lundi 27 septembre 2010

Une odyssée à Odessa

Ce week-end, nous voulons changer d'air. Sortir de ce Chisinau qui pour nous n'est plus un lieu de vacances mais la ville où nous vivons et travaillons. Direction Odessa, dans le sud-ouest de l'Ukraine ( petite carte pour resituer les choses : en rouge, la Moldavie, sous le rond vert, Odessa).



 Vu de la Moldavie, l'Ukraine n'est plus ce pays pauvre de l'ex-URSS, bon à visiter pour celui qui veut trouver de l'alcool à vil prix. L'Ukraine est pour nous un riche voisin et parce qu'Odessa est une station balnéaire prisée, nous pourrons y retrouver une partie de la richesse et du luxe de notre vieille Europe.

Je ne saurais l'expliquer, mais Odessa relève du mythe pour moi : je rêve depuis des années de cette odyssée à Odessa. Cette célèbre scène du film "Le Cuirassée Potemkin" n'y est sans doutes pas pour rien.


Après cinq heures de voyage en bus depuis Chisinau et le passage d'une frontière, nous arrivons à Odessa. Sur les conseils de la colocataires de Faustine, notre amie Calédonienne rencontrée à Chisinau qui nous accompagne ce week-end avec sa petite soeur Dune, nous nous dirigeons vers une auberge de jeunesse située à deux pas du centre-ville.

Notre première nuit payée et nos sacs déposés, nous voilà prêt à arpenter les rues.



En bon touristes, nous allons d'abord au célèbre escalier d'Odessa. Mais nous ne pouvons pas nous empêcher d'être déçus face à ces marches qui ressemble plus au banal escalier d'une mairie qu'au lieu de tournage d'une des plus célèbre scène de l'histoire du cinéma.



Qu'importe. Nous continuons notre balade et sommes émerveillés par cette ville: les bâtiments coloré, à l'architecture "non-Chisinienne" (différente de Chisinau quoi),sont magnifiques. Le calme qui règne dans cette ville, station balnéaire prisée l'été par les riches touristes Russes et Ukrainiens mais déserte en cette fin de mois de septembre, nous fait du bien et apaise nos esprits.



Nous profitons des petites terrasses de cafés qui ne sont pas sans rappeler l'Italie, puis allons boire de la bière pas cher dans le bar underground de la ville, le WKAP (prononcez chkar). L'ambiance nous plait tellement que nous y retournerons le lendemain.



Samedi, mer noire oblige, nous allons à la plage. Quelle bonheur de voir l'horizon marin et d'entendre le bruit des vagues. L'espace de quelques instants, je m'évade totalement et ne pense plus à autre chose qu'au soleil qui chauffe ma peau et qu'à l'air marin qui emplit mes narines. Dans la foulée, je profite de la température de l'eau plutôt clémente pour y piquer une tête: le premier bain de ma vie dans la mer noire, le premier d'une longue liste j'espère.



Au final durant ces trois jours à Odessa, nous avons beaucoup flâné, énormément profité du Soleil, croisé pas mal de marins et au maximum admiré cette ville superbe et si reposante. De quoi entamer une nouvelle semaine en Moldavie sous les meilleurs auspices, sereins et apaisés.

 Plus de photos de notre séjour à Odessa sur Picasa.

lundi 20 septembre 2010

The first moldovan squat !

Rendez-vous à la statue à 10h45, point de rencontre habituel dans le centre de Chişinău. Une petite équipe de volontaires et d'amis moldaves est déjà là quand nous arrivons. Balais et vieux vêtements sont de mise. Non, nous n'allons pas nettoyer les appartements des volontaires (bien que ça s'avèrerait utile...).Non, aujourd'hui nous allons nous attaquer à bien pire.  Aujourd'hui, nous allons nettoyer le nouveau futur lieu underground de Chişinău, un squat en face de l'université.


Le concept est simple : Stas et Anatolie, 2 jeunes moldaves, ont découvert une maison abandonné dans un quartier très calme de Chisinau et ont décidé d'en faire un lieu culturel. Bien sûr nous avons répondu présent pour aider à la réalisation de ce projet. Nous étions venus en nombre puisqu'une grande partie des courageux étaient des volontaires, une équipe très cosmopolite donc.

