Romania

Brasov’s main square, a fun place to hang out for a little while

Leaving Bucharest we’re off on a schlep around Romania. In fact, we’re scheduled to stop for two nights in each of four towns and an even-shorter one-night stop in one more. And after that we have three consecutive two-night stops in Moldova and two nights in Rome. That’s a lot of short stops for a couple of guys who like three- and four-night stops. We’ll see how it works.

The first of these little stops was Brasov, a city of about a quarter-million people up in the Carpathian mountains in southern Transylvania. It’s history dates back to early Saxon settlers, which presumably explains why the city still feels surprisingly German. It is an important winter destination with big ski resorts in the area but ultimately there’s not a lot to do besides enjoy the pretty old town.

Me and Mark at Bran Castle, supposedly (though not really) the home of Dracula

Still, we made the most of our brief stop. After getting into town for lunch we mostly just hung out in town, exploring the old town center. On day two, though, we took off for the town of Bran, maybe 40 minutes away and the home of Bran’s Castle, purportedly Vlad the Impaler’s castle made famous Bram Stoker’s Dracula. While the historic connection between the castle and Vlad (son of Vlad Dracul and thus known as “son of Dracul” or Dracula) is tenuous at best it still makes a fun side trip.

After returning to Brasov for lunch I headed up Tâmpa, the big hill that sits behind Brasov to see the view. The route up is through a nature preserve that is supposedly the home to wild bears but unfortunately I didn’t manage to see any. The view, though, was all it was cracked up to be.

The view of Brasov’s old town from atop Tâmpa

And then to finish off the day – well, except for dinner – we went to a nice little organ concert in the Black Church, a name acquired after suffering smoke damage during a 17th century fire and supposedly the largest Gothic Lutheran church in Transylvania (which seems like kind of modest bragging rights). Clocking in at 45 minutes the concert was just about perfect. There is, after all, only so much organ music you need to hear in one night.

The organ that made for a pleasant, short concert in the Black Church

And that was Brasov. A cute little Saxon town, though big enough for me to find a pair of Ecco hiking shoes that might even fit. From here it’s off to a few more little Romanian cities. If they’re as cute as Brasov we’ll be just fine.

Bran Castle looking … intimidating

Bran Castle remained a residence for Romania’s royal family until World War II. This was King Ferdinand’s bedroom, surprisingly modest for a king. Ignoring the alleged connection to Dracula what was really interesting about the castle was the 19th and 20th century living quarters for the royal family.

From the town you can see the top of Tâmpa and the big BRASOV letters, evoking for some of us at least the HOLLYWOOD sign in LA

And here I am way up there

A state government building in Brasov

Mark liked this door knocker at Bran Castle

And Mark really likes pictures of cool bikes. This definitely qualifies.

Here we are in front of the massive Palace of the Parliament, a tribute to the megalomania of Romania’s former Communist dictator

And finally, Romania. Not finally as in the end of our trip, or even the end of this region, but finally as in “We made it to 100 countries.” That’s 100 for each of us; Mark has been to a few I haven’t been to and I’ve been to a few he hasn’t been to. But we’ve each made it to 100 countries, a pretty big landmark.

And so far Romania has been worth the asterisk it will have on our journeys. It’s funny; my sense of the country has always been as a backward Soviet satellite, a place where peasants starved while the dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife I lived in regal splendor. While it is poor – by some measures the third poorest country in Europe after Moldova and Bulgaria – it is so obviously a European country that you almost forget the awful years of Soviet dominance and dictatorship.

While Romania remains a relatively poor country – by European standards, at least – it has some beautiful parks and great cafés

Almost. And then you tour Ceausescu’s house or his government palace and that history comes racing back. First, though, the very brief history of Romania. In pre-Roman times the area was populated primarily by the Dacians. Under Emperor Trajan, the Romans conquered and colonized the area, later incorporating it fully into the Roman Empire. From this arose the original Romanized Romanian language and the sense that the people here are descendants of Rome. Trajan is, in fact, considered one of the founding fathers of the Romanian people.

As the Western Roman Empire began to collapse, Roman troops pulled out of the area in the late 3rd century. As the Middle Ages evolved starting around the 6th century what is now Romania consisted of three principalities: Wallachia, Moldavia, and Transylvania. While the area was technically conquered by the Ottomans in the 16th century, all three regions retained significant independence until well into the 19th century. After that they were more fully under Ottoman control but that lasted only a few decades. King Carol I was named king in 1866 and the country’s independence was recognized internationally in 1878.

Art from one of the ancient churches in Bucharest

Through the two World Wars the boundaries of Romania were constantly changing as various powers favored one Balkan country or another, but in the aftermath of World War II the Soviet Union occupied Romania and set its boundaries in stone, so far at least. The Soviets then proceeded to do to Romania precisely what Germany had intended with so much of Central and Eastern Europe: strip it of its natural resources and turn it into a source of agricultural products. As a result Romanian development all but stopped.

