resilience
tools
ecological thinking
mapping
garden
Resilient practices in the Romanian countryside
Statistics show that in 2020 around 78 thousand people moved to the villages
from urban centres in Romania, not counting those who have returned home from
abroad. In itself, it is not a very telling statistics, as almost double this
number moved the other way around and, comparing to other EU countries, Romania
still has one of the highest rates of poverty in the rural areas. What is
interesting is that the majority of those deciding to “downshift” to the
countryside are the middle-class who can afford the telework. They want to
reconnect with nature, with their families’ roots, they take classes on
permaculture, they exchange advice, photos and business ideas with peers on the
many Facebook dedicated groups – the most famous of which, “Moved to the
countryside. Life without the clock” counts now 147000 members, having doubled
in the year of the lockdown . Within this trend, a special place is occupied by
those who make this move as not only an individual life-style, but also trying
to be consistent with a sustainable and ecological living with and for larger
communities.
We are looking at practices that redefine the relationship with the countryside,
with land and soil, with nature, with food and natural resources, with the rural
communities and also with people in the big cities who are looking for
sustainable alternatives to their lives. We are mapping some of these practices:
a regenerative farm in Dambovita; an ecological farm that delivers fresh
products to people in Bucharest, also in a village in Dambovita county; a
community and educational centre built on ecological principles in Mogosoaia; a
village eco-touristic campus and co-working space in Banat region, and others. A
more in-depth mapping takes place of a series of case-studies on ecological or
regenerative farms or gardens, thus focusing this part of the research on a
different approach to the land as not only provider of resources but also as a
fragile ecosystem that needs to be tendered and respected. We are conducting
sociological interviews, interpreting them, we are asking questions about
motivations, structure, sustenance, difficulties encountered, awareness of the
wider contexts and of the climate change impact. In addition, we are observing
with artistic means (video-documents, sketches, drawings, notations), in order
to situate these case-studies within a larger picture of emancipatory practices
in the relation between people, nature and communities.