The Prague Post - 'Hobbit houses' that might just save a Moldovan village

EUR -
AED 4.259452
AFN 73.068696
ALL 95.835175
AMD 436.570758
ANG 2.075772
AOA 1063.557999
ARS 1632.514758
AUD 1.648759
AWG 2.090582
AZN 1.974339
BAM 1.952994
BBD 2.335325
BDT 141.806222
BGN 1.910978
BHD 0.437692
BIF 3440.859258
BMD 1.159823
BND 1.480717
BOB 8.01166
BRL 6.111898
BSD 1.159469
BTN 106.319758
BWP 15.599122
BYN 3.406281
BYR 22732.536932
BZD 2.332029
CAD 1.584028
CDF 2621.200372
CHF 0.904776
CLF 0.026617
CLP 1050.997371
CNY 7.999882
CNH 8.008679
COP 4396.600223
CRC 546.535823
CUC 1.159823
CUP 30.735318
CVE 110.106301
CZK 24.406452
DJF 206.479516
DKK 7.470515
DOP 68.963574
DZD 152.362533
EGP 58.098411
ERN 17.39735
ETB 179.847733
FJD 2.563784
FKP 0.870923
GBP 0.868116
GEL 3.137314
GGP 0.870923
GHS 12.500306
GIP 0.870923
GMD 85.244757
GNF 10167.783211
GTQ 8.893182
GYD 242.586628
HKD 9.074313
HNL 30.691087
HRK 7.533869
HTG 152.026123
HUF 389.244239
IDR 19650.88639
ILS 3.5725
IMP 0.870923
INR 106.354605
IQD 1518.989217
IRR 1529891.037604
ISK 144.687337
JEP 0.870923
JMD 181.245017
JOD 0.822366
JPY 182.905877
KES 149.791112
KGS 101.418896
KHR 4653.45333
KMF 491.764763
KPW 1043.851731
KRW 1711.18594
KWD 0.356866
KYD 0.966266
KZT 570.861654
LAK 24834.383152
LBP 103836.057351
LKR 360.4975
LRD 211.605008
LSL 19.131697
LTL 3.424656
LVL 0.701565
LYD 7.390603
MAD 10.770455
MDL 20.054219
MGA 4791.280085
MKD 61.617019
MMK 2435.512911
MNT 4139.497203
MOP 9.341199
MRU 46.299662
MUR 54.979012
MVR 17.931199
MWK 2010.588756
MXN 20.537745
MYR 4.573768
MZN 74.118473
NAD 19.131779
NGN 1607.584239
NIO 42.670154
NOK 11.18671
NPR 170.119136
NZD 1.965419
OMR 0.445969
PAB 1.159434
PEN 3.955633
PGK 4.994017
PHP 68.512505
PKR 324.02405
PLN 4.275839
PYG 7592.351498
QAR 4.228306
RON 5.091743
RSD 117.411175
RUB 91.648694
RWF 1694.615945
SAR 4.353523
SBD 9.338503
SCR 16.133941
SDG 697.625189
SEK 10.679015
SGD 1.482759
SHP 0.870168
SLE 28.42317
SLL 24320.914206
SOS 661.469418
SRD 43.74501
STD 24006.000902
STN 24.465791
SVC 10.145901
SYP 128.533247
SZL 19.138076
THB 36.927613
TJS 11.119273
TMT 4.07098
TND 3.397703
TOP 2.792577
TRY 51.120343
TTD 7.844167
TWD 36.792494
TZS 3003.942293
UAH 50.807061
UGX 4266.960275
USD 1.159823
UYU 45.504413
UZS 14113.718331
VES 493.089609
VND 30433.763729
VUV 138.362584
WST 3.161972
XAF 655.035469
XAG 0.013793
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.13448
XCG 2.089814
XDR 0.814657
XOF 655.035469
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.739885
ZAR 19.257359
ZMK 10439.801828
ZMW 22.320695
ZWL 373.462634
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.21

