marți, 25 noiembrie 2008

Integrations dans mon école

1.Pourquoi as tu choisi de venir dans cette école?
2.Tu es venu seul(e) ou tu as des frères?
3.Tes parents ont été d'accord quand tu as décide de venir dans cette l'école?
4.Les professeurs ont fait des discriminations entre toi et les autres élèves?
5.Est-ce-qu'il y a des problèmes en ce qui concerne les camarades?
6.La langue roumaine est-elle une problème pour toi?
7.Quels sont tes projèts pour le futur?
8.Quand tu es venu dans cette école tu as cru que tu n'avais pas d'amis?
9.Comment tu te sens quand tu sais que ta famille est très loin et tu es ici parmi les étrangeres?
10.Il y a des différences entre l'école roumaine et l'école de Moldovie?
11.Tu penses que tu es bien intégré dans l'Ecole Normale?

marți, 18 noiembrie 2008

The houses memorials of the grands rithers from Iasi

,,Vasile Pogor " House



Museum Address: 4 Vasile Pogor Street.

The 'Vasile Pogor' House is the headquarters of the museum of the modern and contemporary Romanian literature, especially the period of the great classics, of the literary society 'Junimea'. The house was built in 1850 by the high official Vasile Pogor together with his wife Zoe. This date is written on a hexagonal stone found after the diggings carried out for restoration, where the Cyrillic letters legend reads: 'V. Pogor 1850 and his wife Zoe'. The building has a rich long history connected to the Iasi cultural life as it is a place where the intellectuality of the city used to meet, the headquarters of the literary society 'Junimea' (1863) and of the review 'Literary Discussions' (1867). Among the famous personalities who used to attend the Junimea society we first remind the five founders: Titu Maiorescu, Vasile Pogor, P. P. Carp, Th. Rosetti, Jacob Negruzzi, then Mihai Eminescu, Ion Creanga, I. L. Caragiale, Ion Slavici, Vasile Alecsandri, Vasile Conta, A. D. Xenopol, N. Gane, a.s.o.
The museum was inaugurated on the 26th of December 1972. The museum itself is made up of twelve rooms of the permanent exhibition and an adjoining building inaugurated in 1994, supposed to protect the entrance to the Pogor House catacombs, restored between 1993 and 1994. They comprise corridors with two-storey ramifications (dating from the 18th and 19th centuries). Here functioned the so-called cultural club 'Junimea', which houses the activities organised by the Iasi Romanian Literature Museum: conferences during the evenings of the review 'Literary Dacia' (reissued by the Iasi Romanian Literature Museum), the literary society 'Junimea', workshops, anniversaries, commemorations of the Romanian cultural personalities, meetings with Romanian or foreign writers, presentations, book and literary reviews launching, music shows, art exhibition inaugurations.


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,,Ion Creanga" Memorial House

"This cottage became a museum at April 15, 1918. Ion Creanga passed its last two decades of the life while writing, encouraged by Mihai Eminescu, the Tales and Memoirs of the childhood. The last restoration March 1942 - June 1985." In this house Ion Creanga lived between 1872 - 1889.
Two windows (cross-shaped) on the one side of the entrance door and the other. The shingle roof (small fir planks tiles) is given life by two symbolic elements: the chimney through which the smoke gets out and the skylight, a kind of fancy eye through which this strange creature breathes. The hut was opened for the public on the 15th of April 1918 - being the first literary memorial museum in Romania. However, the small house has been visited since 1890, immediately after the writer's death, by pupils, students, teachers and journalists. Since the inauguration and until today the house and the museum have been restored and reorganised several times. The second restoration, after the 1918 one, took place between 1933 and 1934.
'Ion Creanga' literary society gathers young creators from Iasi and from the rest of the country; they meet on Sunday every two weeks and they published the volume 'Tales from the Hut', Junimea Publishing House, 1996, with the winners of the 'Ion Creanga' national competition of literary works - 'Tales'. Ion Creanga hut is the most visited museum of Iasi, and it is taken care of by two Romanian language and literature teachers (one is a member of the Writers' Union, researcher in Ion Creanga's life), three supervisors and a cashier. Ion Creanga hut has long represented a symbol. It often stands for the authentic image of the typical Romanian traditional values. It provides the opportunity of knowing an exceptional Romanian creator, an authentic Romanian interior, a genius (Ion Creanga) identified with 'the very Romanian people in its most glorious moments of creativity'.


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,,Mihail Sadoveanu" Memorial House


The building situated on Copou Hill belonged to M.Kogalniceanu. In this house, between 1919-1947, the great prose writer Mihail Sadoveanu lived. In 1947 he donated his Copou property to the Agronomic Institute from Iasi.
On the first Sunday in May, “Lilac’s celebration” is organized here every year. “Mihail Sadoveanu” museum was inaugurated on 6th November 1980.
When Mihail Sadoveanu got it in 1919, together with his brother Vasile, the villa had the original interior a little changed. Mihail Kogalniceanu had sold it to the Austrian millionaire banker and baron Neuschotz, who embellished it with starry parquets, windows and doors brought from Vienna. The latter were decorated with baron crowns; but Sadoveanu removed the adornments altogether. Neuschotz also endowed the building with a Roman nobleman bath with pottery and a pool . It happened that Mihail Sadoveanu stepped in the new Copou house in 1919 in a moment when George Enescu was about to have a dear residence where he had composed and played for three years, when he had temporarily settled in Iasi after world war one. Thus, for several months, both Euterpe and Erato presided over the same house. But in the end Mihail Sadoveanu's muse remained to dwell alone and for two decades she lived undisturbed in the place inspiring the greatest novelist of our people.
On the 6th of November 1980 the Coposu House celebrated its inauguration as 'Mihail Sadoveanu' Memorial Museum. The festivity was attended by: the writer's daughter, Profira Sadoveanu, his wife, Valeria Sadoveanu, Teoctist, Metropolitan Bishop of Moldavia and Suceava, writers, men of culture, Iasi officials, a large audience. The hosts were museum specialists of the Iasi Romanian Literature Museum, those who by their efforts and endeavors bore fruit in the new destination and aspect of the building. They were joined by Mr Constantin Mitru, brother-in-law and secretary of the great writer, without whose initiative and labour this repository of our cultural memory wouldn't have existed. The carvings by Dan Covataru in the museum garden piously keeps the funerary urn of Valeria Sadoveanu's ashes. The writer's wish to rest here was not yet accomplished. We remind his words spoken on the 6th of February 1938, when he was awarded the title 'doctor honoris causa' by the University of Iasi: 'Whatever my destiny would be, you well know that I'll always return here like a bee after flying in the sky comes back to its swarm without which it cannot live. I do hope that my last trip, the final one, will be still here. I wish this moment came as late as possible, but the odds and frailty of our mortal shell could bring it soon.'




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