Category: Featured Articles

  • The Matchmaker who arranged 2500 marriages

    2500 marriages

    Global Love Report – March 23, 2022
    A translated article by Pamela Stephanie


    In the early 90s, Romanian society changed dramatically. After 44 years of communism, two decades of which were under the brutal dictatorship of Nicolae Ceaușescu, protest broke out across the country that brought down the regime in only one week.

    The revolution marked the beginning of a long and difficult process of democratic change that would solve the problems created by decades of misgovernment. During the period many poor Romanians turned to their wealthier neighbors to imagine a better life.

    At the time, Romanian-born Antoaneta Hambitzer lived hundreds of kilometers away, in West Germany. She saw that this political shift presented possibilities. She left her hometown Arad, near the border with Hungary, in 1986, after meeting her first husband in the early 80s. That marriage didn’t last—the two divorced in 1990 and she lost custody over the child they had together. She says that she tried to challenge the decision for three years but was unsuccessful because her husband was a German doctor and she was a foreigner. “Even now, more than 30 years later, I feel sick when I think about it,” Hambitzer says.

    In 1990, the then-32 years old Hambitzer had a long-term relationship with a Romanian man living in Germany. “We were a good match, and we felt passion and harmony,” says Hambitzer,” but he was much younger than me.” The two broke up almost ten years later because his parents didn’t accept her. But the heartbreak she went through changed Hambitzer’s life forever.

    “I saw an ad in the paper about a company that arranged marriages between German men and Polish women,” says Hambitzer. Motivated by her own heartbreak in the West, Hambitzer wanted to investigate this industry further. “I didn’t know how it worked, I had no idea what I was doing. But I wanted to learn,” she says.

    Harbitzer was hired by the company from the ad, but she soon realized that she wasn’t making enough. Determined not to give up, Hambitzer decided to start her own matchmaking company after her first contract expired. Thirty years later, thanks to the huge impact that technology has had on the dating industry, Hambitzer’s Antoinette Marital Agency is still thriving. Since the official start of her company in 1993, she claims to have arranged more than 2,500 marriages between wealthy German bachelors and Romanian women.

    “My parents divorced when I was three years old and I had a difficult relationship with my stepfather,” she says. “So I try to help make other people happy, satisfied and joyful.”

    In the early years, Hambitzer traveled alone to Romanian cities to personally meet the girls who signed up for her matchmaking. Toward the end of the 90s she found a German partner—an agent based in Frankfurt.

    Her service works as follows: first, people who are interested contact her and she then sends them a form to fill out and send back to her with a photography [of themselves]. The form is for basic information—name, age, date of birth, height, occupation, and whether or not they want children. “These are the most important data,” says Hambitzer. “The rest, hobbies and character traits, are not important.”

    Then she sends the Romanian candidates a letter with a time and place for a meeting. “The invitation was simple: on a certain date I would come to Romania with the German men, and for their part the girls promised to be punctual and nicely dressed,” Hambitzer says. “The idea was that we would have a good and social time.”

    With the German bachelors, she ended up touring Romania, stopping in several cities to introduce the men in person and a potential partner. “My first tour took place in 1996,” says Hambitzer. “I came with two cars and eight German men, and we traveled to eight different cities. It was very tiring, but the result was good.”

    One of the first people Hambitzer successfully paired was a boy who lived near Bonn in West Germany. His parents were very eager to see him get married. “I remember after the wedding his parents invited me to dinner at their house and they placed me at the head of the table. They were so happy that I had arranged for their son to be married,” Hambitzer says. “For me, that was great.”

    According to Hambitzer, the Germans instantly fell in love with the Romanian women because “they were so beautiful and low-maintenance.” But it turned out that the potential Romanian partners did not have reciprocal feelings at that point.

    “The Germans were under the assumption that Romanian women would fall in love with them when they saw them and that they would immediately be willing to move in with them. But that was not the case at all,” says Hambitzer. “They [the Germans] were heads of companies, they were people of high status, they were not poor. A lot of times they were not happy when they found that things were not going as they had hoped.”

    All these meetings started with an opening night, where hundreds of Romanian women came to find a partner. “The Germans were always surprised that the girls were so beautiful and elegant, they had never seen such beautiful women in their lives,” Hambitzer continues.
    The service became so popular in Romania that Hambitzer says she received thousands of applications over the years, each complete with a photo and a form with personal information. “I had two big stacks of folders from A to Z, about 28 in all,” she says. “When a girl got married, I would take her out of the album and replace her with a new one. I had red albums for the younger girls, up to age 30, and blue albums for the older girls, from age 39 to 50.”