    -0.39%

  • BTI

    -2.4200

    58.59

    -4.13%

  • RYCEF

    -0.7700

    17.2

    -4.48%

  • GSK

    -1.5600

    55.27

    -2.82%

  • CMSC

    -0.1990

    23.29

    -0.85%

  • RIO

    -2.8800

    93.37

    -3.08%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    25.98

    -1.81%

  • AZN

    -4.0100

    197.52

    -2.03%

  • NGG

    -0.6900

    89.74

    -0.77%

  • RELX

    1.0000

    35.18

    +2.84%

  • BCC

    -1.0100

    77.31

    -1.31%

  • VOD

    -0.4100

    14.62

    -2.8%

  • BP

    0.4600

    39.3

    +1.17%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    12.8

    -0.86%

'Hobbit houses' that might just save a Moldovan village
'Hobbit houses' that might just save a Moldovan village / Photo: Daniel MIHAILESCU - AFP

'Hobbit houses' that might just save a Moldovan village

They call Rogojeni the "hobbit village", and its little half-buried houses, built to resist Moldova's cold winters and hot summers, do look like something from "The Lord of the Rings".

Text size:

The traditional dugout houses have put the shrinking settlement on the tourist map and locals hope they may also help to save it.

"We do fear that the village could disappear, considering that there are so few people left," said mayor Ruslan Groza, with only 30 people left in a hamlet that once had a population of 200.

"My goal is to develop this locality, build roads, repair where possible the houses that can be preserved and develop tourism," he told AFP.

Rogojeni is one of the last villages that still boasts the low stone "basca" houses built into grassy hills, with their small doors forcing people to stoop down when they enter.

More and more tourists are coming after one of the dwellings was repaired and opened to visitors in 2020, said Groza.

A South Korean student was visiting when AFP went to the village two hours north of the capital Chisinau earlier this month. He had even been invited to join a pig roast by locals ahead of the January 7 Christmas celebration.

Such customs are "hard to see" elsewhere, said Sangkyoung Lee, 22, who looked amazed as smoke rose from the burning hay covering the pig as snow fell all around.

Inside the house-turned-museum, pig stew, polenta with sheep cheese, pickles and red wine were served around a table in a small room with an arched entrance and blue walls decorated with traditionally handsewn carpets in lively colours.

- Exodus -

While mayor Groza, a 46-year-old history teacher, takes pride in the "immense cultural heritage" of the village, he admits most of it has been left to decay, like an old school and church of which only the outer walls remain.

With tens of thousands of Moldovans emigrating every year mostly to EU countries for a better life, many villages have become ghost towns.

Since 2014 Moldovan villages have lost almost half a million inhabitants, according to a 2024 census, with a million Moldovans estimated to be living abroad.

But the mayor's wife, Mariana Groza, 45, is optimistic, insisting that villages will "revive along with tradition".

A literature and French teacher, she started an embroidery and traditional costumes workshop, posting her work on TikTok.

"I have loved this craft since childhood. Not a day goes by without me sewing a cross-stitch or crocheting something. If I don't, the day passes in vain for me," she said.

"We must promote traditions."

- Singing and dancing -

Together with other women from the village, including two grandmothers over 80, she sang traditional carols in front of the museum, ringing a bell while a man played the accordion, as part of the pre-Christmas celebration.

On one of the more joyous songs, the two grandmothers hugged each other and started dancing and cheering.

"When I got married here, there were lots of people, there were children, the village was beautiful," Maria Ardeleanu, one of the two women, told AFP.

"Now there's no one left. Just us, a bunch of old women," she added, saying she enjoys talking to tourists who want to know what it's like to live in the "basca".

"I tell them during the summer it is cool, it's nice inside. And in winter it is warm and I don't go out much," she said.

When the carols ended, the singers threw wheat grains to the listeners to wish them prosperity.

Ardeleanu's dance partner counted the ones she caught.

"Eight," she said cheerfully. "Tradition says that's how many years I've still got to live."

O.Ruzicka--TPP