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{{short description|1947–1989 republic in Southeastern Europe}} | |||
{{Infobox Former Country | |||
{{More citations needed|date=July 2022}} | |||
|native_name = Republica Socialistă România¹ | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2023}} | |||
|conventional_long_name = Socialist Republic of Romania | |||
{{Infobox country | |||
|common_name = Romania | |||
| native_name = '''Romanian People's Republic'''<br />{{small|(1947–1965)}}<br />{{smalldiv|{{lang|ro|Republica Populară Română}} (1947–1958)<br />{{lang|ro|Republica Populară Romînă}} (1958–1965)}}<hr>'''Socialist Republic of Romania'''<br />{{small|(1965–1989)}}<br />{{small|{{lang|ro|Republica Socialistă România}}}} | |||
|continent = Europe | |||
| |
| common_name = Romania | ||
| image_flag = Flag of Romania (1965-1989).svg | |||
|era = Cold War | |||
| flag_type = Flag<br>(1965–1989) | |||
|event_start = Monarchy abolished | |||
| flag = Flag of Romania | |||
|event_end = ] | |||
| image_coat = Coat of arms of Romania (1965–1989).svg | |||
|year_start = 1947 | |||
| symbol_type = Coat of arms<br>(1965–1989) | |||
|year_end = 1989 | |||
| symbol = Coat of arms of Romania | |||
|date_start = December 30 | |||
| image_map = Romania 1956-1990.svg | |||
|date_end = December 22 | |||
| image_map_caption = The Socialist Republic of Romania in 1989 in dark green | |||
|p1 = Kingdom of Romania | |||
| national_motto = {{lang|ro|]}}<br />("Proletarians of all countries, unite!") | |||
|flag_p1 = Rumania.gif | |||
| national_anthem = <br />{{lang|ro|]}}<br />(1948–1953){{parabr}}{{center|]}}<br />{{lang|ro|]}}<br />(1953–1975){{center|]}}<br />{{lang|ro|]}}<br />(1975–1977){{parabr}}{{center|]}}<br />{{lang|ro|]}}<br />(1977–1989){{parabr}}{{center|]}} | |||
|s1 = Romania | |||
| official_languages = ] | |||
|flag_s1 = Flag of Romania.svg | |||
| religion = ] (de jure) <br /> | |||
|image_flag = Flag of Romania (1947-1989).svg | |||
] (dominant) | |||
|image_coat = Stema Republicii Socialiste Romania.png | |||
| status = ] member | |||
|image_map = | |||
| capital = ] | |||
|national_anthem = ] (1947 - 1953)<br>] (1953 - 1968)<br />] (1968-1989) | |||
| largest_city = capital | |||
|common_languages = ] | |||
| government_type = ] ]<br/>] ] | |||
|capital = Bucharest | |||
* under a ] ] (1971–1989) <br><ref name=Horga /><ref name=Thompson /><ref name=Dirdala /> | |||
|government_type = Socialist republic | |||
| demonym = ] | |||
|legislature = Marea Adunare Naţionalǎ | |||
| |
| legislature = ] | ||
| title_leader = ] | |||
|leader1 = Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej | |||
| leader1 = {{nowrap|]}} | |||
|year_leader1 = 1947–1965 | |||
| year_leader1 = 1947–1965 | |||
|leader2 = Nicolae Ceauşescu | |||
| leader2 = ] | |||
|year_leader2 = 1965-1989 | |||
| year_leader2 = 1965–1989 | |||
|stat_area1 = | |||
| title_representative = ] | |||
|stat_pop1 = | |||
| representative1 = ] | |||
|stat_year1 = | |||
| year_representative1 = 1947–1952 (first) | |||
|currency = Romanian Leu | |||
| representative2 = ] | |||
|currency_code = ROL | |||
| year_representative2 = 1967–1989 (last) | |||
|administrative_divisions = ] and ]e | |||
| title_deputy = ] | |||
|time_zone = ] | |||
| deputy1 = ] | |||
|utc_offset = +2 | |||
| year_deputy1 = 1947–1952 (first) | |||
|time_zone_DST = ] <br /> Observed starting 1971 | |||
| deputy2 = {{nowrap|]}} | |||
|utc_offset_DST = +3 | |||
| year_deputy2 = 1982–1989 (last) | |||
|calling_code = 40 | |||
| era = Cold War | |||
|footnotes= ¹ Until 1965 the official name was '''Republica Populară Romînă''' (''People's Republic of Romania'').<br> | |||
| event_start = ] | |||
The administrative divisions of the country were ] between 1950 - 1968 and ]e from 1968 on. | |||
| date_start = 30 December | |||
| year_start = 1947 | |||
| event1 = ] | |||
| date_event1 = 13 April 1948 | |||
| event2 = {{nowrap|]}} | |||
| date_event2 = 24 September 1952 | |||
| event3 = ] | |||
| date_event3 = 22 April 1964 | |||
| event4 = ] | |||
| date_event4 = 21 August 1965 | |||
| event5 = ] | |||
| date_event5 = 22 December 1989<ref name=ROM>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/23/world/upheaval-east-overview-ceausescu-flees-revolt-rumania-but-divided-security.html|title=Upheaval in the East: Overview; Ceausescu Flees a Revolt in Rumania but Divided Security Forces Fight on|first1=David|last1=Binder|first2=Special to The New York|last2=Times|newspaper=The New York Times|date=23 December 1989}}</ref> | |||
| event_end = Name changed to "Romania" | |||
| date_end = 28 December | |||
| year_end = 1989<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qC7pvX2M39AC&q=%2228+december+1989%22+%22socialist+Republic+of+romania%22&pg=PA198|title=A Political Chronology of Europe|publisher=Europa Publications|date=2001|access-date=29 June 2023|isbn=0-203-40340-1|page=198|quote=28 December 1989: The name of the country was changed by decree to Romania.}}</ref> | |||
| event_post = ] | |||
| date_post = 8 December 1991 | |||
| p1 = Kingdom of Romania | |||
| flag_p1 = Flag of Romania (1867–1947).svg | |||
| s1 = Romania | |||
| flag_s1 = Flag of Romania (1867–1947).svg | |||
| currency = ] | |||
| calling_code = 40 | |||
| HDI = 0.863 | |||
| HDI_year = 1990 formula | |||
| HDI_ref = <ref></ref> | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{ |
{{Socialist Republic of Romania}} | ||
The '''Socialist Republic of Romania''' ({{langx|ro|Republica Socialistă România}}, '''RSR''') was a ] ] ] that existed officially in ] from 1947 to 1989 (see ]). From 1947 to 1965, the state was known as the '''Romanian People's Republic''' ({{lang|ro|Republica Populară Romînă}}, '''RPR'''). The country was an ] state and a member of the ] with a dominant role for the ] enshrined in ]. Geographically, RSR was bordered by the ] to the east, the ] (via the ] and ]) to the north and east, ] and ] (via ]) to the west, and ] to the south. | |||
'''Communist Romania''' refers to the period of the ] when its government was dominated by the ]. During this period the country was consecutively known as '''Romanian People's Republic''' (]: ''Republica Populară Romînă'') and '''Socialist Republic of Romania''' (''Republica Socialistă România''). | |||
As ] ended, ], a former ] member which had ], was occupied by the ] as the sole representative of the ]. On 6 March 1945, after mass demonstrations by communist sympathizers and political pressure from the Soviet representative of the ], a new pro-Soviet government that included members of the previously outlawed ] was installed. Gradually, more members of the Workers' Party and communist-aligned parties gained control of the administration and pre-war political leaders were steadily eliminated from political life. In December 1947, ] ] was forced to ] and the People's Republic of Romania was declared. | |||
At first, Romania's scarce post-war resources were drained by the "]s," new tax-exempt Soviet-Romanian companies that allowed the Soviet Union to control Romania's major sources of income.<ref name="Zwass">{{cite book|last=Zwass|first=Adam|title=From Failed Communism to Underdeveloped Capitalism: Transformation of Eastern Europe, the Post-Soviet Union, and China|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|year=1995|isbn=1563244616}}{{Page needed|date=January 2011}}</ref> Another drain was the ] paid to the Soviet Union. However, during the 1950s, Romania's communist government began to assert more independence, leading to, for example, the withdrawal of all Soviet troops from Romania by 1958.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ucis.pitt.edu/nceeer/1989-803-01-Verona.pdf |title=Final report |date= December 1989|website=www.ucis.pitt.edu}}</ref> Overall, from the 1950s to the 1970s, the country exhibited high rates of economic growth and significant improvements in infant mortality, life expectancy, literacy, urbanization, and women's rights, but then stagnated in the 1980s.<ref name="CBan"/> | |||
During the early years, Romania's scarce resources after WWII were drained by the "]" agreements: mixed Soviet-Romanian companies established in the aftermath of World War II to mask the looting of Romania by the Soviet Union, in addition to excessive war reparations paid to the USSR. A large number of people were executed or died in custody; estimates vary from 137,<ref> Balazs Szalontai, , Association for Asian Research, ], ]</ref> | |||
to tens of thousands,<ref name="judt">], '']'', ], 2005. ISBN 1-59420-065-3. "In addition to well over a million in detainees in prison, labor camps, and slave labor on the ], of whom tens of thousands died and whose numbers don't include those ], Romania was remarkable for the severity of its prison conditions".</ref> to hundreds of thousands.<ref name="cioroianu">], ''Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc'', ], Bucharest, 2005. ISBN 9736691756. During debates over the overall number of victims of the Communist regime between 1947 and 1964, ] spoke of 282,000 arrests and 190,000 deaths in custody.</ref><ref name="caraza">Grigore Caraza, , | |||
Bucharest: Editura Vremea XXI, 2004. ISBN 973-645-050-3. The text says: "This is how hundreds of thousands of people were killed in the terrible communist prisons"; in the prison of Aiud alone there were 625 political prisoners who were starved to death from 1945 to 1964 </ref><ref name="applebaum">], ''Gulag: A History'', Doubleday, April, 2003. ISBN 0-7679-0056-1. The author gives an estimate of 200,000 dead at the Danube-Black Sea Canal alone.</ref> Many more were imprisoned for political, economical or other reasons. There were a large number of abuses, deaths and incidents of torture against a large range of people, but mainly political opponents.<ref name="caraza"/> | |||
In the |
In the 1960s and 1970s, ] became General Secretary of the Communist Party (1965), Chairman of the State Council (1967), and the newly established role of ] in 1974. Ceaușescu's denunciation of the 1968 ] and a ] led to a positive image both at home and in the West. However, rapid economic growth fueled in part by foreign credits gradually gave way to an ] and ] that led to ] of his ] government in ].<ref name=Horga>{{Cite SSRN |last1=Horga |last2=Stoica |first1=Ioan |first2=Alina |date=2012 |title=Totalitarianism in Europe. Case Study: Romania between Left-Wing and Right-Wing Dictatorships (1938-1989) |ssrn=2226915}}</ref><ref name=Thompson>{{cite journal |last1=Thompson |first1=M.R. |date=2010 |title=Totalitarian and Post-Totalitarian Regimes in Transitions and Non-Transitions from Communism |journal=Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions |volume=3 |pages=79–106 |doi=10.1080/714005469 |s2cid=145789019}}</ref><ref name=Dirdala>{{Cite report |last1=Dîrdală |first1=Lucian-Dumitru |date=2011 |title=The End of the Ceaușescu Regime – A Theoretical Convergence |url=http://www.umk.ro/images/documente/publicatii/Buletin20/the_end.pdf |access-date=21 May 2019}}</ref> | ||
Many people were executed or died in custody during communist Romania's existence, most during the Stalinist era of the 1950s. While judicial executions between 1945 and 1964 numbered 137,<ref>Balázs Szalontai, The Dynamics of Repression: The Global Impact of the Stalinist Model, 1944–1953. ''Russian History/{{lang|fr|Histoire Russe}}'' Vol. 29, Issue 2–4 (2003), pp. 415–442.</ref> deaths in custody are estimated in the tens or hundreds of thousands.<ref name="judt">], '']'', ], 2005. {{ISBN|1-59420-065-3}}. "In addition to well over a million in detainees in prison, labor camps, and slave labor on the ], of whom tens of thousands died and whose numbers don't include those ], Romania was remarkable for the severity of its prison conditions."</ref><ref name="cioroianu">{{cite book |first=Adrian |last=Cioroianu |author-link=Adrian Cioroianu |title=Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc |publisher=] |location=Bucharest |date=2005 |isbn=978-973-669-175-1 |mode=cs2}}. During debates over the overall number of victims of the Communist government between 1947 and 1964, ] spoke of 282,000 arrests and 190,000 deaths in custody.</ref><ref name="applebaum">], ''Gulag: A History'', Doubleday, April, 2003. {{ISBN|0-7679-0056-1}}. The author gives an estimate of 200,000 dead at the Danube-Black Sea Canal alone.</ref> Others were arrested for political, economical, or other reasons and suffered imprisonment or torture. | |||
== Rise of the Communists == | |||
The ] remained in effect after its dissolution and was amended to reflect Romania's transition to democracy. It was replaced by the ] on 8 December 1991, after a ] abolished the socialist system of government completely and replaced it with a ]. | |||
== History == | |||
{{Eastern Bloc sidebar| Allied states}} | |||
===Soviet occupation and rise of the Communists=== | |||
{{main|Soviet occupation of Romania}} | {{main|Soviet occupation of Romania}} | ||
] | |||
When ] supported by the main political parties overthrew ] in August 1944, breaking Romania away from the ] and bringing it over to the ] side, Michael could do nothing to erase the memory of his country's recent active participation in the ]. Although Romanian forces fought heroically under Soviet command, driving through Northern ] into ] proper, and on into ], Austria and ], the Soviets still treated Romania as conquered territory,{{Fact|date=July 2007}} under the pretext that Romanian authorities were unable to ensure order in the newly-liberated territories, and that clashes between Romanian and Hungarian nationalists had erupted. | |||
When ], supported by the main political parties, overthrew ] in August 1944, breaking Romania away from the ] and bringing it over to the ] side, Michael could do nothing to erase the memory of his country's recent active participation in the ]. Romanian forces fought under Soviet command, driving through Northern ] into Hungary proper, and on into ] and Austria. However, the Soviets treated Romania as a conquered territory,<ref>Romulus Rusan (dir.), in ''Du passé faisons table rase ! Histoire et mémoire du communisme en Europe'', Robert Laffont, Paris, 2002, p. 376–377</ref> and Soviet troops continued to occupy the country on the basis of the Romanians having been active Nazi allies with a fascist government until very recently.{{citation needed|date=September 2020}} | |||
The ] had granted the Soviet Union a predominant interest in Romania |
The ] had granted the Soviet Union a predominant interest in Romania. The ] did not acknowledge Romania as an ], as the Romanian army had fought hard against the Soviets for the better part of the war, changing sides only when the tides started to turn. The Communists, as all political parties, played only a minor role in King Michael's first wartime government, headed by General ], though their presence increased in the one led by ]. This changed in March 1945, when Dr. ] of the ], a party closely associated with the Communists, became prime minister. His government was broad-based on paper, including members of most major prewar parties except the fascist ]. However, the Communists held the key ministries, and most of the ministers nominally representing non-Communist parties were, like Groza himself, ]s. | ||
The |
The King was not happy with the direction of this government, but when he attempted to force Groza's resignation by refusing to sign any legislation (a move known as "the royal strike"), Groza simply chose to enact laws without bothering to obtain Michael's signature. On 8 November 1945, King Michael's ], a pro-monarchy demonstration in front of the ] in ] escalated into street fights between opposition supporters and soldiers, police and pro-government workers, resulting in dozens of killed and wounded; Soviet officers restrained Romanian soldiers and police from firing on civilians, and Soviet troops restored order.<ref name="Stone">{{Cite journal |doi = 10.1080/09592290500533775|title = The 1945 Ethridge Mission to Bulgaria and Romania and the Origins of the Cold War in the Balkans|journal = Diplomacy & Statecraft|volume = 17|pages = 93–112|year = 2006|author1-link=David R. Stone|last1 = Stone|first1 = David R.|s2cid = 155033071}}</ref> | ||
Despite the |
