http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_alexis_s_070504_transylvanian_politi
.htm
 
May 6, 2007 at 09:15:31


 
<http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_alexis_s_070504_transylvanian_polit
i.htm> Transylvanian Politics

by  <http://www.opednews.com/author/author5879.html> Alexis Santi 


http://www.opednews.com

Transylvanian Politics

Help me celebrate the May 1st holiday, for workers that just past, with a
moment of silence for Maria Stroescu.  

In Romania the middle class is working itself literally to death and
parliament is busy impeaching the democratically elected president for
charges that no one can figure out.  It's a real Eastern European B movie
playing out, but you should be paying attention because it could affect the
stability of the European Union and an ally in Iraq. 

Take Dracula. Take the Ceasescus getting shot on Christmas day. Take street
children, orphanages.  The Secret Police, the securitate.  This is how you
probably know Romania, but take a look at this, here's your trailer:

            Flickering light hangs from the ceiling.  Pounding at a door.
Her friends are shouting her name.  Cell phones are blipping, they're
dialing her number.  A phone rings on the inside of the apartment but no one
comes to the door. "Maria!"  They shout.  The last time they had seen her
was after taking her to the hospital on Friday. For the past three weeks at
Ernst and Young, she'd juggled the clients of colleagues that had quit.
It's now Sunday night; they decide they're going to have to break down the
door.  Let's do it.  

Down the street, April had been a busy month for the Romanian Parliament.
First, President Traian Basescu's coalition fell apart.  Second, Parliament
decided to suspend the President that is widely said to have engineered his
country's EU assent.  The charge:  criticizing judges.  No, he didn't fire
any judges being in the wrong political party.  Was that it?  No, wait, I've
got something else here, there's a loose charge of using the intelligence
agency to gather information about political opponents.  Nope, no outing of
Intelligence Agents.  I wish I could say he did something like go to war
without just cause but he is a supporter of the war on terror.  I also wish
I could say the judicial system, having a big axe to grind against the
guy-agreed, but they didn't.   Their ruling was that his actions didn't
break any constitutional laws and weren't enough to suspend him.  

Basescu, the former mayor of Bucuresti is a straight talking no BS type of
guy.  He's the Rudy Giulliani.  Widely popular in Romania.  He doesn't look
polished which is part of his appeal, he doesn't talk polished either which
also, is part of his appeal.  He's supportive of the Bush administration and
there are over 850 Romanian troops in Iraq right now.

In 2003 I was given the assignment of working for the prime minister, Adrian
Nastase who would become his opponent in the election.  Basescu hadn't
entered the campaign at that point, but the Social Democratic Party (PSD)
was neither Social nor Democratic and every day I read articles about party
members and corruption charges.  Still, it was a shot at the big time.  I
sought out a Romanian friend's advice:  

"Should I take the job?"  I asked.

"Do they pay a lot?"

"Yeah, like, tons."

"Take it then, who cares about the election they're all liars and thieves."

I turned them down in the end.   But, later when Basescu entered the
campaign everything changed.  People were excited, my in-laws argued for the
first time about politics.  Basescu is the President that the Romanian
country elected, it's the democratic process the people deserve.

Basescu, New Years 2005, after he won the election in October, he takes a
bottle of champagne and chugs in the middle of the capital, the party
started.  Romanians cheer.  

They broke down the door and found her.  Her hair, dyed orange was splayed
on the floor.  She had collapsed at some point over the weekend, Raluca
Stroescu had died.  She had lost more than 15 pounds recently.  The coroner
said her situation was "very complex" but she weighed less than 88 pounds
and had been working non-stop for three weeks.  The media in Romania is
saying she worked herself to death.

Raluca wrote her friend, Roxana in early April.  Her email is peppered with
smiley face, IM speak, in place of periodsJ . "I've got to be here till 3amJ
next week I'll have to be in more places at the same timeJ. we no longer
have managers."  In the end of the email she practically begs her friend to
find her something else, "worse off doesn't exist."  Of course her working
descriptions seem more like tales from the gulag, then working for fortune
500, Ernst & Young.  But the New York office of Ernst & Young had no idea
who she was when I called them days later, "I'll look into it and call you
back."   I never heard from them again.  She was one of the young ones who
stayed behind in Romania, working for the future of the country.  Raluca
Stroescu, Rest In Peace.

Basescu's case is not terminal, but it depends on how you're looking at it.
After all, they've now suspended the president and by law the people have to
decide whether to approve the suspension in a referendum on May 19th.  As
long as the majority of the widely popular president's electorate votes for
him, he can go back to serving out his duties.  Parliament though may have
other plans.  Perhaps, Parliament is still smarting at his success from
entering the EU, fighting corruption, or releasing those secret police
papers forcing some of their buddies to resign--whatever their real
motives-- they've decided to change the law so that they no longer need the
public's majority to agree with them and can suspend him again no matter the
outcome.  It's a real cliffhanger.

Here's the rub - The EU doesn't exactly like having a newly admitted country
go through political turmoil.  It's bad for business.  If a majority of
voters don't vote for Basescu, or if Parliament decides to suspend him
again, they may pull troops out of Iraq.  As for Maria Stroescu, her story
is the saddest part of all this.  She just wanted a shot at happiness-like
millions of other Romanians do--all the while 300 members of Parliament have
thrown a country of 22 million into turmoil and this is what makes it more
than an Eastern European B movie, it's what makes it a tragedy.

www.ourstories.us

A. E. Santi speaks three languages, yet, prefers to swear in a fourth and
knows how to say "thank you" in over 10 others. After finishing his BA in
English, he hitched a ride to Romania on the Peace Corps train. While
serving as a volunteer, he took care of street children, raised money for
Outward Bound, taught English in a local school and learned how to make
tortillas from scratch.

 

He earned his MFA in Creative Writing from George Mason University in
fiction.   He is the recipient of plenty of accolades in his career so far,
including a prestigious international translation grant. His work has been
published in the Hartford Courant, The Ithaca Journal, Cubista Magazine and
The Plum Ruby Review, to name a few. His short story collection is entitled
"The Time We Had" and he is hard at work on a novel.

 

He is the founder of Our Stories, and the editor of the website. He has
masthead credits for over a dozen newspapers, newsletters and other
publications. Before he founded Our Stories he served on the boards of
Phoebe and So to Speak.

Copyright C OpEdNews, 2002-2007

----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)

Raspunde prin e-mail lui