    The first ten years, about 30 to 35 Germans came along on the Romanian tour, which lasted about a week. “Most of them found a match already during the first night,” says Hambitzer. That became a problem, because she didn’t want her Romanian clients in the other cities to think they were being scammed if Hambitzer didn’t arrive with enough men. So she convinced all the men to just come along, to chat and be social, regardless of their relationship status. “By the end, maybe two men remained: one who was not presentable at all and another who thought he was so special that no woman could be a good match for him.”

    With a sense of nostalgia, Hambitzer says those trips were “phenomenal.” “The opening was on Sunday, and in the days that followed I took them to wine tastings, to parties with DJs and traditional food.”

    They also often went to a German who had a farm outside Arad to barbecue while enjoying music. “In the winter there was the pig slaughter ritual, and in the spring the lamb slaughter ritual,” says Hambitzer. “New Year’s Eve was totally a blast. We didn’t have parties like that anywhere in Romania at that time. There was music and dancing girls on the tables. The Germans had never experienced anything like it.”
    Every year Hambitzer tried to outdo herself by including more exciting stops in the route. In 2007, the Internet changed everything. “A lot of German people were trying to move their businesses online,” says Hambitzer. “The people in Frankfurt with whom we were working got involved in this, too.”

    Her partner’s new business plan was to offer their customers a 5-euro monthly subscription to talk directly to the girls and make their own dates with whomever they wanted. That was cheaper than Hambitzer’s agency, which put a price tag of about 3,000 to 5,000 euros on the Romanian trips.

    This crisis arose at a difficult time in Hambitzer’s personal life. After the end of her relationship with the Romanian man, Hambitzer married a medical engineer, but this again failed. “We both had strong characters and we didn’t agree on anything,” she says. “Love is not enough, beauty is not enough, traveling together is not enough. You need harmony, like I had with the (much younger) Romanian man, with whom I was compatible. So, I divorced again.”

    The divorce had unpleasant financial consequences for her. So Hambitzer decided to return permanently to Romania, where she had bought two apartments in her hometown of Arad. Then suddenly there was an unexpected turn of events.

    “I was in Thailand and staying in the house of a friend I had helped marry some time before, when I received a sudden phone call from a TV station,” Hambitzer recalls. “They wanted to invite me to a show where I would introduce Romanian girls to some German guys. I said I wasn’t interested.” But after repeated emails and phone calls from the TV station, RTL 2, Hambitzer finally agreed, “on the condition that my company, the girls and Romania were not to be ridiculed,” she explains. “They agreed.”

    Hambitzer describes the group of men RTL had assembled as “special cases” and “diverse.” “Only later did I realize that they had been chosen to attract audiences,” she says. Women from other countries also appeared on the show, Traumfrau Gesucht (Dream Woman Wanted) and it became a huge success. This marked a turnaround, and a steady stream of new clients began contacting Hambitzer’s business again. Her return to Romania was off the table.

    Another major change took place in 2005, when Romania joined the European Union, giving Romanians the right to live and work in wealthier countries such as Germany, Italy and Spain. Their brand-new EU passport also made it easier to obtain residence permits for countries outside the Union, such as the US, Canada or the United Arab Emirates.

    Hambitzer claims that many women left Romania in search of work. Sometimes she still pairs them with Germans, but she now mainly focuses on Romanians who already live in Germany. Even in the age of Tinder and countless other dating apps, she says she still has clients who look for love in the wrong way. For example, one of her clients was almost scammed out of thousands of euros after falling for a Russian woman he met online.

    Hambitzer’s business is still in good shape for now, although she says it doesn’t make her much money anymore. Sometimes she thinks about stopping, because she often has to work evenings and weekends, and she almost always has to be reachable by phone. But ultimately, she is passionate about her work.

    “My clients are more than just a source of income, they’re my guests,” Hambitzer says. “I’ve met so many lovely people and have made so many friendships because of my work. I’ve helped hundreds of people.”

    Originally published by Vice


    (Image source: Pexels, Jeremy Wong)
  • Exclusive Matchmaking in Belgium

    exclusive matchmaking in belgium

    Global Love Report – March 16, 2022
    Original Article Published by Together Mag



    (Image source: Pexels, Trung Nguyen)
  • Japanese Agency Offering Free Photoshoot

    japanese agency offers free photoshoot

    Global Love Report – March 9, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    Tokyo Bay Sorte matchmaking agency is partnering with foriio. “foriio” is a company which provides content creators a way to showcase their content.

