Wednesday, July 17, 2013

230. Pictures speak louder than words

A man from the village I use to live in while I was in Moldova has a blog I would like to share with you all.  It is SergiuCretu.wordpress.com.  Since it is all in Romanian it might be hard to understand, but this blog post titled Moldova, țara fără de părinți (Moldova, A Country Without Parents) has very powerful pictures.  The post discusses people (children, fathers, mothers, grandparents) who have a loved one(s) abroad.

Note:  This blog post was written in 2011.  While I will not translate the whole post, here is the caption for each of the photos:

  1. Three children living alone, their parents left in 2007 for Italy.
  2. This girl is solely taken care of by her grandmother.
  3. This girl is speaking with her mother on the phone who is in Italy and has been there since 2007.
  4. This 16 year old girl takes care of her 9 year old sister, their mother is in Italy and their father is in Russia.
  5. This is a first grade class in a village.
  6. A gym in the same school as the above photo.
  7. This boy has been living under his grandparent's care since 2004 when his mother left to work in Italy.
  8. Three daughters are taking care of their mother.
  9. A mother speaks via Skype with her husband and son who are in Moldova.
Many stories are difficult to hear and comprehend.  Adults have difficulty finding jobs, or at least jobs that pay very much and are stable, so many travel to other countries to make more money.  Three countries where many Moldovans work are Italy, Ukraine and Russia.  Italy because Romanian is very close to Italian, so it is easy to learn.  Ukraine and Russia because and most Moldovans and Ukrainians speak Russian as their first or second language.

It is true that some people leave for other countries and stop all communication with their loved ones, start new families and never return to Moldova.  But there are also good stories about people working for a few years, saving up money and returning to Moldova to live with their loved ones.  Others make a huge sacrifice by living abroad for a long period of time and sending the money that they save to support their family and parents.

Working abroad isn't always bad, but it can be.  Don't judge those that do, because sometimes it works out for the best or it could literally be their only option to survive.

1 comments:

Unknown said...

Good Day Timothy!

Sorry to bother you. My name is Ray Blakney and I am a RPCV from Mexico. I am working on a 3rd goal project with the PC regional offices and the main office in DC to try to create an online archive to keep the language training material made all over the world from getting lost. I have created a sub-section on the website my wife and I run - http://www.livelingua.com - with all the information I have been able to get to date (from over the web and sent to me directly by PC staff and PCV's). I currently have close to 100 languages with ebooks, audios and even some videos.

The next step for this project is that I am trying to get the world out about this resource so that it can not only be used by PCV's or those accepted into the Peace Corps, but also so that when people run across material that is not on the site they can send it to me and I can get it up for everybody to use. I was hoping that you could help getting the word out by putting a link on this on your site at:

http://timothyhornsby.blogspot.com/

so that people know it is there. There should be something there for almost everybody. It is all 100% free to use and share. Here is the specific page of the Peace Corps Archive:

http://www.livelingua.com/peace-corps-language-courses.php

Thanks for any help you can provide in making this 3rd goal project a success. And if anybody in your group has some old material they can scan or already have in digital form, and want to add to the archive, please don't hesitate to pass them my email. Thanks and have a great day.



Ray Blakney
blakney.ray@gmail.com

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