Jurnaliștii BBC au venit în România special pentru a străbate o parte din Via Transilvanica: „A creat legături între oameni și a creat oportunități de afaceri acolo unde înainte nu existau”
Jurnalistul BBC Andrew Eames povestește despre fascinanta sa călătorie pe Via Transilvanica, un traseu de peste 1.400 km care traversează România de la nord-est la sud-vest. Acest traseu, inaugurat acum doi ani, șerpuiește prin unele dintre cele mai autentice peisaje și comunități ale Europei, incluzând 12 situri de patrimoniu mondial UNESCO și revitalizând viața în comunitățile rurale izolate.
It would have been churlish not to eat, drink – and make a little donation. It’s not often that you get offered hospitality by a shepherd and his mother at 1,120m in the Carpathian Mountains. A couple of shots later and a couple of miles further on, I found it necessary to have a little lie down.
I was hiking the 1,400km Via Transilvanica, which runs its rugged finger diagonally across Romania from north-east to south-west, mostly through the mountains, forests and villages of the Transylvania region.
The route was launched two years ago (it’s already the winner of a Europa Nostra Award recognising outstanding heritage conservation initiatives) and passes through some of Europe’s most traditional landscapes, rich in bears and wolves. It also ticks off 12 Unesco World Heritage sites and brings new life (and revenue) to remote, rural communities – communities that still scythe hay by hand, travel around by horse and cart and eat food they’ve grown themselves.
And crucially the route also connects some 18 different ethnic and cultural regions in the rich tapestry that constitutes modern-day Romania. Which is why it has been dubbed „the road that unites„.
I’d started at its furthest north-easterly point in a region called Bucovina, famous for its Unesco-registered Painted Monasteries – 16th-Century Bible stories painted on exterior monastery walls to teach, and inspire, passersby – and for its wild landscapes. Not for nothing is the region called the „Switzerland of the East”…