    With this partnership, members of foriio will be able to create a free professional profile picture with the matchmaking agency. With this agreement, the agency will have the chance to obtain more leads. foriio’s large member base means that they will be able to reach a wider audience.

    According to the agency, they want more people to experience and understand the value of the services provided by both companies.

    The service that will be provided is free for the members of foriio. And it is worth approximately 25,000 yen (around US$217). What they’re offering essentially a professional photoshoot package. Included in the package are: a photographer, stylist, and related staff. Additional costs such as venue rental, makeup, extra retouches, may be incurred, depending on what was agreed.

    Originally published by PR Times.


    (Image source: Unsplash, Redd)
  • Dating Indoors Again in the Netherlands

    dating indoors

    Global Love Report – March 9, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    They’re looking forward to dating and flirting at the pub: “I hope that I haven’t forgotten.” Finally, it’s possible again: dating at the pub. And now that it looks like that the 1.5 meter rule will soon be dropped, flirting in real life will become a lot easier. Good news for singles, “I have especially missed the excitement.”

    “Terrible,” is what Rutger de Quay (26) from Rotterdam called the walking dates that he had been limited to until recently. During the pandemic he agreed to a walk four to five times with someone from a dating app. “Walking when you don’t know someone yet is exhausting. It’s multi-tasking. You’re walking and talking at the same time, sometimes with a drink on the side, and on top of that, it’s just cold. You want to sit indoors, to be able to look him in the eye.”

    Lieke (28) from Rotterdam completely agrees. “I got really tired of those walking dates at one point. You don’t get to know each other that well. In the pub, you’re more focused on each other and a drink on the side helps too. I can be quite shy sometimes. You can wash away those first nerves with a little wine and then the conversation quickly flows.”

    Meeting at home on a first date is not something they’re comfortable with. Lieke: “I have the feeling that you’re sending out a signal. That men quickly assume that something more is going to happen. I did do it once. I asked his surname beforehand, I looked him up on the internet, gave my housemate his address and during the date told her that everything was OK. It feels riskier but better than walking.”

    A couple of weeks ago Lieke had another first date at the pub, “Yes, finally! I thought. It is just really nice to have a drunk on a busy terrace. The fact that there are many people sitting around you creates a nice atmosphere and makes it less awkward. It was also a really nice date.”

    Flirting on the dance floor

    Barman Doudou Diop of Thoms op de Meent restaurant and bar is pleased to see that young couples are finding their way to the pub again. From the first day that the restaurant was open again, there was plenty of dating. “You can often tell when it’s a first date, especially if it’s a bit awkward. If they’re looking around or if there is little conversation, you know that it’s not a successful date.”

    According to sources in the government, plans are in place to end the 1.5 meter rule and fixed seating in the hospitality industry by the end of this month. That would mean that Thoms’ Underground Bar could also reopen. And where better can you flirt than on the dance floor? “If you’re standing behind the bar, you don’t notice it as much, but there is a lot of flirting going on downstairs. Sometimes even with the bartender.”

    Excitement

    Rutger, who has a “love-hate relationship” with dating apps can’t wait to get back into the nightlife. “I’m really bad at flirting but it’s really nice to finally be able to walk up to someone and start a conversation again.” Lieke: “I especially missed the excitement: ‘is he single? Will they flirt back or not?’ I think that I’ll have to get used to it again. I hope that I haven’t forgotten how to flirt.”

    Originally published by Provinciale Zeeuwse Courant


    (Image source: Pexels, Chan Walrus)
  • Japanese Hotel Opens Its Own Matchmaking Agency

    japanese hotel

    Global Love Report – March 2, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    There are plenty of businesses that work alongside the wedding industry. Some of these include, travel agencies, companies that produce alcoholic drinks, insurance, as well as retail. In Japan, these companies have begun to create their own matchmaking agency, either as a completely new business or a side business. This is according to one of the largest marriage companies in Japan, IBJ.

    The newest business to create their very own matchmaking agency is a hotel: the New Otani Hotel. On February 24th, the hotel announced that they will establish two new businesses, a serviced apartments and a marriage agency. This is to provide them with new sources for revenue during the pandemic.

    Their new matchmaking agency called Hotel New Otani Marriage Concierge was set up in partnership with IBJ. The hotel’s management explained that the hotel receives a lot of revenue from weddings but it has since dropped in half since 2020. So, in a bid to increase the number of wedding banquets, they’ve decided to create their own matchmaking agency.