Découverte du lieu. On réalise l'ampleur de la tâche à accomplir. Pas découragés pour un sou, nous nous mettons au travail et après quelques heures de "déblayage" les discussions vont bon train à propos des aménagements futurs. C'est tout juste si on ne s'imagine pas creuser une piscine! (rappelons tout de même qu'il n'y a pas de plancher dans la pièce principale, que le rez de chaussée est un amoncellement de gravats et petit détail qui a son importance dans un pays où la température descend vite en dessous de 0 : ni électricité, ni chauffage, ni eau!)


Tout ceci ne nous décourage pas et nous partageons un repas végétarien autour d'un feu improvisé en imaginant tout ce que nous pourrons faire ici : des projections de films (tiens ce vieux panneaux publicitaire ferait un bel écran!), un atelier photo, des expos, un jardin potager...Bref, bientôt « the place to be » à Chisinau!


Un petit reportage maison pour en savoir plus. En anglais bien sûr, sans sous titres...

Prendre son vélo et s'envoler

Hier à Chişinău avait lieu le festival Velo Hora. Un événement autour du vélo, avec courses et démonstrations d'acrobaties.

Quand les bikers Moldaves prennent leur envol, ça donne des images plutôt rigolotes :















Plus de détails et plus d'images sur Picasa.

dimanche 19 septembre 2010

Portraits of volunteers (9)


Meeting. Appreciating, loving each other (or not!). Sharing this incredible adventure that is our EVS in Moldova. And returning enriched by all these meetings.

I decided to keep a mark of all these faces through a collection of  portraits and interviews which echos my own questionings. Family portrait.

 
Rosa, 18 years old, Karlsruhe (Germany), Weltwärst 11 months


Can you explain what you were doing before Moldova?
I just finished high school, and I was doing a lot of stuff unofficially (culture work and things like it).

Why did you decide to do a voluntary service and why in Moldova?
I wanted to work in a social field, because I've done this before, but not really officially. I wanted to do something that I could do without qualifications and without money. So I realized that I could do a voluntary service, and Moldova just happened. I looked on the Internet, and found a nice sending organization. They had a project I liked that was in Moldova. I googled Moldova, and really liked it, because it seemed… strange.

What was your project in Moldova ?
I worked in integrative day centre, for people with disabilities but also without. Mainly, people with disabilities come there in the day for activities. When it's not holidays, kids from an orphanage which is also a school come there after school, three days a week. A big part of my job was to do little art craft, stitching, little animals, things like this. We also did some sport sometimes with the kids with disabilities. We had some game days and had a lot of "sarbatoare" (parties). And the biggest thing for me was that I did a theatre workshop with them: once a week, I met with disable children and we made theatre together. First we did some exercises and then we created a piece out of stories from the kids. We showed this to some little groups, it was nice!

What will you do when you will be back? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I will probably study sociology with something else, in Germany. I applied but don't know yet. Because of this EVS, I met a lot of people through travelling, through Moldovan people and volunteers, that have different lifestyle than what is usual in Germany. Everything is not so normative (you go to school, you study, you do this, you have children, you buy house). I never wanted to have this, but for the first time I got in contact with a lot of people who have a different lifestyle.

What are your dreams for your future?
I don't know, I want to go somewhere where I can be useful and I really want to continue what I always did with squatting and things like this (subculture and all these stuff). I also would like to re experience this in different places of the world because I figured it's very different than in Germany, and I liked it better in some places. Maybe one day I'll go on a farm and live with some people and do this kind of stuff… maybe in the north of Moldova.

What will you remember from this experience ?
I think I will remember all the things that I liked, more than the things that I didn't liked (I lived in different places in the past and it always have been like it for me) and I think I will remember the chaos, everywhere in the streets, in markets, in every part of life. I really like it.
I will remember that here, the people are more self determined: they don't depend on so much things. Maybe they have less but they just find a way to do things: they don’t have so much state or social welfare to rely on so they find their own ways. I know it's not only good but I like this because I feel that they more think of it.
I will remember the food and vegetables, the people, the volunteer community, my flat and flat mates, the squat and "piatza centrala" (central market).


Eric, 24 years old, Germany (Weimar), EVS 12 months

Can you explain what you were doing before Moldova?
I was working in a pharmacy. I worked for a big company as a producer. I didn' t study and in Germany you have the possibility to make an apprenticeship, to work and to split the time with school. That lasted 3 and half year.