Despite the King's disapproval, the ] brought ] and women's ], the former gave the party widespread popularity among peasants from the South and East while the latter gained it the support of educated women. However, it also brought the beginnings of Soviet domination of Romania. In the ], the Communist-led Bloc of Democratic Parties (BPD) claimed 84% of the votes. These elections were characterized by widespread irregularities, including intimidation, electoral fraud, and assassinations<!--ref>Giurescu, "«Alegeri» după model sovietic", p.17 (citing Berry), 18 (citing Berry and note); Macuc, p.40; Tismăneanu, p.113</ref><ref name="Giurescu p.18">Giurescu, "«Alegeri» după model sovietic", p.18</ref--><ref>Rădulescu-Motru, in Cioroianu, p.65</ref> Archives confirm suspicions at the time that the election results were, in fact, falsified.<ref>Frucht, R. ''Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture, Volume 1'', p. 759. ABC-CLIO (2005).<!--ISSN/ISBN needed--></ref> | ||
After forming a government, the Communists moved to eliminate the role of the ] parties; notably, the ] was accused of espionage after it became clear in 1947 that their leaders were meeting secretly with United States officials. A ] of their leadership was then arranged, and they were put in jail. Other parties were forced to "merge" with the Communists. In 1946 and 1947, several high-ranking members in the pro-] government were executed as war criminals, primarily for their involvement in ] and for attacking the Soviet Union. Antonescu himself was executed 1 June 1946.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} | |||
In 1946–7, hundreds of participants in the pro-Axis regime were executed as "war criminals." Antonescu himself was executed ], ]. By 1948, most non-Communist politicians were either executed, in exile or in prison. | |||
By 1947, Romania remained the only monarchy in the ]. On 30 December that year, Michael was at his ] when Groza and ] summoned him back to Bucharest. They presented him with a pretyped instrument of abdication and demanded that he sign it. With pro-Communist troops surrounding his palace and his telephone lines cut, Michael was forced to sign the document. Hours later, ] abolished the monarchy and proclaimed Romania a ]. In February 1948, the Communists merged with the Social Democrats to form the ]. However, most independent-minded Socialists were soon pushed out. Meanwhile, many non-Communist politicians had either been imprisoned or fled into exile.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} | |||
By 1947, Romania remained the only monarchy from the ]. On ], ], the Communists forced King Michael to ]. The Communists declared a ], formalized with the constitution of ], ]. | |||
The new constitution |
The communist regime was formalized with the ]. The new constitution was a near-copy of the ]. While it guaranteed all manner of freedoms on paper, any association which had a "fascist or anti-democratic nature" was forbidden. This provision was broadly interpreted to ban any party not willing to do the Communists' bidding, and gave a legal façade to political repression. | ||
Although the 1948 Constitution and its two successors provided a simulacrum of religious freedom, the regime in fact had a policy of promoting ], coupled with ]. The role of religious bodies was strictly limited to their houses of worship, and large public demonstrations were strictly forbidden. In 1948, in order to minimize the role of the clergy in society, the government adopted a decree nationalizing church property, including schools.<ref>Marian Chiriac, ''Provocările diversității: politici publice privind minoritățile naționale și religioase în România'', p. 111. Bucharest: Centrul de Resurse pentru Diversitate Etnoculturală, 2005, {{ISBN|978-9738-623-97-2}}</ref> The regime found wiser to use religion and make it subservient to the regime rather than to eradicate it.<ref name="StanTurcescu2007">{{cite book|author1=Lavinia Stan|author2=Lucian Turcescu|title=Religion and Politics in Post-Communist Romania|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=15YRDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA46|date=25 October 2007|publisher=Oxford University Press, USA|isbn=978-0-19-530853-2|pages=46–49}}</ref> The communist government also disbanded the ], declaring its merger with the ].<ref>''Ageing, Ritual and Social Change: Comparing the Secular and Religious in Eastern and Western Europe''; Ashgate AHRC/ESRC Religion and Society Series; Daniela Koleva; Peter Coleman; ], 2016; Pgs. 6–7; "The Romanian Orthodox Church by contrast has shown a much stronger development since the Second World War. After the initial waves of militant atheism were spent, a strong spiritual renewal movement took place in the late 1950s, and there has been a stream of notable spiritual figures both before and after communism. ... There was also a lack of consistent suppression of the Romanian Orthodox church by communist authorities. A large number of churches were left open, and monasteries continued to function."</ref> | |||
The Communist government also disbanded the ], declaring its merge with the ]. | |||
===Romanian People's Republic=== | |||
== Early years of the communist state == | |||
] | |||
The early years of Communist rule in Romania were marked by repeated changes of course and by numerous arrests and imprisonments, as factions contended for dominance. The country's resources were also drained by the Soviet's ] agreements, which facilitated shipping of Romanian goods to the Soviet Union at nominal prices. In all ministries, there were Soviet "advisers", who reported directly to Moscow and held the real decision-making powers. All walks of life were infiltrated by agents and informers of the secret police. | |||
====Early years==== | |||
In 1948 the earlier agrarian reform was reversed, replaced by a move toward ]. This resulted in forced "collectivization", since wealthier peasants generally did not want to give up their land voluntarily, and had to be "convinced" by beatings, intimidation, arrests and deportations. | |||
] | |||
The early years of communist rule in Romania were marked by repeated changes of course and by numerous arrests and imprisonments as factions contended for dominance. The country's resources were also drained by the Soviet's ] agreements, which facilitated shipping of Romanian goods to the Soviet Union at nominal prices. | |||
On ], ], all banks and large businesses were nationalized. | |||
On 11 June 1948, all banks and large businesses were ]. | |||
In the communist leadership, there appear to have been three important factions, all of them ], differentiated more by their respective personal histories than by any deep political or philosophical differences: | |||
In the communist leadership, there appear to have been three important factions, all of them ], differentiated more by their respective personal histories than by any deep political or philosophical differences. Later historiography claimed to identify the following factions: the "Muscovites", notably ] and ], who had spent the war in Moscow and the "Prison Communists", notably ], who had been imprisoned during the war. | |||
# The "Muscovites," notably ] and ], had spent the war in Moscow. | |||
# The "Prison Communists," notably ], had been imprisoned during the war. | |||
# The somewhat less firmly Stalinist "Secretariat Communists," notably ] had made it through the Antonescu years by hiding within Romania and had participated in the broad governments immediately after ]. | |||
Pauker and her allies were accused of deviating to the left and right. For instance, they were initially allied on not liquidating the rural bourgeoise, but later shifted their position. Ultimately, with ]'s backing, Gheorghiu-Dej won out. Pauker was purged from the party (along with 192,000 other party members); ] was executed after a ]. | |||
== |
====Gheorghiu-Dej era==== | ||
{{see also|De-satellization of the Socialist Republic of Romania}} | |||
], a firm Stalinist, was not pleased with the reforms in ]'s Soviet Union after Stalin's death in 1953. He also blanched at ]'s goal of turning Romania into the "breadbasket" of the East Bloc, pursuing a program of the development of heavy industry. He also closed Romania's largest labor camps, abandoned the Danube–Black Sea Canal project, halted rationing, and hiked workers' wages. | |||
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2019}} | |||
] speaking at a workers' rally in ] after the ]]] | |||
], a committed Stalinist, was unhappy with the reforms in ]'s Soviet Union after Stalin's death in 1953. He also balked at ]'s goal of turning Romania into the "breadbasket" of the East Bloc, pursuing an economic plan based on ] and energy production. The government closed Romania's largest labor camps, abandoned the ] project, halted rationing and hiked workers' wages. These factors combined to put Romania under Gheorghiu-Dej on a relatively independent and nationalist route. | |||
Gheorghiu-Dej identified with ], and the more liberal Soviet |
Gheorghiu-Dej identified with ], and the more liberal Soviet government threatened to undermine his authority. In an effort to reinforce his position, Gheorghiu-Dej pledged cooperation with any state, regardless of political-economic system, as long as it recognized international equality and did not interfere in other nations' domestic affairs. This policy led to a tightening of Romania's bonds with China, which also advocated national self-determination and opposed Soviet hegemonism. | ||
Gheorghiu-Dej resigned as the party's general secretary in 1954 but retained the premiership; a four-member collective secretariat, including ], controlled the party for a year before Gheorghiu-Dej again took up the reins. Despite its new policy of international cooperation, Romania joined the Warsaw Treaty Organization (]) in 1955, which entailed subordinating and integrating a portion of its military into the Soviet military machine. Romania later refused to allow Warsaw Pact maneuvers on its soil and limited its participation in military maneuvers elsewhere within the alliance. | |||
In 1956 the Soviet premier, ], denounced |
In 1956, the Soviet premier, ], denounced Stalin in a ] before the Twentieth Congress of the ] (CPSU). Gheorghiu-Dej and the leadership of the ] (''Partidul Muncitoresc Român, PMR'') were fully braced to weather de-Stalinization. Gheorghiu-Dej made Pauker, Luca and Georgescu scapegoats for the Romanian communist past excesses and claimed that the Romanian party had purged its Stalinist elements even before Stalin died in 1953. In all likelihood, Gheorghiu-Dej himself ordered the violence and coercion in the collectivization movements, since he did not rebuke those who perpetuated abuses. In fact, Pauker reprimanded any cadre who forced peasants, and once she was purged, the violence reappeared. | ||
In October 1956, |
In October 1956, Poland's communist leaders refused to succumb to Soviet military threats to intervene in domestic political affairs and install a more obedient ]. A few weeks later, the Communist Party in Hungary virtually disintegrated during a popular revolution. Poland's ] and Hungary's popular uprising inspired Romanian students to organize meetings in București, Cluj and Timișoara calling for liberty, better living conditions, and an end to Soviet domination. Under the pretext that the Hungarian uprising might incite his nation's own revolt, Gheorghiu-Dej took radical measures which meant persecutions and jailing of various "suspects", especially people of Hungarian origin. He also advocated swift Soviet intervention, and the Soviet Union reinforced its military presence in Romania, particularly along the Hungarian border. Although Romania's unrest proved fragmentary and controllable, Hungary's was not, so in November Moscow mounted a ] of Hungary. | ||
After the Revolution of 1956, Gheorghiu-Dej worked closely with Hungary's new leader, ] |
After the Revolution of 1956, Gheorghiu-Dej worked closely with Hungary's new leader, ], who was installed by the Soviet Union. Romania took Hungary's former premier (leader of the 1956 revolution) ] into custody. He was jailed at Snagov, north of Bucharest. After a series of interrogations by Soviets and Romanian authorities, Nagy was returned to ] for trial and execution. | ||
Romania's government also took measures to reduce public discontent by reducing investments in heavy industry, boosting output of consumer goods, decentralizing economic management, hiking wages and incentives, and instituting elements of worker management. The authorities eliminated compulsory deliveries for private farmers but reaccelerated the collectivization program in the mid-1950s, albeit less brutally than earlier. The government declared collectivization complete in 1962, when collective and state farms controlled 77% of the ]. | |||
In Transylvania, for their part, the Romanian authorities merged ] and ] universities at ] and consolidated middle schools. | |||
Despite Gheorghiu-Dej's claim that he had purged the Romanian party of Stalinists, he remained susceptible to attack for his obvious complicity in the party's activities from 1944 to 1953. At a plenary PMR meeting in March 1956, ] and ], both ] members and deputy premiers, criticized Gheorghiu-Dej. Constantinescu, who advocated a Khrushchev-style liberalization, posed a particular threat to Gheorghiu-Dej because he enjoyed good connections with the Moscow leadership. The PMR purged Constantinescu and Chișinevschi in 1957, denouncing both as Stalinists and charging them with complicity with Pauker. Afterwards, Gheorghiu-Dej faced no serious challenge to his leadership. Ceaușescu replaced Constantinescu as head of PMR cadres. | |||
Romania's government also took measures to allay domestic discontent by reducing investments in heavy industry, boosting output of consumer goods, decentralizing economic management, hiking wages and incentives, and instituting elements of worker management. The authorities eliminated compulsory deliveries for private farmers but reaccelerated the collectivization program in the mid-1950s, albeit less brutally than earlier. The government declared collectivization complete in 1962, when collective and state farms controlled 77% of the ] land. | |||
The cadres – anyone who was not a rank-and-file member of the Communist Party – were deemed the Party's vanguard, as they were entrusted with the power to construct a new social order and the forms of power that would sustain it. They still underwent extensive surveillance, which created an environment of competition and rivalry. | |||
Despite Gheorghiu-Dej's claim that he had purged the Romanian party of Stalinists, he remained susceptible to attack for his obvious complicity in the party's activities from 1944 to 1953. At a plenary PMR meeting in March 1956, ] and ], both ] members and deputy premiers, criticized Gheorghiu-Dej. Constantinescu, who advocated a Khrushchev-style liberalization, posed a particular threat to Gheorghiu-Dej because he enjoyed good connections with the Moscow leadership. The PMR purged Constantinescu and Chişinevschi in 1957, denouncing both as Stalinists and charging them with complicity with Pauker. Afterwards, Gheorghiu-Dej faced no serious challenge to his leadership. Ceauşescu replaced Constantinescu as head of PMR cadres. | |||
====Persecution, the labour camp system and anti-communist resistance==== | |||
Gheorghiu-Dej never reached a truly mutually acceptable accommodation with ] over ]. (The same could be said of all leaders of the two nations as long as they have had identities as nations.) Gheorghiu-Dej took a two-pronged approach to the problem, arresting the leaders of the Hungarian People's Alliance, but establishing an ] in the ] land. This erected an ultimately meaningless façade of concern for minority rights. | |||
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2019}} | |||
{{main|Romanian anti-communist resistance movement|Bărăgan deportations|Pitești Prison}} | |||
] | |||
{{History of Romania| expanded= Socialist Republic of Romania}} | |||
