IELTS Listening: Short Answers: Witches in Romania

A short answer will be a specific piece of information that you hear in the recording. It could be:

  • a benefit
  • a reason
  • a number of something
  • a kind of something
  •  … an so on

This is a story about a group of witches in Romania! The original is over at VOA Learning English and can be found here.

Words in This Story

  • cast – v. to send or direct (something) in the direction of someone or something
  • craft – n. a job or activity that requires special skill
  • tarot – n. a set of 78 cards with pictures and symbols that is used to see what will happen in the future
  • ritual – n. a formal ceremony or series of acts that is always performed in the same way

Listen to the recording and answer the following questions using no more than THREE words or a number.

  1. Casting a spell is described as spoken words having what?
  2. How many witches are there in Romania?
  3. Which kind of photograph is said to have power?
  4. The witches consider the government to be what?
  5. Besides losing their jobs what might happen to victims of magic?
  6. Some Europeans fear that altered laws might do what to recent political and economic improvements?

Answers, transcript and clues below the image

  1. magic power
  2. 4000
  3. selfie
  4. corrupt
  5. suffer health problems
  6. undo

 

Romanian Witches Use Social Media

“Repeat after me! To be together with who I want.”

Those instructions come from a family of Romanian witches, who are doing a video call with a person in India.

The person is paying the witches to cast a spell – a group of secret words that are believed to have magic power when spoken.

The Internet and the Witch Community

Witchcraft is traditional in the eastern European country.

The rise of the internet and social media have helped to grow the business of Romania’s witch community. Many the country’s estimated 4,000 witches are now getting customers from Europe, Asia and the United States.

“A truly powerful witch can solve problems from a distance,” explains 20-year-old witch Cassandra Buzea.

Buzea said her generation had persuaded the older one about the powers of the ‘selfie,’ referring to images people take of themselves. Her mother quickly supported the idea.

“Nothing’s changed, the craft is the same, but now it’s much easier for us to be in contact with clients from other countries,” said Mihaela Minca, who taught her daughter Cassandra the family craft.

The witches hold many of their online meetings in a small building about 15 kilometers north of Bucharest, Romania.

They would not say how much money they earn, but they did say that a tarot reading starts at around 50 euros, or around $56.

Other more complex services, however, last weeks and can run into the hundreds.

Involvement in Politics

Minca said she connected online with nine witches and wizards from across Europe and the United States. Their goal: to make magic against Romanian lawmakers seen by witches as corrupt.

Streamed online, the group performed a magic act with their overseas partners. The act was to punish “those who don’t do their jobs, those who have bad intentions,” Minca said. She said those targeted by the magic “will lose their positions and suffer health problems.”

The non profit anti-corruption organization Transparency International, says Romania is one of the EU’s most corrupt states. The European Commission, based in Brussels, has kept the country’s judicial system under special monitoring since it joined the bloc in 2007.

Romania’s ruling Social Democrats proposed changes to the country’s crime laws last year. The European Commission said the proposed changes could undo years of democratic and market reforms.

Minca said she and her fellow witches plan to use the power of the internet once more ahead of May’s European parliament elections, “for the good of the country.”

About Paul Davey

I’m Paul from Bristol, England. I am an IELTS tutor available for face-to-face classes in Taipei and Skype classes anywhere in the world. I'm based in Yonghe, New Taipei City — very close to Taipei. I have been teaching for many years and I am good at it. I’m patient and never tire of correcting students’ mistakes. I know many good ways for students to learn quickly and make a lot of progress in a short time. You won’t be wasting your money. I especially know the difficulties faced by Chinese speakers, and I know how to overcome these difficulties. IELTS is my primary concern and over the years I have taught hundreds of students in the UK, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other spots around the world. I know what the examiners look for and I know how to increase your band and get the grade you need to make your dream come true. I have been blogging about IELTS for about a decade. I started my first website in 2007, before beginning to blog at IELTS Tutor on the Hello UK website. Now I blog only at IELTS in Taiwan and Around the World. I majored in Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, UK, graduating with a bachelor’s degree (2/1 with honours). I obtained my language-teaching qualification in 2006, which is accredited by the Royal College of Teachers. Before I began teaching, I worked in a software company in the UK, writing and selling software solutions. After teaching for many years I took a five-year break to run my own retailing business. Following that adventure, I returned to full-time teaching. For the last 11 years, I’ve been in Taiwan, where in addition to my IELTS work, I have taught corporate classes at Taipei Bank, Pfizer, and Chinese Petroleum Corporation (CPC, Taiwan). I have interests in many fields including travel, literature, science and history.
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