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova?
I was pissed about this system, about the work, about hierarchy. You have a boss and you have to follow this leader: it's not possible to think on your own, you have to do what the plan says. I was pissed that my creativity and individual decisions were totally killed. I wanted to be free and wanted to do what I wanted, so I decided to quit my job and not to work anymore in this system. I wanted to have a new experience in another field. Not to work with machines, but work with humans, with children. I wanted to see if I was able to work with people and not anymore with just machines.
I arrived in Moldova by accident, because I never heard about this country before. I was curious about it. I also wanted to leave Europe, to go far away. But EVS is just in Europe. So I applied for Iceland, and East part of Europe. Moldova is the only place that answers so I decided that I will go there, whatever it will be. I didn't know exactly what I will do here. I applied for a project in an animation centre for children and ended up in an animation centre for disable people.
Tell me more about your project in Moldova ?
My project was to organize activities with children, like knidling (and I actually learned to be patient because of that), origami and outdoor activities. It gives the possibility to disable people to see the real life. Because a lot of disable people in Moldova are hidden, in some rooms at home where they never see the real life outside. For example we went with them to the cinema and it was the first time for some of them who were already 30.
We also organized a theatre workshop and we had a German day, to show them our traditions, and other things.
What will you do when you will be back? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I have some dreams. I am sure that I will not come back to the pharmacy; I won't work for a long time again in a system like this I had already. I may will work some month to get money, and then I will travel. This is my dream: travelling. To South America, to New Zeland, and to a lot of other places.


What are your dreams for your future?
My dream is to see different places, to meet different people. What I really know is not to stagnate.

What will you remember from this experience ?
I will remember that I had this EVS experience with a lot of different people from Europe, which is unusual. You can exchange a lot of thinking and mentalities. I learned that our thought about Europe are different compared to what it is now: Europe is a fortress, and a lot of young people want in the future to have a free Europe for everyone. They want to have a free world, not closed with borders. In Moldova, you don't have this possibility to travel in Europe. You don't have the possibility to be free, and a lot of people have to live illegally somewhere.
I will remember that people in Moldova lost there believing and trust, their faith in politics. A lot of people are resignated because the fight is really complicated.

Portraits of volunteers (8)

Meeting. Appreciating, loving each other (or not!). Sharing this incredible adventure that is our EVS in Moldova. And returning enriched by all these meetings.

I decided to keep a mark of all these faces through a collection of  portraits and interviews which echos my own questionings. Family portrait.


Zoé, 22 years old, France ( Angers), EVS 9 months



Can you explain what you were doing before Moldova?
I finished a licence about computer

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova?
I finished my degree in computer science and I didn't want to continue in that way. So I really needed a break to think about it. I wanted to go abroad and do something more concrete than studies. Moreover EVS is for free. Moldova happened by chance but I wanted a project not too risky. I was not very comfortable in English at the beginning and, even if I would have been interested to work on a project in the cultural field, I was too stressed I think.

What was your project in Moldova ?
I was in an entertainment center for children who come after school. The children are chosen based on social criteria. They receive one meal a day in addition to snack and participate in activities. It was not easy ... we tried, with PO the other volunteer, to organize some things: a theater workshop, a photography workshop, arts and crafts... but it was hard to motivate them and we were alone with the children. It was hard to work together with educators.


What will you do when you will be back ? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I came to think about my future and so, yes, that EVS has helped me about that. In particular thanks to the theater workshop that I led at the French alliance, in addition to my entertainment center project. I realised that I was really interrested in the cultural field.
If I am accepted, I will do a Master of Cultural Engineering, scientific option because I have a scientific background.
What are your dreams for your future?
(laughs) I would like to lead a theater workshop...and work in the cultural field, manage a small auditorium, a cabaret...

What will you remember from this experience ?
It made me more open minded, it teaches how to adapt yourself to different people, different culture, to live in community ... About Moldova, Let's say that I am at the end of my stay here ( when I did the interview) and I've had it up to here a bit so it may not be positive what I think ... Even if people are very welcoming, it's really a different culture and it can get tiring ...

 
Natasha, 20 years old, Germany ( Lauterbach ), SVE 11 months


Can you explain what you were doing before Moldova?
I finished highschool.

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova?
I wanted to have a break between school and going to university and to do something useful for other people and to go abroad to meet new people. The plan was to go to eastern Europa and Moldova just happened. I had a good feeling about Moldova (laughts)...