Once the Communist government became more entrenched, the number of arrests increased. The General Directorate of People's Security, or ']', was established in 1948 with the stated aim "to defend the democratic conquest and to ensure the security of the Romanian People’s Republic against the plotting of internal and external enemies".<ref name=ref>{{cite news|url=https://communistcrimes.org/en/countries/romania |title=Communist Dictatorship in Romania (1947-1989)|work=Communist Crimes|access-date=21 August 2015}}</ref> | |||
Most Romanian Jews initially favored Communism, in reaction to the anti-Semitism of the Fascists. | |||
However, by the 1950s, most were disappointed with the increasing discrimination of the Party and the limitations for ]. | |||
All strata of society were involved, but particularly targeted were the prewar elites, such as intellectuals, clerics, teachers, former politicians (even if they had left-leaning views), and anybody who could potentially form the nucleus of anti-Communist resistance. According to figures, in the years between 1945 and 1964, 73,334 people were arrested.<ref name=ref/> | |||
== Persecution, the labor camp system and anti-communist resistance == | |||
The existing prisons were filled with political prisoners, and a new system of forced labor camps and prisons was created, modeled after the Soviet Gulag. A decision to put into practice the century-old project for a ] served as a pretext for the erection of several labor camps, where numerous people died. Some of the most notorious prisons included ], ], ], and ], and forced labor camps were set up at lead mines and in the ]. | |||
{{main|Romanian anti-communist resistance movement|Bărăgan deportations|Piteşti prison}} | |||
Harsh persecutions of any real or imagined enemies of the communist regime started with the Soviet occupation in 1945. The Soviet army behaved as an occupation force (although theoretically it was an ally against Nazi Germany), and could arrest virtually anyone at will, for perceived "fascist" or "anti-Soviet" activities. The occupation period was marked by frequent rapes, looting and brutality against the civilian population.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} | |||
One of the most notorious and infamous brainwashing experiments in Eastern Europe's history took place in Romania, in the political prison of Pitești, a small city about {{cvt|120|km}} northwest of Bucharest. This prison is still infamous in Romania for the so-called 'Pitești experiment' or Pitești phenomenon, conducted there between 1949 and 1952. The ] and the Pitești experiment aimed to 'reeducate' the (real or imagined) opponents of the regime. It involved psychological and physical torture of prisoners, and the submission of them to humiliating, degrading and dehumanizing acts. Tens of people died in this 'experiment', but its aim was not to kill the people, but to 'reeducate' them. Some of those who were thus 'reeducated' later became torturers themselves. Of those who survived Pitești, many either took their own lives or ended up in mental institutions.<ref>{{cite web|first1=Elena|last1=Dragomir|first2=Mircea|last2=Stănescu|title=The Media vs. Historical Accuracy. How Romania's Current Communist Trials Are Being Misrepresented|url=http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2015/01/11/the-media-vs-historical-accuracy-how-romanias-current-communist-trials-are-being-misrepresented/|website=Balkan Analysis|date=11 January 2015|access-date=16 March 2015|archive-date=12 September 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170912043544/http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2015/01/11/the-media-vs-historical-accuracy-how-romanias-current-communist-trials-are-being-misrepresented/|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
Shortly after Soviet occupation, ethnic Germans (who were Romanian citizens and had been living as a community in Romania for 800 years) were deported to the Donbas coal mines (see ]). Despite the King's protest, who pointed out that this was against international law, an estimated 70,000 men and women were forced to leave their homes, starting in January 1945, before the war had even ended. They were loaded in cattle cars and put to work in the Soviet mines for up to 10 years as "reparations", where about one in five died from disease, accidents and malnutrition. | |||
The Communist government also decided on the ] from the ] (south-west from Transylvania, at the border with Yugoslavia), started on 18 June 1951. About 45,000 people were forcibly "resettled" in lesser populated regions on the eastern plains (]). The government decision was directed towards creating a '']'' against ]'s ], but was also used as an intimidation tactic to force the remaining peasants to join collective farms. Most deportees lived in the Bărăgan for 5 years (until 1956), but some remained there permanently. | |||
Once the communist regime became more entrenched, the number of arrests went up. All strata of society were involved, but particularly targeted were the pre-war elites, such as intellectuals, clerics, teachers, former politicians (even if they had left-leaning views) and anybody who could potentially form the nucleus of anti-communist resistance. | |||
Anti-communist resistance also had an organized form, and many people opposing the government took up arms and formed partisan groups, comprising 10–40 people. There were attacks on police posts and sabotage. Some of the famous partisans were ] from ] and ]. Despite the numerous secret police ('']'') and army troops massed against them, armed resistance in the mountains continued until the early 1960s, and one of the best known partisan leaders was not captured until 1974. | |||
The existing prisons were filled with political prisoners, and a new system of forced labor camps and prisons was created, modeled after the Soviet Gulag. A futile project to dig the ] served as a pretext for the erection of several labor camps, where numerous people died. Some of the most notorious prisons included ], ], ] and ], and forced labor camps were set up at lead mines and in the ] as well. | |||
Another form of anti-communist resistance, non-violent this time, was the ]. In reaction to the anti-communist revolt in Hungary, echoes were felt all over the Eastern bloc. Protests took place in some university centers resulting in numerous arrests and expulsions. The most-organised student movement was in ], where 3000 were arrested.<ref>"", ''România liberă'', 25 October 2007.</ref> In Bucharest and Cluj, organised groups were set up which tried to make common cause with the anti-communist movement in Hungary and coordinate activity. The authorities' reaction was immediate – students were arrested or suspended from their courses, some teachers were dismissed, and new associations were set up to supervise student activities. | |||
The prison in ] was the epicenter of a particularly vicious communist "experiment" during this era (''see ]''). It involved both psychological and physical torture, resulting in the total breakdown of the individual. The ultimate aim was to force prisoners to "confess" to imaginary crimes or "denounce" themselves and others, therefore prolonging their prison sentences. This "experiment" resulted in numerous suicides inside the prison and was ultimately stopped. | |||
Tens of thousands of people were killed as part of repression and ] in Communist Romania primarily under Gheorghiu-Dej.<ref>Valentino, Benjamin A (2005). Final solutions: mass killing and genocide in the twentieth century. Cornell University Press. pp. 91–151.</ref><ref>Rummel, Rudolph, Statistics of Democide, 1997.</ref> | |||
The stalinist measures of the Communist government included deportation of peasants from the ] (south-east Transylvania, at the border with Yugoslavia), started on June 18, 1951. About 45,000 people were given two hours to collect their belongings, loaded up in cattle cars under armed guard, and were then forcibly "resettled" in barren spots on the eastern plains (]). This was meant as an intimidation tactic to force the remaining peasants to join collective farms. Most deportees lived in the Bărăgan for 5 years (until 1956), but some remained there permanently. | |||
===Ceaușescu government=== | |||
Anti-communist resistance also had an organized form, and many people opposing the regime took up arms and formed partisan groups, comprising 10-40 people. There were attacks on police posts and sabotage. Some of the famous partisans were ] from ] and ]. Despite a large number of secret police ('']'') and army troops massed against them, armed resistance in the mountains continued until the early 1960s, and one of the best known partisan leaders was not captured until 1974. | |||
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2019}} | |||
], Leader of Romania from 1965 to 1989]] | |||
] died in 1965 and, after a power struggle, was succeeded by the previously obscure ]. During his last two years, Gheorghiu-Dej had exploited the Soviet–Chinese dispute and begun to oppose the ] of the Soviet Union. Ceaușescu, supported by colleagues of Gheorghiu-Dej such as Maurer, continued this popular line. Relations with Western countries and many other states began to be strengthened in what seemed to be the national interest of Romania. Under a policy of ] the forced Soviet (mostly Russian) cultural influence in the country which characterized the 1950s was stopped and Western media were allowed to circulate in Romania instead.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=oIZkAAAAIBAJ&pg=710,2798537 |title=Henry Shapiro, "Red Cultural Influence Vanishing in Romania", United Press International published in the Wilmington (N.C.) ''Star-News'', July 16, 1965 |date=1965-07-17 |access-date=2013-05-16}}</ref> | |||
====First years==== | |||
Another form of anti-communist resistance, non-violent this time, was the ]. In reaction to the anti-communist revolt in Hungary, echoes were felt all over the Eastern bloc. Protests took place in some university centers resulting in numerous arrests and expulsions. The most organized student movement was in ], where 300 were arrested.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} In Bucharest and Cluj, organized groups were set up which tried to make common cause with the anti-communist movement in Hungary and coordinate activity. The authorities' reaction was immediate - students were arrested or suspended from their courses, some teachers were dismissed, and new associations were set up to supervise student activities. | |||
{{multiple image | direction= vertical|footer=Administrative division of Romania 1950–52 (top) and 1960–68 (bottom)|width=180 |image1=Administrative map of Romania, 1950-1952.svg |image2=Administrative map of Romania, 1960-1968.svg}} | |||
On 21 August 1965, following the example of Czechoslovakia, the name of the country was changed to "Socialist Republic of Romania" (''Republica Socialistă România, RSR'') and PMR's old name was restored (''Partidul Comunist Român, PCR''; "Romanian Communist Party"). | |||
In his early years in power, Ceaușescu was genuinely popular, both at home and abroad. Agricultural goods were abundant, consumer goods began to reappear, there was a cultural thaw, and, what was important abroad, he spoke out against the ] While his reputation at home soon soured, he continued to have uncommonly good relations with Western governments and with international capitalist institutions such as the ] and ] because of his independent political line. Romania under Ceaușescu maintained and sometimes improved diplomatic and other relations with, among others, ], Israel, China, ], and ]'s ], all for various reasons not on good terms with Moscow. | |||
== The Ceauşescu regime ==<!-- This section is linked from ] --> | |||
] (1965–89)]] | |||
Gheorghiu-Dej died in 1965 in unclear circumstances (his death apparently occurred when he was in Moscow for medical treatment) and, after the inevitable power struggle, was succeeded by the previously obscure ]. Where Gheorghiu-Dej had hewed to a Stalinist line while the Soviet Union was in a reformist period, Ceauşescu initially appeared to be a reformist, precisely as the Soviet Union was headed into its ] era under ]. | |||
Ceaușescu refused to implement measures of ]. The evolution of his regime followed the path begun by Gheorghiu-Dej. He continued with the program of intensive ] aimed at the ] of the country which since 1959 had already doubled industrial production and had reduced the peasant population from 78% at the end of the 1940s to 61% in 1966 and 49% by 1971. However, for Romania, like other Eastern People's Republics, industrialization did not mean a total social break with the countryside. The peasants returned periodically to the villages or resided in them, commuting daily to the city in a practice called naveta. This allowed Romanians to act as peasants and workers at the same time.<ref name=":Ferrero">The contradictions between domestic and foreign policies in the Cold War Romania (1956-1975), Ferrero, M.D, 2006, Historia Actual Online</ref> | |||
In 1965 the name of the country was changed to Republica Socialistă România (The Socialist Republic of Romania) — RSR — and PMR was renamed once again to Partidul Communist Român — The Romanian Communist Party (PCR). | |||
Universities were also founded in small Romanian towns, which served to train qualified professionals, such as engineers, economists, planners or jurists, necessary for the industrialization and development project of the country. Romanian healthcare also achieved improvements and recognition by the ] (WHO). In May 1969, Marcolino Candau, Director General of this organization, visited Romania and declared that the visits of WHO staff to various Romanian hospital establishments had made an extraordinarily good impression.<ref name=":Ferrero" /> | |||
In his early years in power, Ceauşescu was genuinely popular, both at home and abroad. Agricultural goods were abundant, consumer goods began to reappear, there was a cultural thaw, and, most importantly abroad, he spoke out against the 1968 Soviet invasion of ]. While his reputation at home soon paled, he continued to have uncommonly good relations with western governments and with institutions such as the ] and ] because of his independent political line. Romania under Ceauşescu maintained diplomatic relations with, among others, ], ], ], and ], all for various reasons on the outs with Moscow. | |||
The social and economic transformations resulted in improved living conditions for Romanians. Economic growth allowed for higher salaries which, combined with the benefits offered by the state (free medical care, pensions, free universal education at all levels, etc.) were a leap compared to the pre-WWII situation of the Romanian population. Certain extra retributions were allowed for the peasants, who started to produce more.<ref name=":Ferrero" /> | |||
The period of freedom and apparent prosperity was to be short-lived. Even at the start, reproductive freedom was severely restricted. Wishing to increase the birth rate, in 1966, Ceauşescu promulgated a law restricting ] and ]: only women over the age of 40 or who already had at least four children were eligible for either; in 1972 this became women over the age of 45 or who already had at least five children. | |||
====Human rights issues==== | |||
Other abuses of human rights were typical of a Stalinist regime: a massive force of secret police (the "]"), censorship, relocations, but not on the same scale as in the 1950s. | |||
], is the most prominent feature of these graphs.]] | |||
Concerned about the country's low birthrates, Nicolae Ceaușescu enacted an aggressive ] policy, which included outlawing abortion and contraception, routine pregnancy tests for women, ], and legal discrimination against childless people. This period has later been depicted in movies and documentaries (such as '']'', ''Children of the Decree''). To counter the sharp decline of the population, the ] decided that the Romanian population should be increased from 23 to 30 million inhabitants. In October 1966,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.legex.ro/Decretul-770-1966-363.aspx|title=Decretul 770/1966 – Legislatie gratuita|website=www.legex.ro}}</ref> ] was authorized by Ceaușescu. | |||
