Angloville Bucharest
Sunday - We loaded up the bus with another NES (Native English speaker) who was traveling around Europe and the Middle East. We added 2 Romanians and then drove 3 hours into the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains to Bran in Transylvania. 4 Romanians were no shows as they had a crisis at work so we were overloaded with NES. Classes began that afternoon. These are motivated students for various reasons but the common denominator seems to be increased fluency for career advancement. There is a certain appreciation that English is becoming the Lingua Franca of science , tourism and travel. For instance, the staff at The Novotel Hotel in Bucharest immediately starts a conversation in English with anyone.
Hourly suggested topics are given to the NES and Romanians as suggestions of conversation for the one-on-one sessions. After 1 hour the partners are rotated. There are also suggested sessions of negotiations for salary, apartment rent and leasing which progressed to the same subjects but of increasing complexity as the week progressed. I have spoken to the NES and generally the one-on-one sessions get off topic so I am feeling less guilty as my hour is more free thought and follow where it leads. As long as they are speaking English. The Romanian students are a 47 yo lawyer from Bucharest, a 32 yo Columbian veterinarian who has lived in Romania for 5 years and is now a grad student in Geology, and an OB-GYN from Moldova and she speaks good English, Russian and Romanian.
It occurred to me on day 2 that I would be getting no followup from these students like I would from the children in the Moldovan school. Therefore no report card. There should be a way to keep in contact with these Romanians to see if the course had any influence and possibly to arrange followup sessions of further instruction on Skype. I need to see if this could be set up in a practical manner.
It snowed Wednesday to the delight of the Florida lawyer. He did complain about the temperature but I could not talk him into making snow angels. We all took a group walk to Bran Castle. I was disappointed that there were no impaled bodies (he is called Vlad the Impaler for a reason). It turns out that it was just a fortress to protect the passages through the Caucasus Mountains and most recently was the favorite residence of Queen Maria of Romania. The rest of the Dracula myth is totally made up by the Irishman Bram Stoker and Vlad of the Dragon (Dracula in Romanian) never got much out of Bucharest. But he did fake the Turkish Army into turning for home with the 20,000 impaled bodies of Turkish soldiers that he placed on their route into the country, so he is a national hero.
There is a strange bonding occurring - everyone was wishing the best for the fellow participants with encouragement, tips and suggestions. Each Romanian was assigned a NES mentor for further skills or problems. I was assigned the OB GYN who already had good skills but was very motivated to improve them. Her husband is Russian and had lived in the US for 12 years including 4 years at Harvard Law. She has a young family and another on the way. We always got way off suggested topic and into raising kids, running a medical practice versus contract medicine as an employee, and her determination not to live the life of her ancestors and to give her children opportunities.
The ‘graduation exam’ was a presentation from each Romanian, in English, of a subject of their choice. The presentation was then critiqued by their mentor plus another NES and then a Staff coordinator. A very encouraging review by all for the progress of the Romanians. I thought it would have been a good idea to make each NES give a spontaneous presentation of a topic chosen by the Romanians to show them we were not the absolute experts. We will see if this is included in future Romanian programs. The bus loaded us up at 13:00 and we returned to Bucharest. Not much energy left. Do not arrive in Bucharest during evening rush hour and expect to find a cab. Some eventually found cabs and the rest of us walked to our hotels once we figured out where we were.
The 4 Americans met the evening after they had found their various hotels, in Old Town Bucharest at a recommended restaurant. The Columbian geologist arranged the whole evening and appeared with her boyfriend, also from Columbia. The next day they had arranged for all of us to meet for brunch and then a trip to an antique car museum. That evening, there was another dinner after Frank, the lawyer, and I spent the afternoon at the Radisson getting unwound. The courtesy of the Columbians was way over and above over anything we could ask for, but they are proud of their adopted city. I wondered if Americans would be as hospitable.
I was staying at a different boutique hotel from a week ago and was looking at the sight-seeing tour rack for maps. There were 3 'Exotic Thai' massage pamphlets and all 3 have a ‘Happy Hour’. I have been wondering what that could be for several days now.
The next morning everyone scattered for their flights back to the USA and another arranged a bus trip to Bulgaria.
I mooched around Bucharest going to museums, and caught the flight to Krakow just in time for wet snow.
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