    The hotel will use their lounges and restaurants as matchmaking locations. They will also provide portrait photography for matchmaking along with wedding photography. Their plan is to support clients beyond engagement, but also with proposal and family meeting.

    In terms of membership, the hotel’s agency will have a strict screening process in order to ensure that quality of its members.

    Originally published by CNET Japan and PR Times.


    (Image source: Pexels, Andrea Piacquadio)
  • Korean Agencies Increasing Membership Fees

    membership fees

    Global Love Report – February 23, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    Korean matchmaking companies are increasing membership fees. This is after the country saw price increases for food and drinks, as well as in the retail industry. The service industry in general is increasing its prices. So, it’s no wonder big name companies such as Duo and Noblesse are increasing its fees.

    According to sources, one of the biggest matchmaking companies in South Korea, Duo, will be increasing its fees by 500,000 won (around US$417) by the 1st of March 2022.

    Noblesse has already increased the membership fees of their male clients. It increased from 3.3 million won (around US$2757) to 3.85 million won (around US$3216). And another matchmaking company also raised their price by about 500,000 won.

    Duo is reported to be pushing out a new marketing campaign to obtain new members, at the same time announcing about their current price increase.

    Sources in the South Korean matchmaking industry noted that a combination of factors have led to the increase in fees, including: inflation and labor costs.

    Originally published by The Financial News.


    (Image source: Unsplash, Kevin Turcios)
  • IBJ: 2% of 2021 Marriages Thanks to Us

    2021 marriages

    Global Love Report – February 16, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    IBJ Group, Japan’s largest network of matchmaking agencies, recently announced that they broke a new record. 10,402 couples who met through their agencies were married in 2021. And this amounts to 2% of the total number of marriages in Japan in 2021.

    Thanks to its network of more than 3,000 agencies nation-wide and the trend of people preferring to use matchmaking agencies in order to find a spouse, the IBJ group was able to achieve the feat of marrying 20,804 people.

    This is also in line with one of IBJ’s aim, which is to help solve the declining birthrate in Japan.

    The company also stated that they have set a goal of being responsible for 5% of all marriages in Japan by 2027 and seeks to help create as many relationships as possible.

    Originally published by PR Times.


    (Image source: Pexels, Goran Vrakela)
  • Matchmaking for Young People in the Netherlands

    matchmaking for young people

    Global Love Report – February 16, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    A young person who won’t look at you when he’s talking with you or who’s scared to call someone. Gemma van Grinsven knows: a young person like that won’t be able to get into a relationship easily. And with all the restrictions due to Covid, it has become a lot more difficult: “Three out of ten young people suffer from psychological problems. And that’s a conservative estimate.” That’s why she established a matchmaking agency in Tilburg.

    Gemma effortlessly sums up what many young people struggle with: fear, being chaotic, low self-esteem, and fear of failure. And she immediately clears up a few misunderstandings: this has nothing to do with being stupid or smart and it has nothing to do with looks either: “Come and have a look at us, you won’t see anything. All are normal, nice young people.”

    Gemma has been committed to helping young people with problems for fourteen years. The fact that she has started a matchmaking agency has everything to do with Covid: “They don’t have their regular connections at work or at school. As a result, they have lost their support system and are left to fend for themselves.”

    Gemma knows that communicating through a video connection is difficult: “Because they don’t want to see themselves on camera. You see it when a class is supposed to meet online. We would like everyone to get the chance to build long-lasting friendships or relationships.”

    Gemma works together with psychologist Renske Castricum. They do the intakes in Nijmegen and Tilburg, first covering the provinces of Gelderland and Brabant. Wednesday they will start with the intakes: “Many healthcare institutions around us who know that this is going to start tell us: this could get out of control. I hope not, of course, but it would be fantastic if we could help hundreds of young people.”

    If it goes out of hand Gemma has trained volunteers on hand to help out. Registration can be done from Wednesday on the website. Following that is a intake in Tilburg or Nijmegen and if you would like help, you pay 45 Euros if you’re on benefits, otherwise it’s 90 Euros.

    The Oranjefons (a Dutch charity) is supporting the initiative. “We don’t put any photographs on the website because we know how sensitive that is for young people who are afraid of failure. We will see for ourselves who can be a match and we will bring those people into contact with each other. And we’ll continue to follow that process.”