These pro-natalist measures had some degree of success, as a baby boom resulted in the late 1960s, with the generations born in 1967 and 1968 being the largest in the country's history. The natalist policies temporarily increased birth rates for a few years, but this was followed by a later decline due to an increased use of ].<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1093/humupd/dmq023 |pmid=20603286 |title=Europe the continent with the lowest fertility |journal=Human Reproduction Update |volume=16 |issue=6 |pages=590–602 |year=2010 |author1=ESHRE Capri Workshop Group |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1136/jfprhc-2012-100498 |pmid=23296845 |title=The remarkable story of Romanian women's struggle to manage their fertility |journal=Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care |volume=39 |issue=1 |pages=2–4 |year=2013 |last1=Horga |first1=Mihai |last2=Gerdts |first2=Caitlin |last3=Potts |first3=Malcolm |doi-access=free }}</ref> Ceaușescu's policy resulted in the deaths of over 9,000 women due to illegal abortions,<ref name="Kligman short">Kligman, Gail. "Political Demography: The Banning of Abortion in Ceausescu's Romania". In Ginsburg, Faye D.; Rapp, Rayna, eds. ''Conceiving the New World Order: The Global Politics of Reproduction.'' Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1995 :234–255. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE KIE/49442.</ref> large numbers of children put into ] by parents who couldn't cope with raising them, ] in the 1990s (when many orphanages were closed and the children ended up on the streets), and ] in homes and schools. | |||
During the Ceauşescu era, there was a secret ongoing "trade" between Romania on one side and Israel and West Germany on the other side, under which Israel and West Germany paid money to Romania to allow Romanian citizens with certified Jewish or Saxon ancestry to emigrate to Israel and West Germany, respectively. | |||
Other restrictions of human rights included invasion of privacy by the secret police (the "]"), censorship and relocation, but not on the same scale as in the 1950s. | |||
Ceauşescu's Romania continued to pursue Gheorghiu-Dej's policy of industrialization, but still produced few goods of a quality suitable for the world market. Also, after a visit to ], Ceauşescu developed a megalomaniacal vision of completely remaking the country; this became known as ]. A large portion of the capital, ], was torn down to make way for the ] (now House of Parliament) complex and ] (Civic Center), but the ] left much of the huge complex unfinished, such as a new National Library and the National Museum of History. During the huge demolitions in the 1980s, this area was popularly called "]" - a bitter satirical allusion of Ceauşescu and ]<ref>Lonely Planet, , accessed on October 18, 2006</ref>. Currently it is being redeveloped as a commercial area known as Esplanada. | |||
During the Ceaușescu era, there was a secret ongoing "trade" between Romania on one side and Israel and West Germany on the other side, under which Israel and West Germany paid money to Romania to allow Romanian citizens with certified Jewish or German ancestry to emigrate to Israel and West Germany, respectively. | |||
Prior to the mid-1970s, Bucharest, as most other cities, was developed by expanding the city, especially towards the south, east and west, by building high density dormitory neighbourhoods at the outskirts of the city, some (such as ]) of architectural and urban planning value. Conservation plans were made, especially during the 1960s and early 1970s, but all was halted, after Ceauşescu embarked on what is known as ''"Mica revoluţie culturală"'' ("The Small Cultural Revolution"), after visiting ] and the ] and then delivering a speech known as the ]. | |||
====Industrialization==== | |||
The ] shocked Bucharest, many buildings collapsed, and many others were weakened; this was the backdrop that led to a policy of large-scale demolition which affected monuments of historical significance or architectural masterpieces such as the monumental Vǎcǎreşti Monastery (1722), the "Sfânta Vineri" (1645) and "Enei" (1611) Churches, the Cotroceni (1679) and Pantelimon (1750) Monasteries, the ] "Republic's Stadium" (ANEF Stadium, 1926). Even the Palace of Justice — built by Romania's foremost architect, ], was scheduled for demolition in early 1990, according to the systematisation papers. Yet another tactic was abandoning and neglecting buildings and bringing them into such a state that they would require being torn down. | |||
] | |||
Ceaușescu's Romania continued to pursue Gheorghiu-Dej's policy of ]. Romania made progress with the economy. From 1951 to 1974, Romania's gross industrial output increased at an average annual rate of 13 percent.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Romania : a country study|url=https://www.loc.gov/item/90006449/|access-date=2021-01-25|website=Library of Congress}}</ref> Several branches of heavy industry were founded, including the machine-tool, tractor, and automotive industries; large-tonnage shipbuilding; the manufacture of electric diesel locomotives; and the electronics and petrochemical industries.{{Citation needed|date=December 2011}} | |||
Thus, the policy towards the city after the earthquake was not one of reconstruction, but one of demolition and building anew. Post-earthquake estimates commissioned by the office of the city's mayor judged that only 23 buildings were beyond repair, none of them of any historic value.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} An analysis by the Union of Architects, commissioned in 1990, claims that over 2000 buildings were torn down, with over 77 of very high architectural importance, most of them in good condition. Even Gara de Nord (the city's main train station), listed on the Romanian Architectural Heritage List, was scheduled to be torn down and replaced in early 1992. | |||
Prior to the mid-1970s, Bucharest, as most other cities, was developed by expanding the city, especially towards the south, east and west. High density residential neighbourhoods were built on the outskirts of the city, some (such as ], ], ] or ]) of architectural and urban planning value. Conservation plans were made, especially during the 1960s and early 1970s, but all were halted after Ceaușescu embarked on what is known as "The Small ]" ("Mica revoluție culturală"), after visiting ] and the ] and then delivering a speech known as the ]. In the late 1970s, the construction of the ] system was started. After two years, 10 km of network were already complete and after another 2 years, 9 km of tunnels were ready for use. By 17 August 1989, 49.01 km of the subway system and 34 stations were already in use. | |||
Despite all of this, and despite the appalling treatment of ]-infected ]s, the country continued to have a notably good system of schools and generally good medical care. Also, not every industrialization project was a failure: Ceauşescu left Romania with a reasonably effective system of power generation and transmission, gave Bucharest ], and left many cities with an increase in habitable apartment buildings. | |||
]]] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
The ] shocked Bucharest; many buildings collapsed, and many others were weakened. This was the backdrop that led to a policy of large-scale demolition which affected monuments of historical significance or architectural masterpieces such as the monumental Văcărești Monastery (1722), the "Sfânta Vineri" (1645) and "Enei" (1611) Churches, the Cotroceni (1679) and Pantelimon (1750) Monasteries, and the ] "Republic's Stadium" (ANEF Stadium, 1926). Even the Palace of Justice – built by Romania's foremost architect, ] – was scheduled for demolition in early 1990, according to the systematisation papers. Yet another tactic was abandoning and neglecting buildings and bringing them into such a state that they would require being torn down. | |||
In the 1980s, Ceauşescu became simultaneously obsessed with repaying Western loans and with building himself a ] of unprecedented proportions, along with an equally grandiose neighborhood, ], to accompany it. These led to a shortage of available goods for the average Romanian. By 1984, despite high crop yield and food production, food rationing was introduced on a wide scale (the government promoted it as "a means to reduce obesity" and "rational eating"). Bread, milk, butter, cooking oil, sugar, pork, beef, chicken, and in some places even potatoes were rationed in most of Romania by 1989, with rations being made smaller every year (by 1989, a person could legally buy only 10 eggs per month, half to one loaf of bread per day, depending on the place of residence, or 500 grams of any kind of meat{{Fact|date=February 2007}}). Most of what was available were export rejects, as most of the quality goods were exported, even underpriced, in order to obtain ], either to pay the debt, or to push forward in the ever-growing pursuits of heavy industrialisation. | |||
Thus, the policy towards the city after the earthquake was not one of reconstruction, but one of demolition and building anew. An analysis by the Union of Architects, commissioned in 1990, claims that over 2000 buildings were torn down, with over 77 of very high architectural importance, most of them in good condition. Even Gara de Nord (the city's main railway station), listed on the Romanian Architectural Heritage List, was scheduled to be torn down and replaced in early 1992. | |||
Romanians became accustomed to ''"tacâmuri de pui"'' (chicken wings, claws and so on), mixed cooking oil (mostly unrefined, dark, ] oil, of the poorest grade), "Bucureşti Salami" (consisting of soy, ], ] and pork lard), ] coffee (made of corn), oceanic fish and sardines as a meat replacement, and cheese mixed with starch or flour{{Fact|date=February 2007}}. Even these products were in very scarce supply, with queues whenever such products were available. All quality products, such as Sibiu and Victoria Salami, high- and mid-grade meats, and ] peaches were designated as "export-only", and were available to Romanians only on the thriving ]. | |||
Despite all of this, and despite the much-questioned treatment of HIV-infected ]s,<ref name="nytimes-children">{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/24/magazine/romania-s-lost-children-a-photo-essay-by-james-nachtwey.html | work=The New York Times | title=ROMANIA'S LOST CHILDREN: A Photo Essay by James Nachtwey | first=Kathleen | last=Hunt | date=24 June 1990 | access-date=30 April 2010}}</ref> the country continued to have a notably good system of schools. Also, not every industrialization project was a failure: Ceaușescu left Romania with a reasonably effective system of power generation and transmission, gave Bucharest ], and left many cities with an increase in habitable apartment buildings. | |||
By 1985, despite Romania's huge refining capacity, petrol was strictly rationed, with supplies drastically cut, a Sunday curfew was instated, and many buses and taxis converted to ] propulsion (they were mockingly named "bombs"). Electricity was rationed to divert supplies to heavy industry, with a maximum monthly allowed consumption of 20 ] per family (everything over this limit was heavily taxed), and very frequent ]s (generally 1–2 hours daily). Streetlights were generally kept off, and television was reduced to a 2 hours each day. | |||
====1980s: severe rationing==== | |||
Gas and heating were also turned off; people in cities had to turn to natural gas containers (''"butelii"''), or charcoal stoves, even though they were connected to the gas mains. According to a decree of 1988, all public spaces had to be kept to a temperature of no more than 16 degrees ] (about 63 degrees ]) in winter (the only institutions exempted were kindergartens and hospitals), with some (such as factories), kept at no more than 14 degrees (about 59 degrees Fahrenheit). All shops were to close no later than 5:30 p.m., in order to preserve electricity. A thriving black market appeared, with ] cigarettes becoming Romania's second currency (it was illegal and punished with up to ten years imprisonment to own or trade any foreign currency), used to purchase everything, from food to clothes or medicine. Health care dropped substantially, as drugs were no longer imported. | |||
{{main|1980s austerity policy in Romania}} | |||
] | |||
] card, 1989]] | |||
] poster on the streets of Bucharest, 1986. The caption reads "65 years since the creation of the Romanian Communist Party", while the background states "Ceaușescu Era" and "The Party. Ceaușescu. Romania."]] | |||
Before austerity, Romania had made considerable progress in many areas. Between 1950 and 1973, Romania joined Yugoslavia and Bulgaria in achieving average annual growth rates that were above both the Central European and the West European average. During the first 3 post-war decades, Romania industrialized faster than Spain, Greece, and Portugal. The infant mortality rate plummeted from 139 per 1,000 during the interwar period to 35 in the 1970s. During the interwar period, half the population was illiterate, but under the communist government illiteracy was eradicated. The population became urbanized, women's rights greatly improved, life expectancy grew, among many other achievements.<ref name="CBan">{{Cite journal|last=Ban|first=Cornel|date=2012-11-01|title=Sovereign Debt, Austerity, and Regime Change: The Case of Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania|url=https://doi.org/10.1177/0888325412465513|journal=East European Politics and Societies|language=en|volume=26|issue=4|pages=743–776|doi=10.1177/0888325412465513|s2cid=144784730|issn=0888-3254}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Gorky|first=Patricia|title=Romania: 30 years removed from socialism – Liberation News|url=https://www.liberationnews.org/romania-30-years/|access-date=2021-01-14|language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
Control over society became stricter and stricter, with an ]-style ] installed, and with ] recruiting more agents, extending censorship and keeping tabs and records on a large segment of the population. By 1989, according to CNSAS (the Council for Studies of the Archives of the Former Securitate), one in three Romanians was an informant for the Securitate. Due to this state of affairs, income from tourism dropped substantially, the number of foreign tourists visiting Romania dropping by 75%, with the three main tour operators that organized trips in Romania leaving the country by 1987. | |||
Romania continued to make progress. High rates of growth in production created conditions for raising living standards of the people. From 1950 to the mid-1980s, average net wages increased more than eightfold. The consumption fund increased 22-fold, and a broad program of building cultural facilities and housing was carried out. Over 80 percent of the country's population had moved to new apartments during this period.<ref name="International Affairs 1985">''International Affairs'', No. 3, Vol.31, 1985, page(s): 141–152</ref> | |||
There was also a revival of the effort to build a ], which was completed, along side a nationwide ] system and irigation network (some of it completed, most of it still a project, or abandoned) an effort to improve the railway system (with electrification and a modern control system), a ] at ], a national ] power system (including the ] power station on the ] in cooperation with ]), a net of oil refineries, a fairly developed oceanic fishing fleet and naval shipyards at ], a good industrial basis for the chemical and heavy machinery industries, and a rather well-developed foreign policy. | |||
Despite all this, living standards in the country remained some of Europe's lowest and as early as 1981, there were clear signs of public discontent, such as riots and an angry mob throwing rocks at Ceaușescu's helicopter while it made a flight to Transylvania that October. Ceaușescu desired to repay Western loans, and thus enacted a harsh austerity policy, including ] of food, gas, heating and electricity. People in cities had to turn to natural gas containers (''"butelii"'') or charcoal stoves, even though they were connected to the gas mains. | |||