What was your project in Moldova ?
First, I worked with diseable children. After that in an animation center and now I'm helping in a medical center for diseable children. I played with the children, I did some arts and handycrafts, I tried to teach english... not always worked well (laughts) and also helped with transportation of the children.

What will you do when you will be back ? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I will go to University and study economics ans hopefuly combined with eastern european studies and continue my russian studies.

What are your dreams for your future?
(laughts) First travel like everyone of the volunteers and hopefuly living also abroad and continue visiting the friends I met here!

What will you remember from this experience ?
Life in a city, the first time. And being alone away from the family and just being independant and do whatever you want to do for the first time, go wherever, whenever...
And Chisinau, definitly... with all the sovietic buildings, and trolleybus, and microbus and also the countryside, the hospitality of the moldovan people...good wine, good food...

samedi 11 septembre 2010

On arrival training

Au début d'un SVE, tous les volontaires nouvellement arrivés dans le pays doivent participer au "On arrival training". Le nôtre s'est déroulé à environ 3 heures de route au nord de Chisinau dans le petit village de Lalova.



Le principe de ce training était de rencontrer tous les volontaires, de mieux se connaître et bien sûr de parler de notre volontariat en Moldavie.



On a bien sûr pour cela participé à des tas de jeux, drôles pour certains, un peu moins pour d'autres. Même si le côté trop sérieux parfois de nos encadrantes était un peu pesant, la bonne humeur l'a emporté et on a eu de bons moments de rigolades.



La plupart de temps nous étions regroupés par nationalité pour les activités ce qui est un peu dommage. Nous sommes un très gros groupe de volontaires français, c'est très sympa mais il faut qu'on évite de faire un clan durant cette année de volontariat. Le but c'est quand même de s'ouvrir aux autres!




En tous cas, la nourriture était excellente et l'on a pu visiter le village et les alentours comme le monastère de Saharna.



On a aussi eu l'occasion de visiter des ruches.

dimanche 5 septembre 2010

Portraits of volunteers (3)

Meeting. Appreciating, loving each other (or not!). Sharing this incredible adventure that is our EVS in Moldova. And returning enriched by all these meetings.

I decided to keep a mark of all these faces through a collection of  portraits and interviews which echos my own questionings. Family portrait.


Pierre-Olivier (PO), 30 years old, France (Paris), EVS 6months



Can you explain me what you were doing before Moldova ?
I worked in broadcasting in post production. Basically, I was "truquiste editor ", I did the course of generics. In fact it's a job I did not know before doing it ... (laughs)

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova ?
I was working since 5 years, I was enthusiast, I woke up in the morning saying to myself "waw you work in audiovisual, it's really good. " And then I finally forget why I was doing that. I had no more time for personal projects, I wanted to use audiovisual to say what I wanted to say but I was back into a routine. I might as well have worked in a post office. And so I thought to EVS I was just at the age limit. I saw it as a time when I have free mind. You see, here for six months, I took photographs, I met people, I did what I wanted to do. And in addition it was also an associative surroundongs with a social value. I wanted to see if I could work with children. It was also a test for me.

What was your project in Moldova ?
I worked in a social and after-school club for children and teenagers.

What will you do when you will be back ?
I will go back to my job because I took a sabbatical leave and I have to take back my job.

What are your dreams for your future? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I see visual art as a profession for young people, I do not want to do it all my life. In Moldova I tested myself with a new job, I used new skills. It made ​​me realize that I could work with children while I did not think I could. In fact you can do many things with kids. This experience has brought me new ideas on what I could do. I'd like to organize trainings, workshops, photo, video, perhaps for children and tennagers. It's important at that age. Today the picture is everywhere and I think you need to know how it is done in order to criticize, for having hindsight.

What will you remember from this experience ?
Time, this experience gave me time to do many things that I could not do anymor ein working ... photo, video ... It was what I was looking for.


Piotr, 26 years old, Poland (Łomża), EVS 9 months



Can you explain me what you were doing before Moldova ?
I've studied sociology, I have a Master degree. And after that I was doing an internship in an NGO in Varsaw. They're dealing with educational issues in villages in Poland.

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova?
I had this idea going for an EVS during my studies but I didn't find a good project. And then I saw this ADVIT project in Moldova and it was the kind of project I wanted because I can use it as a reference on my CV.

