Two tasks
have occupied me these past few days. One of my daughters had come across some letters
between her mother’s parents and it had led her to wonder about aspects of my
own parents and family. I duly pulled out the pages I had written about some of
this way back in 1995 and set to work…….over the weekend I had about 30 pages…
At the same
time, my thoughts had been running with an idea for a project in the lower
reaches of the River Danube - which I have been crossing every
few months these past 8 years…at Russe in the east
Later this
week I am scheduled to cross it for the first time in Bulgaria's north-west corner - thanks to the
new EC-funded bridge at Vidin - also near the border with Serbia….And to stay overnight at the refurbished mansion – Port Cetate – now a cultural centre
owned by one of Romania’s best known personalities, poet Mircea Dinescu whose
satirical sketches I remember watching on Romanian television in the 1990s…
I had sent
the centre the latest draft of my new book Bulgarian Realists –
updated edition – as well as the E-book Mapping Romania
- notes on an unfinished journey - and wondered whether they might not be one of
the partners for a future bid for (cross-border) EC Structural Funds with a
focus on art, culture and wine…
Alternating between
Bulgaria and Romania has made me think a lot about cultural differences.
Despite sharing the Danube as a border, the citizens of the two countries have (apart from the summer trips to the Bulgarian part of the Black Sea) little contact and know very little about each other.
Despite sharing the Danube as a border, the citizens of the two countries have (apart from the summer trips to the Bulgarian part of the Black Sea) little contact and know very little about each other.
It probably hasn’t helped that the
Dobrogea area at the Black Sea has changed hands several times in the past few
centuries – nor that the Bulgarian alphabet is Cyrillic and the Romanians so
proudly Latin
Indeed it would not be
exaggerating to suggest that relations are characterised by a “state of studied
indifference”. This is confirmed by the common perception that the two nations
turn their back on one another at the Danube ….
On Sunday I invited
an old friend who is one of its most experienced consultants in cross-border
work to my flat here in Sofia, replete with art and library, in order to
brainstorm about a possible project. With
a wine from the Rila Monastery - in his case a Mavrud; in mine a Chardonnay.
I’m glad to say that he too he was enthusiastic….Of course there have been previous projects such as TourNet – Promotion of cross-border networking for development of a common Bulgarian-Romanian tourist product (EC 2012 - see linked Photo library of the Danube Region); Impact Analysis of People-to-People project in Danube area (2013) an interesting pot-pourri of projects (covering, amonst other topics, dental treatment, chess, singing); and Rafting holidays
These are just some of the projects using EU and other funding to develop cultural trails in this part of the Danube but they seem to have had limited timescales or ambition. Supply-driven approaches always fail – as do good ideas which don’t take root for not trying to generate local understanding and commitment.
I have a deep interest in
and knowledge of Bulgarian and Romanian painting (and wine) – as well as 20
years’ experience as a consultant in capacity building – and am trying to work
out how I can give something to what I see as nothing less than a spirit of reconciliation
which is needed between the two countries. A lot of consultancy companies have
jumped into the vacuum but what is needed is something much deeper
I’m glad to say that he too he was enthusiastic….Of course there have been previous projects such as TourNet – Promotion of cross-border networking for development of a common Bulgarian-Romanian tourist product (EC 2012 - see linked Photo library of the Danube Region); Impact Analysis of People-to-People project in Danube area (2013) an interesting pot-pourri of projects (covering, amonst other topics, dental treatment, chess, singing); and Rafting holidays
These are just some of the projects using EU and other funding to develop cultural trails in this part of the Danube but they seem to have had limited timescales or ambition. Supply-driven approaches always fail – as do good ideas which don’t take root for not trying to generate local understanding and commitment.
Cultural Routes in the Middle and
Lower Danube Region - the Roman Emperors Route and the Danube Wine Route,
for example, is a German/Serbian project for the development and marketing of
transnational and cross-border routes in Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia and Croatia,
launched in 2012 by the Danube Competence Center (DCC) and supported by the
German consultancy GTZ.
The project runs another
year and has issued a
brochure and handbook - Managing
visitor on thematic cultural routes