On the negative side, the legacy of the period was a bloated heavy industry using archaic production methods, consuming lots of resources, and producing low-value goods (the refining capacity is over ten times what was needed, the steel production capabilities two-and-a-half times, the ] production facilities five times). Most of what was produced could not be sold anywhere, and ended up sitting and deteriorating outside the factories where it was made, while light industries were ridiculously undersized (Romanians had to wait 3 years for a washing machine, 2–3 years for a color TV, 5–10 years for a car), and technologically obsolete (Romania, in 1989, produced 1960s cars and 1970s TVs and washing machines). The communication network was, with the exception of the modernisation of the trunk railway lines, left at the 1950s' level. Romania had, in 1989, only a 100 km (68 mile) stretch, of motorway, and even that in a very poor state. | |||
With full-scale food rationing in place, the Communist Party published official guidelines on how Romanians could eat nutritiously while reducing their calorie intake by 25%. There was a shortage of available goods for the average Romanian. By 1984, despite a high crop yield and increased food production, wide-scale food rationing was introduced. The government promoted it as "rational eating" and "a means to reduce obesity". Most of what was available were export rejects, as most of the quality goods were exported, even underpriced, in order to obtain ], either to pay the debt, or to push forward in the ever-growing pursuit of heavy industrialization.{{citation needed|date=February 2021}} | |||
Measures in the mechanization and chemicalization of farming helped to increase the output of agricultural products. In 1950, more than 300 kg of cereals was gathered per head of the population; by 1982 this amount had increased to 1 ton per person. Meat production increased from 29.5 to 100 kg.<ref name="International Affairs 1985"/> | |||
The telephone network was one of the least reliable in Europe, with 1930s–1950s manual ] technologies in villages, and early 1960s automatic switching in towns and cities, and based on an under-sized backbone. By 1989, in Romania, there were about 700,000 phone lines, for a population of 23 million.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} TV broadcasts were limited to two hours daily, mostly propaganda, with most people choosing to watch ]n, ]n, ] or ]n TV, wherever the signal was sufficiently strong, using illegal antennas or mini satellite dishes. There were almost no computers ] clones of Western ]s being directly shipped to serve as workstations in factories and such. | |||
In spite of the ], Romania participated in the ] in Los Angeles. At that time, it was the only Soviet-aligned country to participate in the Olympic Games. | |||
Another legacy of this era was pollution, with Ceauşescu's government scoring badly on this count even by the standards of the Eastern European communist states. Examples include ] with its infamous Carbon Powder factory (in the 1980s, the whole city could be seen from ] as covered by a thick black cloud), ], or the plan, launched in 1989, to convert the unique ] — a ] ] — to plain agricultural fields. | |||
In the late 1980s, the United Nations Human Development report classified Romania as having had high human development. The life expectancy was 71 years, the literacy rate was 96%, and the Real GDP per capita was $3000.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/hdr_1990_en_indicators1.pdf|title=- Human Development Reports|website=hdr.undp.org}}</ref> | |||
== Downfall == | |||
{{main|Romanian Revolution of 1989}} | |||
Unlike the Soviet Union at the same time, Romania did not develop a large, privileged elite. Outside of Ceauşescu's own relatives, government officials were frequently rotated from one job to another and moved around geographically, to reduce the chance of anyone developing a power base. This prevented the rise of the ]-era reformist communism found in Hungary or the Soviet Union. Similarly, unlike in ], Ceauşescu reacted to strikes entirely through a strategy of further oppression. | |||
Romania was nearly the last of the Eastern European communist regimes to fall; its fall was also the most violent up to that time. Although the events of December 1989 are much in dispute, the following is at least a reasonable outline. | |||
By 1985, despite Romania's huge refining capacity, petroleum products were strictly rationed with supplies drastically cut, a Sunday curfew was instated, and many buses used ] propulsion (they were mockingly named "bombs"); taxis were converted to burning ]. Electricity was rationed to divert supplies to heavy industry, with a maximum monthly allowed consumption of 20 ] per family (everything over this limit was heavily taxed). Only one in five streetlights was kept on, and television was reduced to a single channel broadcasting just 2 hours each day. All these policies combined led Romanians to have the lowest standard of living in Europe, with the possible exception of Albania. | |||
Protests and riots broke out in ] on ] soldiers opened fire on the protesters, killing about 100 people. After cutting short a two-day trip to ], Ceauşescu held a televised speech on ], in which he condemned the events of Timişoara, considering them an act of foreign intervention in the internal affairs of Romania and an aggression through foreign Secret Services on Romania's sovereignty, and declared National Curfew, convoking a mass meeting in his support in Bucharest for the next day. The uprising of Timişoara became known across the country and in the morning of ] protests spread to ], Bucharest, and elsewhere. On ] the meeting at the CC Building in Bucharest turned into chaos and finally into riot, Ceauşescu hiding himself in the CC Building after losing control of his own "supporters". On the morning of the next day, ], it was announced that the army general Vasile Milea was dead by suicide; people were besieging the CC Building, while the Securitate did nothing to help Ceauşescu. Ceauşescu soon fled in an helicopter from the rooftop of the CC Building, only to find himself abandoned in ], where he was finally formally tried and shot by a ] on ]. | |||
====Systematization: demolition and reconstruction==== | |||
=== Controversy over the events of December 1989 === | |||
{{Main|Systematization (Romania)}} | |||
] | |||
] ({{langx|ro|Sistematizarea}}) refers to the program of ] carried out under Ceaușescu's regime. After a visit to ] in 1971, Ceaușescu was impressed by the '']'' ideology of that country, and began a massive campaign shortly afterwards. | |||
Beginning in 1974, systematization consisted largely of the demolition and reconstruction of existing hamlets, villages, towns, and cities, in whole or in part, with the stated goal of turning Romania into a "multilaterally developed ]". The policy largely consisted in the mass construction of high-density blocks of flats (''blocuri''). | |||
For several months after the events of December 1989, it was widely argued that ] and the FSN had merely taken advantage of the chaos to stage a coup. While, ultimately, a great deal did change in Romania, it is still very contentious among Romanians and other observers as to whether this was their intent from the outset, or merely pragmatic playing of the cards they were dealt. It is clear that by December 1989 Ceauşescu's harsh and counterproductive economic and political policies had cost him the support of many government officials and even the most loyal Communist Party cadres, most of whom joined forces with the popular revolution or simply refused to support him. This loss of support from regime officials ultimately set the stage for Ceauşescu's demise. | |||
During the 1980s, Ceaușescu became obsessed with building himself a ] of unprecedented proportions, along with an equally grandiose neighborhood, ], to accompany it. The mass demolitions that occurred in the 1980s under which an overall area of eight square kilometres of the historic center of Bucharest were leveled, including monasteries, churches, synagogues, a hospital, and a noted ] sports stadium, in order to make way for the grandiose ] (Civic center) and the House of the Republic, now officially renamed the ], were the most extreme manifestation of the systematization policy. | |||
In 1988 ]. | |||
====Last years: increased social control==== | |||
].]] | |||
] | |||
Control over society became stricter and stricter, with an ]-style ] installed, and with the ] recruiting more agents, extending ] and keeping tabs and records on a large segment of the population. By 1989, according to CNSAS (the Council for Studies of the Archives of the Former Securitate), one in three Romanians was an informant for the Securitate. Due to this situation, income from tourism dropped substantially, the number of foreign tourists visiting Romania falling by 75%, with the three main tour operators that organized trips in Romania leaving the country by 1987. Ceaușescu also started becoming the subject of ], his portrait on every street and hanging in every public building. | |||
By 1988, with ] and ] policies in effect in the Soviet Union and China undergoing ], Romania's ] sociopolitical system began to look increasingly out-of-place, but all attempts were made to keep the populace isolated from events going on outside the country. Also, while the West had been willing in the past to overlook Ceaușescu's human rights record in lieu of his independent, anti-Soviet stance, this was becoming less relevant with the Cold War winding down. As such, Romania started coming under fire from the United States and its allies, but such complaints were merely brushed off as "unwelcome interference in our nation's internal affairs". | |||
There was also a revival of the effort to build: | |||
*the ], which was completed; | |||
*a nationwide canal system and irrigation network, some of which was completed, but most of which is still a project, or was abandoned; | |||
*an effort to improve the ] with electrification and a modern control system; | |||
*the ]; | |||
*a national ] power system, including the ] power station on the ] in cooperation with ]; | |||
*a network of oil refineries; | |||
*a fairly developed oceanic fishing fleet; | |||
*naval shipyards at ]; | |||
*a good industrial basis for the chemical and heavy machinery industries; | |||
*a rather well-developed foreign policy; and | |||
*new towns via the ]. | |||
===Downfall=== | |||
====Brașov Riot==== | |||
{{main|Brașov Rebellion}} | |||
December 1989 was the last act of a finale that had started in 1987, in Brașov. The anti-communist riot in Brașov on 15 November 1987 was the main political event that announced the imminent fall of communism in Romania.<ref>Emil Hurezeanu, as quoted (see note below) by: {{in lang|ro}} "Ziua care nu se uită. 15 noiembrie 1987, Brașov", ], 2002, {{ISBN|973-681-136-0}}.<br /> This is documented by the book's revision, available at {{in lang|ro}} </ref> | |||
The revolt started at the enterprise of Trucks Brașov, as a strike that began on the night of 14 November, on the night-shift, and it continued the next morning with a march downtown, in front of the Council of the ].{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} | |||
The population heard about this event through ]. As Emil Hurezeanu tells it: "I remember that Neculai Constantin Munteanu, the moderator of the show, started the broadcast: 'Brașov! So Brașov! Now it started!' This was the tone of the whole broadcast. We had interviews, information, interpretations of some political interpretations, older press articles announcing open street protests against Ceaușescu."{{Cite quote|date=November 2009}} | |||
The reprisals against the strikers were rapid. The workers were arrested and imprisoned and their families were terrorized, but this act of courage on the part of the workers of Brașov set the stage for future mass revolts.{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} {{POV statement|date=May 2024}} | |||
Hurezeanu continues: "... All these have been turned into an offensive. The reaction of the regime was expected.. Very soon it was seen that the regime wants to hide it, to cancel it, practically not to respond to claims, not to take measures, to change anything, not to turn this protest into a public debate or even inside the party, in the Political Executive Committee. And then, the recipe of street confrontations with the regime became the only...possible. It became the leitmotif of all the media analysis. It was the beginning of an action against the system that comprises more items. It was a labor protest in a citadel of Ceaușescu, it was an antidictatorial message, it was a clear political context: the pressures of Moscow, Ceaușescu's refusal to accept the demands of Gorbachev, the breaking with the West, who changed the views towards the regime – all these have made us to believe that the beginning of the end was coming".{{Cite quote|date=November 2009}} | |||
====Protests in 1989 before the Revolution==== | |||
In March 1989, several leading activists of the PCR protested in a letter that criticized the economic policies of Nicolae Ceaușescu, but shortly thereafter Ceaușescu achieved a significant political victory: Romania paid off its external debt of about US$11 billion several months earlier than even the Romanian dictator had expected. Ceaușescu was formally reelected secretary general of the Romanian Communist Party—-the only political party of the Romanian Socialist Republic—-on 14 November at the party's XIVth Congress. | |||
On 11 November 1989, before the party congress, on Bucharest's Brezoianu Street and Kogălniceanu Boulevard, students from ] and Bucharest demonstrated with placards that read "We want Reforms against the Ceaușescu government."{{Cite quote|date=November 2009}} <!-- and what is the Romanian original?--> The students–Mihnea Paraschivescu, Grațian Vulpe, the economist Dan Căprariu from Cluj and others–were arrested and investigated by the Securitate at the {{Interlanguage link multi|Rahova Penitentiary|ro|3=Penitenciarul Rahova}}, accused of propaganda against the socialist society. They were released on 22 December 1989 at 14.00. There were other letters and other attempts to draw attention to the economic, cultural, and spiritual oppression of Romanians, but they served only to intensify the activity of the communist police and the Securitate.{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} | |||
====Revolution==== | |||
{{main|Romanian Revolution}} | |||
On 16 December, a protest broke out in ] in response to an attempt by the government to evict the dissident pastor ] from his church flat. Tőkés had recently made critical comments against the regime to the Hungarian media,<ref>Brubaker, Rogers: ''Nationalist politics and everyday ethnicity in a Transylvanian town''. Princeton University Press, 2006, page 119. {{ISBN|0691128340}}</ref> and the government alleged that he was ]. His parishioners gathered around his home to protect him from harassment and eviction. Many passers-by, including Romanian students, spontaneously joined the protest. Subsequently, police and ''Securitate'' forces showed up at the scene. By 7:30 pm, the protest had spread, and the original cause became largely irrelevant. Some of the protesters attempted to burn down the building that housed the District Committee of the ] (PCR). The ''Securitate'' responded with ] and water jets, while the police attacked rioters and arrested many of them. Around 9:00 pm, the rioters withdrew. They regrouped eventually around the ] and started a protest march around the city, but again they were confronted by the security forces. | |||
Riots and protests resumed the following day, 17 December. The rioters broke into the District Committee building. The army failed to establish order and chaos ensued, with gunfire, fighting, burning of cars, and casualties. | |||
Unlike the Soviet Union at the same time, Romania had not developed a large, privileged elite. Ceausescu's family maintained all control of politics and Communist Party officials were paid poorly and often rotated from job to job, thus preventing any potential political rivals from developing a base of support. This prevented the rise of the ]-era reformist Communism found in Hungary or the Soviet Union. Ceausescu was so bitterly opposed to reform that he went as far as to call for a Warsaw Pact invasion of Poland after its Communists decided to treat with the opposition–a marked turn from his vehement opposition to the invasion of Czechoslovakia two decades earlier. | |||