Enter Nicolae Ceausescu, who became dictator in 1965 on the death of Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, the original Romanian communist dictator. Ceausescu, to his credit, saw that his relationship with the Soviet Union was a dead-end and so he started putting some space between Romania and the Soviets; Romania was, for instance, the only member of the Warsaw Pact that refused to participate in the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia. That modest independence endeared him to Western powers who, ignoring his massive civil rights abuses, began showering Romania with loans from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

All was good through the 1970s as the money kept pouring in and he could invest and buy and the country could grow. By the 1980s, though, the loans were coming due. What to do? Easy. Ceausescu put the country on an austerity plan to pay back the loans, which he actually did. The problem is that the Romanian people suffered terribly as every possible resource (except those needed to keep the ruling clique happy, of course) went to paying foreigners. By the end of the decade, with communism collapsing across Eastern Europe, the Romanian people revolted. On December 21, 1989, they forced Ceausescu out of power, captured him, and tried him and his wife. They were quickly convicted and executed before a firing squad on Christmas Day, 1989 – all pretty quick you might observe. Thus ended the tyranny and Romania quickly began the process of rejoining Europe.

Modern Bucharest in black and white. I liked this picture as it seems as though it could have been taken any time in the last hundred years. While the buildings may look a little bombed out they’re actually pretty attractive.

So here we are in Bucharest, 10 years after Romania joined the European Union. On the drive from the Bulgarian border into the city – the sixth largest city in the EU – you could see that the countryside is still poor and that peasants often live only marginally better than they did perhaps hundreds of years ago. Still, once in the city it’s also obvious that there is a lot of growth in Romania these days: great buildings, nice restaurants, beautiful parks, cafés – all that stuff that makes you feel as though you’re in Europe. According to one analysis Romania’s per capita income is 59 percent that of the EU average; not good, but a lot better than the 41 percent level of 2007 when it joined the EU. One piece of evidence, at least, that integration into the European economy works.

What to do for a few days in Bucharest? One of the surprising things for us is that after our weeks in the Balkans we’re not so crazy about the food here. The problem is that unlike the other Balkan countries, Romanian food appears to be a lot more influenced by German cuisine which just isn’t as good (and certainly a lot more carb-laden). We were amused after a couple days to observe that our meals had been in Lebanese, Turkish, Greek, and Israeli restaurants, even a Uruguayan steak house; not a bite of authentic Romanian food. The Mediterranean food, though, was great.

The Ceausescus gold-plated bathroom, seen throughout the world after his overthrow in 1989

We did two big tours that both turned out great. The first was a tour of Ceausescu’s home, the Spring Palace, the Ceausescu family residence from the mid-1960s on. We were both surprised by how much we liked the building, not quite as over-the-top garish as perhaps we’d expected. The guide was great, by no means an apologist for the Ceausescus but not simply depicting them as the devil either. He insisted, for instance, that during the years of austerity in the 1980s no one in Romania starved, that they all found ways of surviving, even though one of the crimes the Ceausescus were convicted of was genocide through starvation. Either way, the 90-minute tour was fascinating and a great introduction to modern Romania.

The massive Palace of the Parliament

The other property we toured was the Palace of the Parliament. Planned by Ceausescu but not finished until after his execution, it is today one of the largest buildings in the world, second only to the Pentagon by some standards. Built during those horrible years of austerity in Romania, the building is a tribute to megalomania. Some of the numbers are staggering: 35 million cubic feet of marble, 3,500 tons of crystal, 32 million cubic feet of wood for parquet floors, underground parking for 20,000 cars. After the execution there was quite the debate about what to do with the unfinished building, but eventually it became home to Parliament with many of the spaces available for parties and events and meetings. To give you a sense of the size our tour lasted over an hour and we covered about 1.25 miles; that consisted of about four percent of the total building. So yeah, big.

That was our introduction to Romania. From here we’re doing a tour of five smaller cities around the country before we end our Balkan trip.

There were some beautiful parks in Bucharest. Here we are enjoying one of them.

Back to the Ceausescu house, there were fabulous mosaics throughout. This was particularly noteworthy in their private swimming pool.

A closeup of some of the mosaic work in the swimming pool

A statue

Romania has some love affair with Michael Jackson. This plaque was on Michael Jackson Avenue in one of the biggest parks in the city.

This balcony in the Palace of the Parliament has a Michael Jackson connection, too. It was built so Ceausescu could give grand speeches ala Italy’s Il Duce, but of course he didn’t live to use it. The first person ever given the honor of speaking from the balcony was Michael Jackson who came out, waved to the throngs of fans and uttered the immortal words, “Hello Budapest!” Yeah, those Eastern European cities all look the same, huh?

Inside the palace are all kinds of meeting rooms and halls and over-the-top auditoriums like this one

More construction going on. Between our hotel and the Palace of the Parliament they’re building a huge new Cathedral. So now we have to periodically visit Barcelona to see how the Sagrada Familia is coming along, Belgrade to see how their cathedral is doing, and back here every few years.

The beautiful interior of one of the grand old churches in Bucharest

The old churches are beautiful but the scale is dwarfed by the modern stuff