Poezie dumitru matcovschi biography

Unification of Moldova and Romania

Movement for uniting Moldova and Romania

Not to be confused with Unification of Moldavia and Wallachia or Union of Bessarabia with Romania.

The unification of Moldova and Romania is the idea that Moldova and Romania should become a single sovereign state and the political movement which seeks to bring it about. Beginning during the Revolutions of 1989 (including the Romanian Revolution and the independence of Moldova from the Soviet Union), the movement's basis is in the cultural similarity of the two countries, both being Romanian-speaking, and their history of unity as part of Greater Romania.

The question of reunification is recurrent in the public sphere of the two countries, often as a speculation, both as a goal and a danger. Though historically Romanian support for unification was high, a March 2022 survey following the Russian invasion of Ukraine indicated that only 11% of Romania's population supports an immediate union, while over 42% think it is not the right moment.[1]

A majority in Moldova continues to oppose it

Dumitru Matcovschi 55c63d6ecadd5

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Dumitru Matcovschi was a Moldovan poet, prose writer, playwright, and journalist born in 1939 in Vadul-Rașcov. He published over 50 volumes of poetry, prose, and plays throughout his career and received many honors and awards for his literary work, including being named a People's Writer of Moldova. Matcovschi played a key role in Moldova's national revival movement and is considered one of the greatest Romanian-language poets. He died in 2013 in Chișinău following health complications from a serious car accident in 1989 that left him in a coma for months. Matcovschi was given a state funeral and is remembered as a symbol of Moldovan national

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Dumitru Matcovschi was a Moldovan poet, prose writer, playwright, and journalist born in 1939 in Vadul-Rașcov. He published over 50 volumes of poetry, prose, and play

Doina (Eminescu)

Political poem by Mihai Eminescu

Doina, or Doină (sometimes translated as "Lament"),[1] is a political poem by the Romanian Mihai Eminescu. It was first published in 1883 and is therefore seen by some as Eminescu's final work in verse, although it may actually be an 1870s piece, inspired or enhanced by the perceived injustice of the Berlin Treaty. A variation of the doina (plural: doine), picked up from Romanian folklore, it is noticeably angry to the point of rhetorical violence, a radical expression of Romanian nationalism against invading "foreigners", with additional hints of ecopoetry and "anti-technicist" discourse. Doina delineates the ideal geographical space of Greater Romania, at a time when Romanian-inhabited regions were divided between an independent kingdom and multinational empires. Its final lines call on Stephen the Great, depicted as a sleeping hero, to take up the cause of Romanians and chase foreigners out with the sound of his horn. The same basic themes appear in another poem by Eminescu, the anthem-like La arme

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