Similarly, unlike in Poland, Ceaușescu reacted to strikes entirely through a strategy of further oppression. Romania was nearly the last of the Eastern European communist governments to fall; its fall was also the most violent up to that time. | |||
Protests and riots broke out in ] on 17 December and soldiers opened fire on the protesters, killing about 100 people. After cutting short a two-day trip to Iran, Ceaușescu gave a televised speech on 20 December in which he condemned the events of Timișoara, saying he considered them an act of foreign intervention in the internal affairs of Romania and an aggression through foreign secret services on Romania's sovereignty, and declared National Curfew, convoking a mass meeting in his support in Bucharest for the next day. The uprising of Timișoara became known across the country, and on the morning of 21 December, protests spread to ], Bucharest and elsewhere.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} | |||
Matters came to a head on 21 December, when Ceausescu's speech at the ] (CC) in Bucharest turned into chaos. The crowd, in a reaction that would have been unthinkable for most of the previous quarter-century, openly booed and jeered Ceaușescu as he spoke. He was forced to hide himself in the CC Building after losing control of his own "supporters". The night of 21 December brought fighting between protesters and the ], police and part of the army forces; more than 1100 protesters were killed during the fights over the next few days. On the morning of 22 December, it was announced that the army general Vasile Milea was dead by suicide. Believing that Milea had actually been murdered, the rank-and-file soldiers went over almost ''en masse'' to the budding rebellion. A second attempt at a speech the next day quickly failed. Soon, people were besieging the Central Committee Building, coming within a few meters of Ceaușescu himself;<ref name=Revolution1989>{{cite book|last=Sebetsyen|first=Victor|title=Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire|publisher=]|location=New York City|year=2009|isbn=978-0-375-42532-5|url=https://archive.org/details/revolution1989fa00sebe}}</ref> the Securitate did nothing to help him. Ceaușescu soon fled by helicopter from the rooftop of the CC Building, only to find himself abandoned in ], where he and his wife Elena were ] by a ], convicted after an hour and a half, and executed by ] moments after the verdict and sentence were announced on 25 December.<ref name=Meyer>{{cite book |last=Meyer |first=Michael |title=The Year That Changed the World: The Untold Story Behind the Fall of the Berlin Wall |year=2009 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-1-4165-5845-3 |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/yearthatchangedw00meye/page/196 }}</ref> The ] dissolved soon afterward and has never been revived. | |||
====Controversy over the events of December 1989==== | |||
For several months after the events of December 1989, it was widely argued that ] and the ] (FSN) had merely taken advantage of the chaos to stage a coup. While, ultimately, a great deal did change in Romania, it is still a subject of contention among Romanians and other observers as to whether this was their intent from the outset, or merely pragmatic playing of the cards they were dealt. By December 1989 Ceaușescu's harsh and counterproductive economic and political policies had cost him the support of many government officials and even the most loyal Communist Party cadres, most of whom joined forces with the popular revolution or simply refused to support him. This loss of support from government officials ultimately set the stage for Ceaușescu's demise. The Romanian army also was a factor in the regime's fall as it suffered from severe budget cuts while vast sums were spent on the Securitate, leaving them severely discontented and unwilling to save Ceaușescu.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} | |||
==Politics== | |||
{{see also|Politics of Romania|Economy of the Socialist Republic of Romania}} | |||
RSR's political framework was a ] ], the ]. All of its legislative meetings took place in ]. | |||
===Foreign relations=== | |||
{{main|Foreign relations of Romania}} | |||
Romania's foreign policy was aligned with all nations that were aligned with the ]. Under Ceaușescu it enjoyed strategic relations with the ] and the ], and it was the only Eastern Bloc country not to boycott the ] in Los Angeles. | |||
Following the ], Romania also maintained relations with China and North Korea as well as the Chinese-backed ]-ruled ]. | |||
Romania joined the United Nations on 14 December 1955 (see ]) as well as the ] and the ] in 1972. In July 1980, Romania signed a comprehensive trade agreement with the ]; which in turn became the ] in 1993 when Romania joined in 2007. | |||
== Legacy == | |||
{{See also|Communist nostalgia#Romania|Bans on communist symbols#Romania}} | |||
Despite the prolonged economic and social crisis between 1982 and 1989 and the following ]; mostly due to the fast and stunning economic growth that was followed by the decline,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Stanescu|first=Iulian|date=July 2019|title=Quality of life in Romania 1918-2018: An overview|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330480915|journal=Calitatea Vietii|volume=02|issue=29|pages=107–144}}</ref> many Romanians still view the Socialist era of their country positively,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Manuela|first=Marin|date=11 July 2016|title=Assessing communist nostalgia in Romania: chronological framework and opinion polls|journal=Twentieth Century Communism|publisher=Gale Academic OneFile|issue=11|page=10}}</ref> looking back nostalgically at an era of perceived stability and safety as opposed to the recent ] and ], and also the post-communist corruption that were resilient after 1989, being considered a major problem in the country.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kligman|first1=Gail|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rmzOtWapThUC|title=Peasants under siege: the collectivization of Romanian agriculture, 1949–1962|last2=Verdery|first2=Katherine|date=2011|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-1400840434|location=Princeton, NJ|page=209|access-date=26 December 2020}}</ref> More than 53% of Romanians responded in polls that they would prefer to live once again under the ],<ref>{{cite news|last=Odobescu|first=Vlad|date=30 August 2012|title=Struggling Romanians yearn for communism|work=The Washington Times|url=http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/aug/30/struggling-romanians-yearn-for-communism/?page=all|access-date=17 December 2012}}</ref> and 63% think that their lives were better under it.<ref name="balkanalysis.com">{{cite news|date=27 December 2011|title=In Romania, Opinion Polls Show Nostalgia for Communism|publisher=Balkanalysis|url=http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2011/12/27/in-romania-opinion-polls-show-nostalgia-for-communism/|access-date=28 December 2012|archive-date=11 January 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120111110854/http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2011/12/27/in-romania-opinion-polls-show-nostalgia-for-communism/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Noul Partid Comunist Român, condus de un șofer de taxi|date=7 November 2010 |url=http://www.adevarul.ro/actualitate/eveniment/Noul_Partid_Comunist_Roman-_Pionierii_0_367163711.html|access-date=28 December 2012|publisher=Adevarul}}</ref> The last and longest ruling leader of the Communist regime, Ceaușescu, also enjoys a high amount of approval in polls: In 2010, 41% of Romanians would vote for Ceaușescu, by 2014 this percentage reached 46%. In December 2018, 64% of people had a good opinion of Ceaușescu, making him the president with the highest amount of approval in the country.<ref>{{Cite web|date=27 December 2018|title=Ceaușescu still most beloved President of Romania|url=https://transylvanianow.com/ceausescu-still-most-beloved-president-of-romania/}}</ref> | |||
On the other hand, after the fall of the communist regime, Romania began shifting its political and economic policies from support (albeit tepid) for Moscow to aligning itself with Brussels and Washington by joining ] in 2004 and the ] in 2007. Today, the "apologetic presentation" of Nazi and communists governments and denigrating their victims in the audio-visual media is forbidden by decision of the ]. Dinel Staicu was fined 25,000 ] (approx. 9,000 United States dollars) for praising Ceaușescu and displaying his pictures on his private television channel (''3TV Oltenia'').<ref>{{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071220071037/http://www.cna.ro/comunicare/comunic/2006/c0207.html|date=20 December 2007|title=Official communique of the National Board of the Audio-Visual}}, originally at but now removed, accessible through web.archive.org</ref> | |||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery> | |||
Flag of Romania.svg|Flag (1947–1948) | |||
Flag of Romania (January-March 1948).svg|Flag (1948) | |||
Flag of Romania (1948-1952).svg|Flag (1948–1952) | |||
Flag of Romania (1952-1965).svg|Flag (1952–1965) | |||
Flag of Romania (1965-1989).svg|Flag (1965–1989) | |||
</gallery> | |||
<gallery> | |||
Coat of arms of Romania (January-March 1948).svg|Emblem (1948) | |||
Coat of arms of the Popular Republic of Romania (1948-1952).svg|Emblem (1948–1952) | |||
Coat of arms of the Popular Republic of Romania (1952-1965).svg|Emblem (1952–1965) | |||
Coat of arms of the Socialist Republic of Romania.svg|Emblem (1965–1989) | |||
</gallery> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Portal|Communism|Romania}} | |||
*'']''- a documentary about Communist Romania | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
* ] - The ]'s Newspaper | |||
*] | |||
* The ] | |||
*'']'', the ]'s newspaper. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
== Notes == | |||
<div style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br> | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
<hr noshade size="4" width="100%"/> | |||
< '''] | ] | ] ''' > | |||
<hr noshade size="4" width="100%"/> | |||
</div> | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
<references/></div> | |||
== External links == | |||
*, extensive website on Communist Romania. | |||
*, memorial site to the victims of Communism in Romania, based at ]. | |||
* | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Communist Eastern Europe}} | |||
{{commons category|Socialist Republic of Romania}} | |||
*, an extensive website on Communist Romania. | |||
*, a memorial site dedicated to the victims of Communism in Romania, based at ]. | |||
* 3/2011: | |||
{{Romanian topics}} | |||
] | |||
{{Communist Eastern and Central Europe}} | |||
{{Eastern Bloc}} | |||
{{Socialist states}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 16:11, 25 December 2024
1947–1989 republic in Southeastern EuropeThis article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Socialist Republic of Romania" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Romanian People's Republic (1947–1965) Republica Populară Română (1947–1958) Republica Populară Romînă (1958–1965) Socialist Republic of Romania (1965–1989) Republica Socialistă România | |||||||||
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1947–1989 | |||||||||
Flag (1965–1989) Coat of arms (1965–1989) | |||||||||
Motto: Proletari din toate țările, uniți-vă! ("Proletarians of all countries, unite!") | |||||||||
Anthem: Zdrobite cătușe (1948–1953) Te slăvim, Românie (1953–1975) E scris pe tricolor Unire (1975–1977) Trei culori (1977–1989) | |||||||||
The Socialist Republic of Romania in 1989 in dark green | |||||||||
Status | Warsaw Pact member | ||||||||
Capitaland largest city | Bucharest | ||||||||
Official languages | Romanian | ||||||||
Religion | State atheism (de jure) Romanian Orthodox (dominant) | ||||||||
Demonym(s) | Romanian | ||||||||
Government | Unitary one-party Marxist–Leninist socialist republic
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General Secretary | |||||||||
• 1947–1965 | Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej | ||||||||
• 1965–1989 | Nicolae Ceaușescu | ||||||||
Head of state | |||||||||
• 1947–1952 (first) | Constantin Ion Parhon | ||||||||
• 1967–1989 (last) | Nicolae Ceaușescu | ||||||||
Head of government | |||||||||
• 1947–1952 (first) | Petru Groza | ||||||||
• 1982–1989 (last) | Constantin Dăscălescu | ||||||||
Legislature | Great National Assembly | ||||||||
Historical era | Cold War | ||||||||
• Forced abdication of Michael I | 30 December 1947 | ||||||||
• First constitution | 13 April 1948 | ||||||||
• Second constitution | 24 September 1952 | ||||||||
• De-satellization | 22 April 1964 | ||||||||
• Last constitution | 21 August 1965 | ||||||||
• Fall of Ceaușescu | 22 December 1989 | ||||||||
• Name changed to "Romania" | 28 December 1989 | ||||||||
• Formally abolished | 8 December 1991 | ||||||||
HDI (1990 formula) | 0.863 very high | ||||||||
Currency | Leu | ||||||||
Calling code | 40 | ||||||||
ISO 3166 code | RO | ||||||||
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The Socialist Republic of Romania (Romanian: Republica Socialistă România, RSR) was a Marxist–Leninist one-party socialist state that existed officially in Romania from 1947 to 1989 (see Revolutions of 1989). From 1947 to 1965, the state was known as the Romanian People's Republic (Republica Populară Romînă, RPR). The country was an Eastern Bloc state and a member of the Warsaw Pact with a dominant role for the Romanian Communist Party enshrined in its constitutions. Geographically, RSR was bordered by the Black Sea to the east, the Soviet Union (via the Ukrainian and Moldavian SSRs) to the north and east, Hungary and Yugoslavia (via SR Serbia) to the west, and Bulgaria to the south.
As World War II ended, Romania, a former Axis member which had overthrown their pro-Axis government, was occupied by the Soviet Union as the sole representative of the Allies. On 6 March 1945, after mass demonstrations by communist sympathizers and political pressure from the Soviet representative of the Allied Control Commission, a new pro-Soviet government that included members of the previously outlawed Romanian Workers' Party was installed. Gradually, more members of the Workers' Party and communist-aligned parties gained control of the administration and pre-war political leaders were steadily eliminated from political life. In December 1947, King Michael I was forced to abdicate and the People's Republic of Romania was declared.
At first, Romania's scarce post-war resources were drained by the "SovRoms," new tax-exempt Soviet-Romanian companies that allowed the Soviet Union to control Romania's major sources of income. Another drain was the war reparations paid to the Soviet Union. However, during the 1950s, Romania's communist government began to assert more independence, leading to, for example, the withdrawal of all Soviet troops from Romania by 1958. Overall, from the 1950s to the 1970s, the country exhibited high rates of economic growth and significant improvements in infant mortality, life expectancy, literacy, urbanization, and women's rights, but then stagnated in the 1980s.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Nicolae Ceaușescu became General Secretary of the Communist Party (1965), Chairman of the State Council (1967), and the newly established role of President in 1974. Ceaușescu's denunciation of the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia and a brief relaxation in internal repression led to a positive image both at home and in the West. However, rapid economic growth fueled in part by foreign credits gradually gave way to an austerity and political repression that led to the violent fall of his totalitarian government in December 1989.
