village Museum.


    Today, as the year is drawing
    to an end, our games are inspired by holidays in Dobrogea; we are making a
    traditional doll, which is wearing a traditional costume that children can take
    at home. So kids can get acquainted with traditional folk costumes specific to
    Dobrogea and also have a toy to play with.


    According to Delia Popescu, these workshops have been constantly
    attended by a good number of children.


    Each workshop has been attended
    by 5-15 children. We’ve had pottery workshops, during which we’ve built animals
    and birds from the Danube Delta. By using straws, wood and clay we have tried
    to build dioramas illustrating various parts of the delta. Children have been
    taught to build traditional households from the delta and windmills as the
    region is renowned for its windmills. We post these activities on our webpage
    at ‘www.sosdelta.ro’ or on the museum site and children submit their online
    applications for the workshops, where they can join free of charge. Parents
    will pay only the entrance fee to the museum.


    According to Delia Popescu, children’s happiness is the most
    important thing.


    Kids are happy and that’s the
    most important thing for us. They are excited because these activities are
    interactive, different from what they do in front of a computer or a smartphone.
    They work, they are making stuff and last but not least they get valuable
    information about the delta and its wildlife, which will eventually come in
    handy in their adult life. There are kids who have been attending these
    workshops on a weekly basis and we encourage them to learn about ecology,
    environment issues and things. They read books and we have round table talks on
    certain issues in our next workshops.


    Maria is 7 years old and has attended almost all workshops with
    delight.


    I am
    loving it, as I am always doing new things. Today I am making dolls. I first
    made a boy doll and haven’t finished his clothes yet, so I don’t know how he is
    going to look like in the end. Last time I made a diorama entitled ‘Fishing in
    the Delta’ when I made a pelican out of cardboard.


    Delia Popescu has told us how the first
    workshop organised in February has grown into what we see today:


    Parents always stand by their children and proof of this is also the
    workshop we’ve organised today. Parents and children alike worked shoulder to
    shoulder. It’s been more difficult at the start of the year, because people
    were unaware of our weekly activities here, but now they know and are deeply
    involved in our actions, as we want to spend quality time with our children.
    Even though the weather is not really fine outside, the Village Museum is a
    spectacular museum and it is beautiful all the year around. Now, in winter, we
    carry out our activities indoors, but when the weather is fine, we spend the
    entire time outdoors. We try to carry out many activities in the open because
    most parents do not have enough spare time and keep their children indoors. And
    children should learn to spend time in the open.


    It’s worth mentioning that the Save
    the Flora and Fauna in the Danube Delta Association was founded in 2007, at the
    initiative of a group of friends, out of their wish to protect this unique
    region in Europe and the world: the Danube Delta. In time, the Association has
    enriched its activities included in the initial project, such as protecting the
    fauna and flora by identifying the species on the brink of extinction, cleaning
    up the areas affected by pollution, promoting ecological tourism and this
    educational component at an early age, a warranty to instil real values in the
    young generation.

    (Translated by D. Bilt & D. Vijeu)