Chisinau - day 13
Monday - Full day in Chisinau to get some economic information from the American Embassy and then to get a demonstration of some electronic teaching aides. Every building on Embassy Row has 2 carabinieri out front. They are unarmed security guards. They are not police officers nor military. The American Embassy will only see you 13:30 to 16:30 if you have an appointment - so “send us an email” was as far as I got. OK. Took a long walk through the city looking for the electronic aide but it turns out that their website had the old address, so all I got was a 7 kilometer walk through the peripheral areas of town. Did overhear 2 guys with west coast American accents though. Nice, clean scrubbed LDS boys from Portland doing their mission in Moldova. There are special hospitals for foreigners and these buildings look better maintained than the hospitals for the locals. Masses of Soviet styled apartments and they all need maintenance of various degrees. Each apartment is owned. I do not understand why the coop doesn't get together and maintain the investment. Again, got the lingering long look from the pedestrians. They were not fearful, just more curious. Still cannot figure why I am a curiosity.
Driving a car through Chisinau is a series of lightening starts and stops, but only rarely do you hear a horn. They also have a habit of straddling the lane dividers just in case they see an opportunity to advance 20 more feet on the car beside them. This effectively makes the 2 lane roads a sort-of 3 lanes.
I had several sessions over 2 days talking with Moldovians, English speakers, aged maybe 20 to 60 years old. There is a type of national inferiority complex along the lines of the “Indians are so much better at computer coding than we are” or “we are a poor country and so what do you expect”. All this while they are doing a world class, warm and friendly, job in the service industry. I couldn’t decide if they were discouraged by the ability of other nationalities to afford to buy things because the economies are doing well and their wages were higher or if the corruption amongst their elected leadership was not punishable. Either way they are discouraged.
Wednesday - Got all the Chisinau tasks done so got to the airport early and hung out. The Tarom flight to Bucharest was a turbo prop and well used but it was only an hour. There was a Romanian business man sitting next to me who was setting up an IT company in Moldova and Bulgaria and had just finished 3 days discussing this with bankers and various government agencies. He was astounded that 2 Americans would volunteer to teach English in Moldova and things progressed from there. English is the lingua franca in his line of work from Germany to the Black Sea. I mentioned looking into building a school in Causeni and the recurring rumors I’d heard about bribes and the government just shutting the project down half way into construction. He agreed that corruption was all over the area and if you got rid of one ‘Mafia’ type there were 10 more behind him to take his place and they were increasing worse. However, he was told that anything with corporation in the business name was untouchable and he would be pleased to get me into contact with the powers that be.
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