Many people were executed or died in custody during communist Romania's existence, most during the Stalinist era of the 1950s. While judicial executions between 1945 and 1964 numbered 137, deaths in custody are estimated in the tens or hundreds of thousands. Others were arrested for political, economical, or other reasons and suffered imprisonment or torture.
The 1965 Constitution remained in effect after its dissolution and was amended to reflect Romania's transition to democracy. It was replaced by the current constitution on 8 December 1991, after a nationwide referendum abolished the socialist system of government completely and replaced it with a semi-presidential system.
History
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Soviet occupation and rise of the Communists
Main article: Soviet occupation of RomaniaWhen King Michael, supported by the main political parties, overthrew Ion Antonescu in August 1944, breaking Romania away from the Axis and bringing it over to the Allied side, Michael could do nothing to erase the memory of his country's recent active participation in the German invasion of the Soviet Union. Romanian forces fought under Soviet command, driving through Northern Transylvania into Hungary proper, and on into Czechoslovakia and Austria. However, the Soviets treated Romania as a conquered territory, and Soviet troops continued to occupy the country on the basis of the Romanians having been active Nazi allies with a fascist government until very recently.
The Yalta Conference had granted the Soviet Union a predominant interest in Romania. The Paris Peace Treaties did not acknowledge Romania as an allied co-belligerent, as the Romanian army had fought hard against the Soviets for the better part of the war, changing sides only when the tides started to turn. The Communists, as all political parties, played only a minor role in King Michael's first wartime government, headed by General Constantin Sănătescu, though their presence increased in the one led by Nicolae Rădescu. This changed in March 1945, when Dr. Petru Groza of the Ploughmen's Front, a party closely associated with the Communists, became prime minister. His government was broad-based on paper, including members of most major prewar parties except the fascist Iron Guard. However, the Communists held the key ministries, and most of the ministers nominally representing non-Communist parties were, like Groza himself, fellow travelers.
The King was not happy with the direction of this government, but when he attempted to force Groza's resignation by refusing to sign any legislation (a move known as "the royal strike"), Groza simply chose to enact laws without bothering to obtain Michael's signature. On 8 November 1945, King Michael's name day, a pro-monarchy demonstration in front of the Royal Palace in Bucharest escalated into street fights between opposition supporters and soldiers, police and pro-government workers, resulting in dozens of killed and wounded; Soviet officers restrained Romanian soldiers and police from firing on civilians, and Soviet troops restored order.
Despite the King's disapproval, the first Groza government brought land reform and women's suffrage, the former gave the party widespread popularity among peasants from the South and East while the latter gained it the support of educated women. However, it also brought the beginnings of Soviet domination of Romania. In the elections of 19 November 1946, the Communist-led Bloc of Democratic Parties (BPD) claimed 84% of the votes. These elections were characterized by widespread irregularities, including intimidation, electoral fraud, and assassinations Archives confirm suspicions at the time that the election results were, in fact, falsified.
After forming a government, the Communists moved to eliminate the role of the centrist parties; notably, the National Peasants' Party was accused of espionage after it became clear in 1947 that their leaders were meeting secretly with United States officials. A show trial of their leadership was then arranged, and they were put in jail. Other parties were forced to "merge" with the Communists. In 1946 and 1947, several high-ranking members in the pro-Axis government were executed as war criminals, primarily for their involvement in the Holocaust and for attacking the Soviet Union. Antonescu himself was executed 1 June 1946.
By 1947, Romania remained the only monarchy in the Eastern Bloc. On 30 December that year, Michael was at his palace in Sinaia when Groza and Gheorghiu-Dej summoned him back to Bucharest. They presented him with a pretyped instrument of abdication and demanded that he sign it. With pro-Communist troops surrounding his palace and his telephone lines cut, Michael was forced to sign the document. Hours later, Parliament abolished the monarchy and proclaimed Romania a People's Republic. In February 1948, the Communists merged with the Social Democrats to form the Romanian Workers' Party. However, most independent-minded Socialists were soon pushed out. Meanwhile, many non-Communist politicians had either been imprisoned or fled into exile.
The communist regime was formalized with the constitution of 13 April 1948. The new constitution was a near-copy of the 1936 Soviet Constitution. While it guaranteed all manner of freedoms on paper, any association which had a "fascist or anti-democratic nature" was forbidden. This provision was broadly interpreted to ban any party not willing to do the Communists' bidding, and gave a legal façade to political repression.
Although the 1948 Constitution and its two successors provided a simulacrum of religious freedom, the regime in fact had a policy of promoting Marxist–Leninist atheism, coupled with religious persecution. The role of religious bodies was strictly limited to their houses of worship, and large public demonstrations were strictly forbidden. In 1948, in order to minimize the role of the clergy in society, the government adopted a decree nationalizing church property, including schools. The regime found wiser to use religion and make it subservient to the regime rather than to eradicate it. The communist government also disbanded the Romanian Greek-Catholic Uniate Church, declaring its merger with the Romanian Orthodox Church.
Romanian People's Republic
Early years
The early years of communist rule in Romania were marked by repeated changes of course and by numerous arrests and imprisonments as factions contended for dominance. The country's resources were also drained by the Soviet's SovRom agreements, which facilitated shipping of Romanian goods to the Soviet Union at nominal prices.
On 11 June 1948, all banks and large businesses were nationalized.
In the communist leadership, there appear to have been three important factions, all of them Stalinist, differentiated more by their respective personal histories than by any deep political or philosophical differences. Later historiography claimed to identify the following factions: the "Muscovites", notably Ana Pauker and Vasile Luca, who had spent the war in Moscow and the "Prison Communists", notably Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who had been imprisoned during the war.
Pauker and her allies were accused of deviating to the left and right. For instance, they were initially allied on not liquidating the rural bourgeoise, but later shifted their position. Ultimately, with Joseph Stalin's backing, Gheorghiu-Dej won out. Pauker was purged from the party (along with 192,000 other party members); Pătrășcanu was executed after a show trial.
Gheorghiu-Dej era
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Gheorghiu-Dej, a committed Stalinist, was unhappy with the reforms in Nikita Khrushchev's Soviet Union after Stalin's death in 1953. He also balked at Comecon's goal of turning Romania into the "breadbasket" of the East Bloc, pursuing an economic plan based on heavy industry and energy production. The government closed Romania's largest labor camps, abandoned the Danube–Black Sea Canal project, halted rationing and hiked workers' wages. These factors combined to put Romania under Gheorghiu-Dej on a relatively independent and nationalist route.
Gheorghiu-Dej identified with Stalinism, and the more liberal Soviet government threatened to undermine his authority. In an effort to reinforce his position, Gheorghiu-Dej pledged cooperation with any state, regardless of political-economic system, as long as it recognized international equality and did not interfere in other nations' domestic affairs. This policy led to a tightening of Romania's bonds with China, which also advocated national self-determination and opposed Soviet hegemonism.
Gheorghiu-Dej resigned as the party's general secretary in 1954 but retained the premiership; a four-member collective secretariat, including Nicolae Ceaușescu, controlled the party for a year before Gheorghiu-Dej again took up the reins. Despite its new policy of international cooperation, Romania joined the Warsaw Treaty Organization (Warsaw Pact) in 1955, which entailed subordinating and integrating a portion of its military into the Soviet military machine. Romania later refused to allow Warsaw Pact maneuvers on its soil and limited its participation in military maneuvers elsewhere within the alliance.
In 1956, the Soviet premier, Nikita Khrushchev, denounced Stalin in a secret speech before the Twentieth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). Gheorghiu-Dej and the leadership of the Romanian Workers' Party (Partidul Muncitoresc Român, PMR) were fully braced to weather de-Stalinization. Gheorghiu-Dej made Pauker, Luca and Georgescu scapegoats for the Romanian communist past excesses and claimed that the Romanian party had purged its Stalinist elements even before Stalin died in 1953. In all likelihood, Gheorghiu-Dej himself ordered the violence and coercion in the collectivization movements, since he did not rebuke those who perpetuated abuses. In fact, Pauker reprimanded any cadre who forced peasants, and once she was purged, the violence reappeared.
In October 1956, Poland's communist leaders refused to succumb to Soviet military threats to intervene in domestic political affairs and install a more obedient politburo. A few weeks later, the Communist Party in Hungary virtually disintegrated during a popular revolution. Poland's defiance and Hungary's popular uprising inspired Romanian students to organize meetings in București, Cluj and Timișoara calling for liberty, better living conditions, and an end to Soviet domination. Under the pretext that the Hungarian uprising might incite his nation's own revolt, Gheorghiu-Dej took radical measures which meant persecutions and jailing of various "suspects", especially people of Hungarian origin. He also advocated swift Soviet intervention, and the Soviet Union reinforced its military presence in Romania, particularly along the Hungarian border. Although Romania's unrest proved fragmentary and controllable, Hungary's was not, so in November Moscow mounted a bloody invasion of Hungary.
After the Revolution of 1956, Gheorghiu-Dej worked closely with Hungary's new leader, János Kádár, who was installed by the Soviet Union. Romania took Hungary's former premier (leader of the 1956 revolution) Imre Nagy into custody. He was jailed at Snagov, north of Bucharest. After a series of interrogations by Soviets and Romanian authorities, Nagy was returned to Budapest for trial and execution.
Romania's government also took measures to reduce public discontent by reducing investments in heavy industry, boosting output of consumer goods, decentralizing economic management, hiking wages and incentives, and instituting elements of worker management. The authorities eliminated compulsory deliveries for private farmers but reaccelerated the collectivization program in the mid-1950s, albeit less brutally than earlier. The government declared collectivization complete in 1962, when collective and state farms controlled 77% of the arable land.
Despite Gheorghiu-Dej's claim that he had purged the Romanian party of Stalinists, he remained susceptible to attack for his obvious complicity in the party's activities from 1944 to 1953. At a plenary PMR meeting in March 1956, Miron Constantinescu and Iosif Chișinevschi, both Politburo members and deputy premiers, criticized Gheorghiu-Dej. Constantinescu, who advocated a Khrushchev-style liberalization, posed a particular threat to Gheorghiu-Dej because he enjoyed good connections with the Moscow leadership. The PMR purged Constantinescu and Chișinevschi in 1957, denouncing both as Stalinists and charging them with complicity with Pauker. Afterwards, Gheorghiu-Dej faced no serious challenge to his leadership. Ceaușescu replaced Constantinescu as head of PMR cadres.
The cadres – anyone who was not a rank-and-file member of the Communist Party – were deemed the Party's vanguard, as they were entrusted with the power to construct a new social order and the forms of power that would sustain it. They still underwent extensive surveillance, which created an environment of competition and rivalry.
Persecution, the labour camp system and anti-communist resistance
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Once the Communist government became more entrenched, the number of arrests increased. The General Directorate of People's Security, or 'Securitate', was established in 1948 with the stated aim "to defend the democratic conquest and to ensure the security of the Romanian People’s Republic against the plotting of internal and external enemies".
All strata of society were involved, but particularly targeted were the prewar elites, such as intellectuals, clerics, teachers, former politicians (even if they had left-leaning views), and anybody who could potentially form the nucleus of anti-Communist resistance. According to figures, in the years between 1945 and 1964, 73,334 people were arrested.
The existing prisons were filled with political prisoners, and a new system of forced labor camps and prisons was created, modeled after the Soviet Gulag. A decision to put into practice the century-old project for a Danube–Black Sea Canal served as a pretext for the erection of several labor camps, where numerous people died. Some of the most notorious prisons included Sighet, Gherla, Pitești, and Aiud, and forced labor camps were set up at lead mines and in the Danube Delta.
One of the most notorious and infamous brainwashing experiments in Eastern Europe's history took place in Romania, in the political prison of Pitești, a small city about 120 km (75 mi) northwest of Bucharest. This prison is still infamous in Romania for the so-called 'Pitești experiment' or Pitești phenomenon, conducted there between 1949 and 1952. The prison in Pitești and the Pitești experiment aimed to 'reeducate' the (real or imagined) opponents of the regime. It involved psychological and physical torture of prisoners, and the submission of them to humiliating, degrading and dehumanizing acts. Tens of people died in this 'experiment', but its aim was not to kill the people, but to 'reeducate' them. Some of those who were thus 'reeducated' later became torturers themselves. Of those who survived Pitești, many either took their own lives or ended up in mental institutions.
The Communist government also decided on the deportation of peasants from the Banat (south-west from Transylvania, at the border with Yugoslavia), started on 18 June 1951. About 45,000 people were forcibly "resettled" in lesser populated regions on the eastern plains (Bărăgan). The government decision was directed towards creating a cordon sanitaire against Tito's Yugoslavia, but was also used as an intimidation tactic to force the remaining peasants to join collective farms. Most deportees lived in the Bărăgan for 5 years (until 1956), but some remained there permanently.
Anti-communist resistance also had an organized form, and many people opposing the government took up arms and formed partisan groups, comprising 10–40 people. There were attacks on police posts and sabotage. Some of the famous partisans were Elisabeta Rizea from Nucșoara and Gheorghe Arsenescu. Despite the numerous secret police (Securitate) and army troops massed against them, armed resistance in the mountains continued until the early 1960s, and one of the best known partisan leaders was not captured until 1974.
Another form of anti-communist resistance, non-violent this time, was the student movement of 1956. In reaction to the anti-communist revolt in Hungary, echoes were felt all over the Eastern bloc. Protests took place in some university centers resulting in numerous arrests and expulsions. The most-organised student movement was in Timișoara, where 3000 were arrested. In Bucharest and Cluj, organised groups were set up which tried to make common cause with the anti-communist movement in Hungary and coordinate activity. The authorities' reaction was immediate – students were arrested or suspended from their courses, some teachers were dismissed, and new associations were set up to supervise student activities.
Tens of thousands of people were killed as part of repression and agricultural collectivization in Communist Romania primarily under Gheorghiu-Dej.
