Neil Clark

What Britain can learn from Romania

Brasov, Romania (iStock) 
issue 22 July 2023

Romania gets a bad rap here, associated as it often is with organised crime. In recent years around half a million Romanians have settled in the UK, making them the fourth largest group of foreign-born residents. But the irony is that as Romanians head to Britain in search of a higher standard of living, we Brits should really be booking our flights to Romania to remind us of how our country once was.

Romania has everything: fascinating medieval towns, unspoilt countryside, vibrant major cities and a 150-mile coastline. There are even still horses and carts on the roads. But the appeal is more than that: it’s the spirit of the place. If you want to go back to 1988 or even 1978 then a Wizz Air flight east is like a time-machine.

If you want to go back to 1988 or even 1978 then a Wizz Air flight east is like a time-machine

Cluj-Napoca – or Kolosvar, to give it its Hungarian name (this part of Romania, Transylvania, was ruled by Hungary for several hundred years) – still has the old-fashioned speciality shops that have sadly vanished from our own high streets.

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