Day 4 + 5
Sunday - I was picked up at 11:30AM by the Director of The Center for the Development of International Relations (CDIR), Svetlana Coiceva, (or Coiceva Svetlana as they say here) and her husband, Vladimir, who is nick named Vova. They brought along a retired career US Army sergeant who had been invalided out. Laramie Bahr is doing the same thing I am with Love Volunteers out of Auckland but had arrived 4 weeks prior. He is already at the same bed and breakfast where I would be staying. He is a published author and literate, even if he was raised near Chicago. We left the hotel in Chisinau for a 30 minute trip north of the city to Orheiul Vechi.
This is an ancient monastery that survived the religious views of the Soviet influence and still has monks living in underground rooms carved out of the limestone beneath the buildings. There is also a collection of preserved houses around the monastery, possibly dating back to medieval times, filled with the period tools and appliances from the past. This country resembles the Southern Albertan geography of rolling foothills with deep gorges carved out by the rivers. However, I do not remember shelves of seashells embedded in slate/limestone as are seen at this site. We then travelled back to Chisinau and to MallDova (shopping mall in Moldova - get it? cute) for shirts and trousers for Laramie. This is the 4 story shopping mall put up with Turkish money. We had hamburgers and fries at 4:30 and then Svetlana warned us there was a full supper waiting at the room and board apartment where we were to spent the night. Sure enough. Large dinner was being held for Laramie and me with homemade organic wine.
Monday - The school is a cram school for the English exams that must be written by the students to get promoted out of grade 9 and grade 12. You are allowed 3 retries if you do not pass the exam the first time. But, if you do not get the English certificate you cannot proceed to university, though you can go to trade school. The school was conceived by Svetlana Coiceva and she is the energy source for the whole operation. Classes began at 11AM after Svetlana has already put in 3 hours at the regular school system. The first group were young 4 and 5 year olds. There were lots of singsongs in English and dancing to computer based tutorials. Svetlana was a full participant. It was like a gym class in street clothes. I was tossed into the mix later on with another class of older kids. It was gentle. I introduced myself and then read a passage out loud and then asked the students prepared questions. It was a set up.
Okay! I can do this! Then the questions arrived from the students in either Romanian or Russian. I froze. Svetlana answered in rapid fire Russian. I think she has done this before. And so on it went with new classes of increasing skills every 90 minutes and questions in Russian. Other than a 30 minute break at 1PM, the action never slowed until 5PM when I left. Svetlana stayed another 90 minutes to instruct a full energy German class. I returned to the apartment with the Laramie for a large dinner and organic homemade wine.
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