    Additionally, there will be activities. At first in Nijmegen and later also in Tilburg. “Walking together, cooking or going to the museum? What we will be doing, the group will decide for themselves. You are never alone, there are always supervisors with you. I would find it fantastic if we have helped 25 couples by the end of the year.”

    Originally published by Omroep Brabant.


    (Image source: Unsplash, Randy Kinne)
  • Matchmaking Program Continues After Success

    matchmaking program

    Global Love Report – February 9, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    The Ministry of Religion in Solo, Indonesia has re-started their matchmaking agency, Jadikan Aku Halalmu (Translation: “Make me be your halal”) for two weeks now. This matchmaking program is a continuation to a similar program that they released in September 2021.

    The Head of Solo’s Ministry of Religion, Hidayat Masykur, stated that the re-opening of the agency’s matchmaking program is due to the fact that there were a lot of interests in the first stage.

    “For the first stage, we were able to marry seven couples, and it’s possible there are some who are currently in the process [of marrying].”

    Hidayat explained that the total of registrants for the first stage of the matchmaking agency’s opening reached around 500 people. They then went through a selection and verification process. About 380 of the 500 were eligible for the program. “We are still observing and giving pre-marital guidance to all of the verified registrants,” he explained.

    Hidayat mentioned that the program not only facilitated those who wanted to find a partner but also to give pre-marital guidance.

    According to data that he obtained, the number of divorces in Solo city is quite high. And the average marriage last under 10 years. Pre-marital guidance is expected to provide education regarding how to move forward within a marriage.

    “The process from the getting to know stage until marriage is long. We are still giving them guidance until now. They can also have a consultation,” he explained.

    Originally published in Solo Pos.


    (Image source: Pexels, Danu Hidayatur)
  • Matchmaking with Love Letters

    love letters

    Global Love Report – February 2, 2022
    A review article by Pamela Stephanie


    Chatting with someone for hours on a dating app only to find out that he’s after something else , has a fake profile or suddenly doesn’t react anymore. Daisy van Tussenbroek was fed up with it all. That’s why she created her own offline dating alternative where you don’t chat with each other but write letters. “It’s super romantic.”

    Daisy couldn’t find what she was searching for: a fun, original way to find a long-term partner. That’s why the 35-year-old woman from Rotterdam decided to take matters into her own hands.

    Lasting Relationship

    She founded Wooing, a platform where people who are looking for a “lasting relationship” can register. They have to write a letter to their upcoming date at the beginning. “You purchase a physical box. The inside contains paper, an envelope, and a booklet with tips and tricks on how to write a good letter,” explained Daisy to EditieNL.

    Candidates also answer a list of questions so it’s clear what they’re looking for. Then it’s on Daisy to make good matches. Candidates receive mail in the letterbox twice per month. “Per round there are two to five letters from people of whom I think, this really be something.” Pictures will also be sent along.

    First Meeting

    Then the candidates can indicate if they’ve received a letter from someone that they would like to get to know. If both sides says “go”, then Daisy plans the first meeting: “a meet cute”, as she calls it. “I try to choose a unique place that is related to their interests. Maybe it’s their favorite bookstore in Rotterdam, for example. At the moment I’m planning these meet cutes outside due to Covid.”

    Matching

    Daisy does not have a background in matchmaking. “I studied (web)design, so something completely different. But I do the matching process together with relationship therapists and sexologists. I do everything else by myself, although that’s hardly possible anymore.” There are now almost 100 registrations.
    Anyone 18 and above is welcome at Wooing, regardless of sexuality or where they live. “The dates are taking place in 32 of the biggest municipalities in the Netherlands. Basically, they’re easily accessible from all corner of the country.”

    Romance

    But is letter writing still relevant today? “Well, maybe not. But I really want to bring it back. I feel that with a letter you get closer to the heart of the matter. You take the time for it and sit on the coach with a blanket and a cup of coffee to read it. It’s tangible and also super romantic.”

    Seed Paper

    If the match turns out to be a success and the two decide to move forward, they can get to work too. The letters are printed on seed paper, which is made from recycled material. If you plant it in the soil, a plant can grow out of it under the right conditions. “So you can see together if something beautiful comes out of your letter.”

    Daisy has not yet managed to find a partner for herself. “I’m still single,” she says. “I’m not going along with this concept. I find the matching fun but for myself, I’m not so concerned with it. And no, I can’t keep the good candidates for myself. I’m very honest with it. I take Wooing very seriously.”

    Originally published by RTL Nieuws


    (Image source: Pexels, Karolina Grabowska)