What was your project in Moldova?
I was working in ADVIT's office (our hosting and coordinating organisation). The tasks were mainly administrative. I learn some new things in the area of youth exchanges coz ADVIT applies for the trainings, is helping Moldovan people to go abroad for an EVS, is hosting EVS volunteers, organizing international trainings. So, it was a nice experience, I could see how it works from the inside and I think I could use it in the future

What will you do when you will be back? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I started to send Cvs, I'm looking for a job and thanks to this EVS, because I was working in an international environement, I can apply in some international NGOs in Poland. I hopped that it would be nice to be somewhere else for a year to maybe finaly decide what I want to do with my life but it didn't happen. I don't have precise idea about my future

What are your dreams for your future?
It's very hard to people of our age to find a job for a long period of time. I cannot make plans beacause it's so insecure. My dream is simple : find a job where I would be happy

What will you remember from this experience?
The first thing is that's the longuest period of time that I'm abroad, so that's a huge experience to see how I would be far away from my friends and family. I had to visit a couple of time Poland during my EVS so I wasn't 100% here. And I really started to appreciate Poland. When I was back in Poland I noticed things I didn't notice before and I notice where are we and what we achieved these last 20 years. What else? It was nice to meet a lot of people from different countries and to realise that we are all similar, in general we are like the same.

Portraits of volunteers (4)

Meeting. Appreciating, loving each other (or not!). Sharing this incredible adventure that is our EVS in Moldova. And returning enriched by all these meetings.

I decided to keep a mark of all these faces through a collection of  portraits and interviews which echos my own questionings. Family portrait.



Marion, 25 years old, France (Pau), EVS 10 months



Can you explain what you were doing before Moldova?
I got a master degree in communication and multimedia in Grenoble.

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova?
My partner, Stéphane, was working since one year as VIE (voluntary service in enterprise) for a cheese factory and I decided to join up with him. To stay longer than 3 months I needed a job or a vontary service so I found out about EVS. I was lucky enought to choose my project.

What was your project in Moldova ?
I worked in Alliance française of Moldova. I was working on the communication and on the website, so that was exactly my field and I found out after that it was pretty rare to find a project wich matches with your studies. So I was really happy about this project because at first this EVS was not really my choice but finally it was a great first experience in my field. I finished the website and I lined it up. I take care of it everyday and also of the e-letter. About communication, I' more and more involved in the projects. Now I supervise the publication of all the new supports : booklets, posters...About the advertising on TV or on radio, I don't take care of it because I don't master the language yet but I have right to check. I'm usefull because of my background before Moldova.

What will you do when you will be back ? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I didn't have any plan before coming. I was coming for one year as a volunteers without knowing what will be next. I'm a part now of the team in the French Alliance and so I have a local contract as responsible of communication and multimedia. So, I stay! The both of us stay!


What are your dreams for your future?
It's not mapped out yet, I don't know...I don't know if after one more year in Moldova I would have explored all the aspects of this country...I think so. I think that I would like to live an other experience abroad but in a completly different country, I dream about South America. Though, our future as a couple is more in russian-speaking countries but I'm not tempted by it. And maybe in 4-5 years we would like to settle in, to have children...so to come back to France. Even if it's great to live abroad, you also realize that there are some very nice things in France. That's why I take the opportunity now to travel.

What will you remember from this experience ?
I am used to say this sentence wich is a bit « cliché » but it's really how I feel after 10 months here : « Moldova is not the kind of country that you visit, you have to LIVE it ». And this country, I live it, I like everything here. OK, I'm sometimes pissed about some stuffs, I think that we grumble every day about some things in this country. But I like the people, I like the simple life, I like to feel safe. I like a lot the countryside. This is something I will remember : the moments we spent in the countryside, it was extraodinary for me. I shared it with my parents when they came and they also thought that it's exceptional and I think what is attractive in Moldova is also that : this countryside that doesn't exist anymore in France. Though I come from the countryside but it's not like that anymore. And it's a good way to find talking points with our grand parents (laughts)


Sören, 19 years old, Germany ( Hambourg), volunteer with Project abroad for 9 months



Can you explain what you were doing before Moldova?
I finished hight school.

Why did you decide to be a volunteer and why in Moldova?
I wanted to have a breack before studying and the thing is 2 years ago my father died so I was like struggling and I wanted to do something new. I wanted to go a year away from home, I wanted to go abroad. Everyone is going to America, Australia...So I came to Moldova !


