Arbore Genealogic Model De Completat -
In the dusty attic of her grandmother's house in the Carpathian village of Breb, Ana found a rolled sheet of parchment. It was an arbore genealogic model de completat — a genealogical tree model to be completed. The parchment showed a massive oak with empty oval leaves, each waiting for a name, a date, a place. Only the lowest roots bore handwriting: Marin Ionescu, 1873–1941, carpenter and Elena Ionescu, 1878–1952, weaver .
Determined, Ana began her search. She traveled to the county archives in Cluj-Napoca, where a pale archivist pulled out yellowing census records. She found Marin and Elena’s children: three survived the typhus epidemic of 1918. One was her great-grandfather, Vasile, who had emigrated to Bucharest and become a tram driver. The tree grew. arbore genealogic model de completat
Ana’s grandmother, Sofia, now 89, had forgotten the tree existed. “It was your great-grandfather’s dream,” she whispered, touching the fragile paper. “He wanted to fill every leaf. But the war came. Then the communists. Names were erased, not written.” In the dusty attic of her grandmother's house

