That’s how to win your first #Wimbledon title… pic.twitter.com/khhebfswej
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 13, 2019
Category : Romania
Congratulations to 2019 Wimbledon Ladies Singles Champion Simona Halep
(BBC) Anti-Semitism threatens Romania’s fragile Jewish community
Ugly scenes of smashed and toppled headstones at a Jewish cemetery in Romania have shocked the country’s dwindling Jewish community and prompted international condemnation.
Vandals badly damaged 73 gravestones in the north-eastern town of Husi earlier this month, amid a surge in anti-Semitic attacks across Europe.
“It’s a very disturbing event, but it’s nothing surprising,” said Maximillian Marco Katz, founding director of the Centre for Monitoring and Combating anti-Semitism in Romania.
“It shows that anti-Semitism is alive, it doesn’t matter who did it,” he told the BBC.
“They didn’t knock down two or three gravestones, they knocked down 73 gravestones – that takes some determination and it takes time.”
A criminal investigation has been opened.
Anti-Semitism threatens Romania’s fragile Jewish community https://t.co/ULUREiOhXC
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) April 14, 2019
Conflicts of interest between industry+rehabilitation programs stall Romanian fight vs gambling
On the cusp of turning 40, Dan has been living with addiction for half his life. Yet his eyes behind thin-rimmed glasses are not bloodshot; his arms are not punctured or bruised by needles. Under a fine Bucharest drizzle, he heads for a gambling hall, convinced he has lost almost everything. “People believe that all humans are fit to survive,” said Dan, a pseudonym to protect his identity. “But nature is not like that.”
Gambling venues have become ubiquitous across Romania since the first big betting hall opened its doors in Bucharest’s central train station in the spring of 1990, just months after Nicolae CeauÅŸescu’s communist rule ended in popular revolt and a Christmas Day firing squad.
In May 2015, the Romanian parliament approved a law on gambling that included measures designed to tackle the scourge of addiction. But more than a year later, there are reasons to doubt their effectiveness.
(Quartz) The Roma may be just what Europe needs to recover
The Roma constitute the largest ethnic minority in Europe. While many think the continent would be better off without them, the Roma have lived in Europe for more than 1,500 years, and represent one of Europe’s last, great hopes.
But currently, the Roma are among the continent’s most underserved communities. And like Europe’s Jews, and newcomers from Africa and the Middle East, they’re finding themselves caught up in a resurgence of racism and xenophobia.
The unemployment rate for Roma in Bulgaria was 59% in 2010, and 50% in Romania according to a seminal World Bank report, while average unemployment in Bulgaria was 11.6%, and 7.3% in Romania in 2013.