What was your project in Moldova ?
I worked in Casa Aschuita (a shelter for children). I was mostly doing arts and crafts with the children, drawing, playing with them, helping with their homeworks.

What will you do when you will be back ? This voluntary service changed something about your plans for the future?
I probably gonna study politic in Autumn. I hope it will work, I'm not sure yet. The life in Moldova, the political stuffs going on in this country, it was pretty interresting for me. So I decided why not studying it.

What are your dreams for your future?
I definitly want to travel again like doing a semester abroad in University or travelling after my degree.

What will you remember from this experience ?
The life in Germany is not what life is about, life in Germany is really easy. Moldova is pretty different.
I will also of course remember the people I met here.

Portraits of volunteers (2)

Meeting. Appreciating, loving each other (or not!). Sharing this incredible adventure that is our EVS in Moldova. And returning enriched by all these meetings.

I decided to keep a mark of all these faces through a collection of  portraits and interviews which echos my own questionings. Family portrait.


Clémence, 23 years old, France (Angers), EVS 5 months



Can you explain me what you were doing before Moldova ?
I was studying in a professional licence called « professions around book »

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova ?
I wanted to have a break, to go abroad in being usefull. I've already heard about EVS, so I've found a sending organisation and I've applyed by chance for Moldova, a country that I've almost never heard anything about it. So, I paid attention more to the project than to the country.

What was your project in Moldova ?
I was working in a center for victims of human trafic and domestic violences. It's a shelter, a hiden place. They receive visctims arrested abroad and directly repatriate to Moldova. There were also a lot of battered persons. The victims, most of the time women and children, stay for one to three months in the center, and according to the scenario, are sent to other centers. The shelter is for emergencies wich provides to the beneficiaries medical, social, psychological and juridic assistance. I was supporting the victims in their daily life, I was doing some activities, I was talking with them and I also created a library in the center.

What will you do when you will be back ?
I'm registered in a Licence (third year) of modern letters and I have to take some contests in the public service (librarian). I don't really want to go back to my studies even if this experience made me want to learn always more, probably thanks to all the people I met here. I would like to study anthropology, sociology, only for myself. But compared to studies, concret and human experiences are much more stronger! I'm scared to go back, to start again what I was doing in France and to realize how lifeless it is. I'm scared to be bored, to feel useless in France.

What are your dreams for your future? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
I would like to find a job in the associative area, to go into this in depth to know what I could do linked to books, or something else. But most of all, I would like to leave again, but not only to travel, because I really want to serve the country where I will go.

What will you remember from this experience ?
Two things : humanly and then professionaly. My project was THE most important factor during my stay because I was there at first for it. It's indescribable all the things I learnt here about me, about life in general, even if I'm incapable to be objective now. It makes our lifes into perspective. It has totally changed my way of seeing things and it also taught me patience.

 
Quentin, 19 years old, France (Lyon), EVS 7 months


Can you explain me what you were doing before Moldova ?
I finished highschool (social and economic baccalauréat).

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova ?
It was the humanitarian side that attracted me. I was involved since 2 years in the NGO Action against Hunger and I've had the idea to study in the Bioforce school wich trains students for careers in humanitarian. I wanted to be sure about myself before making this very specific way, so this EVS was a try to « confirm » it, to answer to the question « Do I really want to do that? ». Besides, when highschool is over, it means that you have spent 14 years at school so a gap year can be nice! About Moldova, it's like for all the volunteers here, I haven't try to go to Moldova, they sent me a project and I tought « Why not? » because I wanted to go in an eastern country.


What was your project in Moldova ?
I was working in an after school club at the beginning but it was frustrating because there was not much to do and the communication with employees was hard. In addition I was working only three hours a day so I found an other project for the morning : Memoria, a rehabilitation center for victims of torture. I organised some events to inform people and to take preventive action. And finally I also changed my other project, I worked in an other after-schoolclub wich was more motivating.

What will you do when you will be back ?
I'll try to find a job before the start of the new school year and then try to integrate Bioforce, so eventually this experience confirmed my desires about the future.

What are your dreams for your future? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
Achieve what I have now as a project, that is integrate Bioforce and get a license "in charge of general services, logistics humanitarian option" and then go abroad in humanitarian projects.

What will you remember from this experience ?
I'm able to live abroad. And something simple : I felt usefull and it's really satisfying.

