EIN News Quote of the Day:  
<http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/01/01/news/romania.php> "For the first time, 
Romanians will have to accept responsibility for themselves." (Alina 
Mungiu-Pippidi, a Romanian political analyst)

International Herald Tribune Europe
 <http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/01/01/news/romania.php> Newest EU citizens 
wonder what it will mean
By Matthew Brunwasser

Monday, January 1, 2007 
 
 
<http://ad.fr.doubleclick.net/jump/europe.iht.com;cat=index;sz=336x280;ord=123456789?>
 
BUCHAREST 

For the past four years, at a fictional bar called La Europa, Romanian 
villagers have discussed, argued and wisecracked about their future in the 
European Union, trying to come to terms with European standards like the length 
and curvature specifications for cucumbers.

Their adventures are broadcast into Romanian living rooms from the Bucharest 
set of a popular Sunday sitcom, "The Winding Road to Europe."

Half an hour away, in Vidra, the village where the opening sequence of the show 
was filmed, regulars at a real bar called Mona's were sitting on small stools 
at plastic tables on a recent evening, wearing winter clothes in the unheated 
room and drinking beer and tuica, a strong grape brandy.

Just days before their country's accession Jan. 1, no one there was sure what 
EU membership would mean — but then, no one had tried to find out.

"Everyone says it will be bad because we don't have the conditions the EU 
requires, like money for packaging equipment," said Florica Stoian, 48, a 
vegetable farmer with a black knit cap. "So we won't be able to sell our 
tomatoes anymore."

His drinking partner, Nicu Georgescu, 39, said that EU subsidies would be a big 
help for his small farm but that he had not tried to learn how to get them. 
"The rumors say you need to have good connections," he said.

Their friend Paul Neagu, 65, a tractor driver, said he was most concerned that 
he would not be able to slaughter his pigs in the "traditional Romanian way." 
He used his index finger to make a slicing motion across his neck.

Like the sitcom villagers, these Romanians and many others may feel a sense of 
achievement at having joined the EU, yet few know what it will mean.

Their country, isolated and totalitarian under Nicolae Ceausescu, has come far 
since the collapse of communism in 1989, with fundamental changes to the 
organization of society, the economy and the political system, and serious 
efforts to combat corruption.

But as Romania enters an expanded EU of 27 nations, much remains to be done. 
With accession, said Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, a political analyst, Romanians will 
no longer be able to blame history and geopolitics for their problems. "For the 
first time," she said, "Romanians will have to accept responsibility for 
themselves."

For Europeans, Romania represents the bloc's furthest thrust eastward. Its 22 
million citizens are the largest population to enter the union since Poland 
joined three years ago; Romania's accession expands the external EU border by 
1,682 kilometers, or 1,045 miles, along Ukraine, Moldova, Serbia and the Black 
Sea.

Economically, Romania is the least developed EU member state, with widespread 
poverty and an undeveloped infrastructure. Of the active population, 32 percent 
work in agriculture, compared with 4 percent among the EU's 25 members before 
Romanian and Bulgarian accession Monday.

Only about one-third of Romanians have traveled outside Romania, and even many 
who have now gone abroad had never previously been more than 30 kilometers from 
their villages, according to Vintila Mihailescu, director of the Museum of the 
Romanian Peasant and an anthropologist who has studied peasants for 30 years.

One positive aspect of membership, Mihailescu said, will be the freedom for 
young people to travel easily to and from Romania — an improvement in both 
administrative and psychological terms. "It's no longer running away, it's 
moving around," he said. "There is a big difference."

He said he was troubled, however, at the lack of debate in the country. "We 
don't really know deeply about what is happening with our society during these 
last 15 years," Mihailescu said from his desk in a palatial brick edifice built 
in 1906 to house the national art gallery. "Romanian society is better than we 
think, but no one knows it."

No individual embodies the institutional changes in Romania more than Monica 
Macovei, a human rights lawyer who became justice minister two years ago. She 
is popular with the public as a stateswoman with a soft voice and an iron will, 
is politically unaffiliated, and has succeeded in reforming the judicial system 
and institutionalizing anti-corruption measures.