Portraits of volunteers (1)

Meeting. Appreciating, loving each other (or not!). Sharing this incredible adventure that is our EVS in Moldova. And returning enriched by all these meetings.

I decided to keep a mark of all these faces through a collection of  portraits and interviews which echos my own questionings. Family portrait.

 
Aurélia, 27 years old, New Caledonia (TOM, France), EVS 6 months



Can you explain me what you were doing before Moldova?
I was working in an highschool in Nouméa (New Caledonia).

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova?
I wanted to change my life, to discover East Europa, to have a job experience with children and to help and bring some smile !

What was your project in Moldova ?
I was working in an after-school club.

What will you do when you will be back ? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
First, before going back to New Caledonia, I'm going to travell in Nepal to learn Yoga. And when I will be back, find a job to save some money. And, if I have the opportunity, I would like to work in after-school clubs or something like that. Anyway, a job with human contacts.

What are your dreams for your future?
I'd like to open a zen tea house...where there will be a parc for children and parents could relax in drinking some tea with musical background. I'm attracted by the relational side, the meetings...

What will you remember from this experience ?
Because of this experience, I had some simple and unforgetable meetings.I feel more positive about my future, I have got more plans. I want to share and travell much more than before.

Elise, 31 years old, France (Paris), EVS 6 months


Can you explain me what you were doing before Moldova ?
So, before coming to Moldova I was working as a video editor. I edit documentaries, TV shows...

Why did you decide to do an EVS and why in Moldova ?
It was a good plan actually, we wanted to leave Paris for 6 months (with PO, her partner) and it was a really confortable plan coz we could have a trip full of meaning without spending money. It was not risky for us because we were working and wondering how we could manage to do this break without spending too much money. And for me, it made sense, rather than going backpaking in Australia and taking pictures of Aboriginals and buying pearl necklaces. I'm more interrested in meeting people, I wanted to understand a bit the country in wich I will arrive. And I think that's what happened.

What was your project in Moldova ?
I worked in a social and after-school club for children and teenagers. We were 3 volunteers for 30 or 40 children per day.

What will you do when you will be back ?
I will go back to my job.

What are your dreams for your future? This EVS changed something about your plans for the future?
It's not clear in my mind yet...Thanks to this experience in Moldova I worked with children for the first time. I wanted to try, to know if I was able to do that, it worked well...So, I will start by going back to my previous life because I need to fill in the fridge, but I don't close the door. I will try to listen to me, to take benefits from this experience for maybe, change my work after.

What will you remember from this experience ?
People and a country...A different culture, a real human look. There's this word that a kid said to me once, it touched me : « Tu esti o doamna buna ». They use a lot this word here « bun », good, goodness in english. People here have goodness, they have nothing and give you everything. Their honessty also, here nobody defraud, for example in the trolleybuses. I think that moldovans are radically honest and welcoming. I will remenber that I think...


vendredi 3 septembre 2010

Moldova 2 / Finland 0 !!

Stade Zimbru, 18h. Ce soir, notre petite équipe cosmopolite sera moldave ou ne sera pas!


Nous sommes bien décidés à trouver des billets pour assister au match Moldavie / Finlande. C'est chose faite, puisque nous voilà bientôt installés au premier rang derrière l'un des buts et ceci pour une bouchée de pain...

L'excitation monte peu à peu d'autant plus que nous sommes placés dans la tribune voisine de celle des suporters finlandais. Dans leur camp, ça crie, ça chante, ça entonne des slogans. Ils sont surmotivés! Parfait, on peut crier plus fort qu'eux : Moldova, Moldova!


La sécurité est renforcée autour de ces supporters en bleu et blanc, des dizaines de policiers veillent au grain. Cette prudence s'avérera utile puisqu'après le premier but marqué par la Moldavie le ton monte chez nos voisins nordiques.

Le stade est en ébullition, nous sommes comme des piles électriques! Moldova Moldova...



Un deuxième but et la foule est en transe tandis que les finlandais en viennent aux mains avec des supporters moldaves. Une voix retentit dans le stade demandant aux supporters filnandais de rester sur leur siège et de ne sortir du stade que 10 minutes après la fin du match. Ils font grise mine les pauvres et certains afficionados ont même du mal à retenir leurs larmes. Quant à nous on ne contient pas notre joie : ON a gagné!