The changes she has effected have led to the indictment of 8 members of 
Parliament, 2 serving government ministers, a former prime minister, 9 judges 
and prosecutors, and 70 to 80 police and customs officers. Public officials are 
now screened for past cooperation with the secret police, and detailed 
statements of their assets are published on the Web pages of state institutions.

"It really wasn't that difficult to do," she said in her enormous office in the 
Justice Ministry. "You just need a group of independent-minded prosecutors, 
give them funds and equipment, and let them work. I really thought it would be 
more complicated. It's not."

Macovei said that Romanian institutions were ready for the EU but that the 
Romanian public would need time to develop trust. People "don't believe in 
promises," she said. "They need to see real cases."

Despite the difficulties that some Romanians will face as the country joins the 
EU, "as a whole, we will be a happier nation," said Macovei, who was at 
University Square during the revolution that brought down Ceausescu in December 
1989.

"Everyone has wanted this moment so much," she said. "It's a huge 
accomplishment and I can feel that I contributed to it."

But for many Romanians, the revolution — Eastern Europe's bloodiest — meant 
enormous sacrifice. About 1,000 Romanian protesters lost their lives.

At the Heroic Martyrs of the Revolution Cemetery in Bucharest on a recent 
Sunday, Maria Bara was caring for the grave of her son Petru Sofer, who died at 
25, just as she has every Sunday for 17 years.

"During the protest, my son was holding his sister very tightly when the 
shooting started," she said, trying to restrain her tears as she recalled the 
details. "He told her, 'We are making history now.'"

He was shot by Securitate forces through an artery in the thigh and bled to 
death in an ambulance before it could reach a hospital. The streets were 
clogged by people and chaos.

"Now there is freedom of speech, and you can curse the ones in power," she 
said. "But what does that matter if there is no work?"

As for the EU, "It will be good for the ones who had money during the communist 
times," Bara said. "And he who was poor back then will still be poor."

Across town, at the flashy City Mall, young people consume the same fast food 
and movies and buy the same brands as their peers in the West. Yet despite 
appearances, this young consumer generation — the apparent beneficiary of the 
changes the EU has already brought and will continue to bring to Romania — is 
hardly carefree.

The young people here say they are typical of all young Romanians in that they 
must consider emigrating, whether they want to or not.

"I am at the top of my class," said Sandra Putere, 22, a medical student at 
Bucharest University. "I got a scholarship — and my salary will be €100 a month 
when I finish."

In order to find work in Romania, she added, "I have to pay a bribe of €20,000 
for a job with 'extras,'" referring to the extra fees doctors sometimes receive 
for services that are supposed to be free. "The changes will be far away for 
me."

Back on the set of the bar called La Europa, producers said they had chosen 
that setting because research had shown that Romanians learned more about the 
EU in bars than anywhere else. With accession a reality, they said, "The 
Winding Road to Europe" will now focus on how the new system works.

One of the problems facing Romanians is that "everyone is expecting someone to 
inform them, but no one knows how to ask questions," said Mihai Alecsandrescu, 
a producer.

Gabriel Giurgiu, who helped develop the show, said: "People tend to look at 
Brussels as a Santa Claus who will come to give everyone money and jobs, or as 
a source of inexhaustible political wisdom that will get rid of all the corrupt 
politicians. And this is really concerning."

While fully supporting Romania's membership, the show has poked hard at the EU 
because the producers want Romanians to be realistic.

Regarding news that an Italian medical recruiter had come to Romania announcing 
that Italy needed 75,000 medical workers, Alecsandrescu said, "We'll have a 
show about how hard it is to find a nurse."

Giurgiu added, "When I read in the British papers about the cheap Polish 
plumbers, I worry about how much I will have to pay for a plumber here."

And what of the sitcom characters, now that the country has joined the EU?

Like real Romanians, "The people in the village are happy, but not excited," 
Alecsandrescu said. "There is a big difference."

Copyright © 2007 The International Herald Tribune |  <http://www.iht.com> 
www.iht.com

----------------------------
 
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)

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