Ceaușescu government
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Gheorghiu-Dej died in 1965 and, after a power struggle, was succeeded by the previously obscure Nicolae Ceaușescu. During his last two years, Gheorghiu-Dej had exploited the Soviet–Chinese dispute and begun to oppose the hegemony of the Soviet Union. Ceaușescu, supported by colleagues of Gheorghiu-Dej such as Maurer, continued this popular line. Relations with Western countries and many other states began to be strengthened in what seemed to be the national interest of Romania. Under a policy of de-Russification the forced Soviet (mostly Russian) cultural influence in the country which characterized the 1950s was stopped and Western media were allowed to circulate in Romania instead.
First years
Administrative division of Romania 1950–52 (top) and 1960–68 (bottom)On 21 August 1965, following the example of Czechoslovakia, the name of the country was changed to "Socialist Republic of Romania" (Republica Socialistă România, RSR) and PMR's old name was restored (Partidul Comunist Român, PCR; "Romanian Communist Party").
In his early years in power, Ceaușescu was genuinely popular, both at home and abroad. Agricultural goods were abundant, consumer goods began to reappear, there was a cultural thaw, and, what was important abroad, he spoke out against the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. While his reputation at home soon soured, he continued to have uncommonly good relations with Western governments and with international capitalist institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and World Bank because of his independent political line. Romania under Ceaușescu maintained and sometimes improved diplomatic and other relations with, among others, West Germany, Israel, China, Albania, and Pinochet's Chile, all for various reasons not on good terms with Moscow.
Ceaușescu refused to implement measures of economic liberalism. The evolution of his regime followed the path begun by Gheorghiu-Dej. He continued with the program of intensive industrialization aimed at the economic self-sufficiency of the country which since 1959 had already doubled industrial production and had reduced the peasant population from 78% at the end of the 1940s to 61% in 1966 and 49% by 1971. However, for Romania, like other Eastern People's Republics, industrialization did not mean a total social break with the countryside. The peasants returned periodically to the villages or resided in them, commuting daily to the city in a practice called naveta. This allowed Romanians to act as peasants and workers at the same time.
Universities were also founded in small Romanian towns, which served to train qualified professionals, such as engineers, economists, planners or jurists, necessary for the industrialization and development project of the country. Romanian healthcare also achieved improvements and recognition by the World Health Organization (WHO). In May 1969, Marcolino Candau, Director General of this organization, visited Romania and declared that the visits of WHO staff to various Romanian hospital establishments had made an extraordinarily good impression.
The social and economic transformations resulted in improved living conditions for Romanians. Economic growth allowed for higher salaries which, combined with the benefits offered by the state (free medical care, pensions, free universal education at all levels, etc.) were a leap compared to the pre-WWII situation of the Romanian population. Certain extra retributions were allowed for the peasants, who started to produce more.
Human rights issues
Concerned about the country's low birthrates, Nicolae Ceaușescu enacted an aggressive natalist policy, which included outlawing abortion and contraception, routine pregnancy tests for women, taxes on childlessness, and legal discrimination against childless people. This period has later been depicted in movies and documentaries (such as 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, Children of the Decree). To counter the sharp decline of the population, the Communist Party decided that the Romanian population should be increased from 23 to 30 million inhabitants. In October 1966, Decree 770 was authorized by Ceaușescu.
These pro-natalist measures had some degree of success, as a baby boom resulted in the late 1960s, with the generations born in 1967 and 1968 being the largest in the country's history. The natalist policies temporarily increased birth rates for a few years, but this was followed by a later decline due to an increased use of illegal abortion. Ceaușescu's policy resulted in the deaths of over 9,000 women due to illegal abortions, large numbers of children put into Romanian orphanages by parents who couldn't cope with raising them, street children in the 1990s (when many orphanages were closed and the children ended up on the streets), and overcrowding in homes and schools.
Other restrictions of human rights included invasion of privacy by the secret police (the "Securitate"), censorship and relocation, but not on the same scale as in the 1950s.
During the Ceaușescu era, there was a secret ongoing "trade" between Romania on one side and Israel and West Germany on the other side, under which Israel and West Germany paid money to Romania to allow Romanian citizens with certified Jewish or German ancestry to emigrate to Israel and West Germany, respectively.
Industrialization
Ceaușescu's Romania continued to pursue Gheorghiu-Dej's policy of industrialization. Romania made progress with the economy. From 1951 to 1974, Romania's gross industrial output increased at an average annual rate of 13 percent. Several branches of heavy industry were founded, including the machine-tool, tractor, and automotive industries; large-tonnage shipbuilding; the manufacture of electric diesel locomotives; and the electronics and petrochemical industries.
Prior to the mid-1970s, Bucharest, as most other cities, was developed by expanding the city, especially towards the south, east and west. High density residential neighbourhoods were built on the outskirts of the city, some (such as Drumul Taberei, Berceni, Titan or Giurgiului) of architectural and urban planning value. Conservation plans were made, especially during the 1960s and early 1970s, but all were halted after Ceaușescu embarked on what is known as "The Small Cultural Revolution" ("Mica revoluție culturală"), after visiting North Korea and the People's Republic of China and then delivering a speech known as the July Theses. In the late 1970s, the construction of the Bucharest Metro system was started. After two years, 10 km of network were already complete and after another 2 years, 9 km of tunnels were ready for use. By 17 August 1989, 49.01 km of the subway system and 34 stations were already in use.
The earthquake of 1977 shocked Bucharest; many buildings collapsed, and many others were weakened. This was the backdrop that led to a policy of large-scale demolition which affected monuments of historical significance or architectural masterpieces such as the monumental Văcărești Monastery (1722), the "Sfânta Vineri" (1645) and "Enei" (1611) Churches, the Cotroceni (1679) and Pantelimon (1750) Monasteries, and the art deco "Republic's Stadium" (ANEF Stadium, 1926). Even the Palace of Justice – built by Romania's foremost architect, Ion Mincu – was scheduled for demolition in early 1990, according to the systematisation papers. Yet another tactic was abandoning and neglecting buildings and bringing them into such a state that they would require being torn down.
Thus, the policy towards the city after the earthquake was not one of reconstruction, but one of demolition and building anew. An analysis by the Union of Architects, commissioned in 1990, claims that over 2000 buildings were torn down, with over 77 of very high architectural importance, most of them in good condition. Even Gara de Nord (the city's main railway station), listed on the Romanian Architectural Heritage List, was scheduled to be torn down and replaced in early 1992.
Despite all of this, and despite the much-questioned treatment of HIV-infected orphans, the country continued to have a notably good system of schools. Also, not every industrialization project was a failure: Ceaușescu left Romania with a reasonably effective system of power generation and transmission, gave Bucharest a functioning subway, and left many cities with an increase in habitable apartment buildings.
1980s: severe rationing
Main article: 1980s austerity policy in RomaniaBefore austerity, Romania had made considerable progress in many areas. Between 1950 and 1973, Romania joined Yugoslavia and Bulgaria in achieving average annual growth rates that were above both the Central European and the West European average. During the first 3 post-war decades, Romania industrialized faster than Spain, Greece, and Portugal. The infant mortality rate plummeted from 139 per 1,000 during the interwar period to 35 in the 1970s. During the interwar period, half the population was illiterate, but under the communist government illiteracy was eradicated. The population became urbanized, women's rights greatly improved, life expectancy grew, among many other achievements.
Romania continued to make progress. High rates of growth in production created conditions for raising living standards of the people. From 1950 to the mid-1980s, average net wages increased more than eightfold. The consumption fund increased 22-fold, and a broad program of building cultural facilities and housing was carried out. Over 80 percent of the country's population had moved to new apartments during this period.
Despite all this, living standards in the country remained some of Europe's lowest and as early as 1981, there were clear signs of public discontent, such as riots and an angry mob throwing rocks at Ceaușescu's helicopter while it made a flight to Transylvania that October. Ceaușescu desired to repay Western loans, and thus enacted a harsh austerity policy, including rationing of food, gas, heating and electricity. People in cities had to turn to natural gas containers ("butelii") or charcoal stoves, even though they were connected to the gas mains. With full-scale food rationing in place, the Communist Party published official guidelines on how Romanians could eat nutritiously while reducing their calorie intake by 25%. There was a shortage of available goods for the average Romanian. By 1984, despite a high crop yield and increased food production, wide-scale food rationing was introduced. The government promoted it as "rational eating" and "a means to reduce obesity". Most of what was available were export rejects, as most of the quality goods were exported, even underpriced, in order to obtain hard currency, either to pay the debt, or to push forward in the ever-growing pursuit of heavy industrialization.
Measures in the mechanization and chemicalization of farming helped to increase the output of agricultural products. In 1950, more than 300 kg of cereals was gathered per head of the population; by 1982 this amount had increased to 1 ton per person. Meat production increased from 29.5 to 100 kg.
In spite of the Soviet-led boycott, Romania participated in the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. At that time, it was the only Soviet-aligned country to participate in the Olympic Games.
In the late 1980s, the United Nations Human Development report classified Romania as having had high human development. The life expectancy was 71 years, the literacy rate was 96%, and the Real GDP per capita was $3000.
By 1985, despite Romania's huge refining capacity, petroleum products were strictly rationed with supplies drastically cut, a Sunday curfew was instated, and many buses used methane propulsion (they were mockingly named "bombs"); taxis were converted to burning methanol. Electricity was rationed to divert supplies to heavy industry, with a maximum monthly allowed consumption of 20 kWh per family (everything over this limit was heavily taxed). Only one in five streetlights was kept on, and television was reduced to a single channel broadcasting just 2 hours each day. All these policies combined led Romanians to have the lowest standard of living in Europe, with the possible exception of Albania.
Systematization: demolition and reconstruction
Main article: Systematization (Romania)Systematization (Romanian: Sistematizarea) refers to the program of urban planning carried out under Ceaușescu's regime. After a visit to North Korea in 1971, Ceaușescu was impressed by the Juche ideology of that country, and began a massive campaign shortly afterwards.
Beginning in 1974, systematization consisted largely of the demolition and reconstruction of existing hamlets, villages, towns, and cities, in whole or in part, with the stated goal of turning Romania into a "multilaterally developed socialist society". The policy largely consisted in the mass construction of high-density blocks of flats (blocuri).
During the 1980s, Ceaușescu became obsessed with building himself a palace of unprecedented proportions, along with an equally grandiose neighborhood, Centrul Civic, to accompany it. The mass demolitions that occurred in the 1980s under which an overall area of eight square kilometres of the historic center of Bucharest were leveled, including monasteries, churches, synagogues, a hospital, and a noted Art Deco sports stadium, in order to make way for the grandiose Centrul Civic (Civic center) and the House of the Republic, now officially renamed the Palace of Parliament, were the most extreme manifestation of the systematization policy.
In 1988 massive rural resetlement program began.
Last years: increased social control
Control over society became stricter and stricter, with an East German-style phone bugging system installed, and with the Securitate recruiting more agents, extending censorship and keeping tabs and records on a large segment of the population. By 1989, according to CNSAS (the Council for Studies of the Archives of the Former Securitate), one in three Romanians was an informant for the Securitate. Due to this situation, income from tourism dropped substantially, the number of foreign tourists visiting Romania falling by 75%, with the three main tour operators that organized trips in Romania leaving the country by 1987. Ceaușescu also started becoming the subject of a vast personality cult, his portrait on every street and hanging in every public building.
By 1988, with perestroika and glasnost policies in effect in the Soviet Union and China undergoing economic reforms, Romania's Stalinist sociopolitical system began to look increasingly out-of-place, but all attempts were made to keep the populace isolated from events going on outside the country. Also, while the West had been willing in the past to overlook Ceaușescu's human rights record in lieu of his independent, anti-Soviet stance, this was becoming less relevant with the Cold War winding down. As such, Romania started coming under fire from the United States and its allies, but such complaints were merely brushed off as "unwelcome interference in our nation's internal affairs".
There was also a revival of the effort to build:
- the Danube–Black Sea Canal, which was completed;
- a nationwide canal system and irrigation network, some of which was completed, but most of which is still a project, or was abandoned;
- an effort to improve the railway system with electrification and a modern control system;
- the Cernavodă Nuclear Power Plant;
- a national hydroelectric power system, including the Porțile de Fier power station on the Danube in cooperation with Yugoslavia;
- a network of oil refineries;
- a fairly developed oceanic fishing fleet;
- naval shipyards at Constanța;
- a good industrial basis for the chemical and heavy machinery industries;
- a rather well-developed foreign policy; and
- new towns via the Romanian rural systematization program.
Downfall
Brașov Riot
Main article: Brașov RebellionDecember 1989 was the last act of a finale that had started in 1987, in Brașov. The anti-communist riot in Brașov on 15 November 1987 was the main political event that announced the imminent fall of communism in Romania.
The revolt started at the enterprise of Trucks Brașov, as a strike that began on the night of 14 November, on the night-shift, and it continued the next morning with a march downtown, in front of the Council of the Romanian Communist Party.
The population heard about this event through Radio Free Europe. As Emil Hurezeanu tells it: "I remember that Neculai Constantin Munteanu, the moderator of the show, started the broadcast: 'Brașov! So Brașov! Now it started!' This was the tone of the whole broadcast. We had interviews, information, interpretations of some political interpretations, older press articles announcing open street protests against Ceaușescu."
The reprisals against the strikers were rapid. The workers were arrested and imprisoned and their families were terrorized, but this act of courage on the part of the workers of Brașov set the stage for future mass revolts.
Hurezeanu continues: "... All these have been turned into an offensive. The reaction of the regime was expected.. Very soon it was seen that the regime wants to hide it, to cancel it, practically not to respond to claims, not to take measures, to change anything, not to turn this protest into a public debate or even inside the party, in the Political Executive Committee. And then, the recipe of street confrontations with the regime became the only...possible. It became the leitmotif of all the media analysis. It was the beginning of an action against the system that comprises more items. It was a labor protest in a citadel of Ceaușescu, it was an antidictatorial message, it was a clear political context: the pressures of Moscow, Ceaușescu's refusal to accept the demands of Gorbachev, the breaking with the West, who changed the views towards the regime – all these have made us to believe that the beginning of the end was coming".
Protests in 1989 before the Revolution
In March 1989, several leading activists of the PCR protested in a letter that criticized the economic policies of Nicolae Ceaușescu, but shortly thereafter Ceaușescu achieved a significant political victory: Romania paid off its external debt of about US$11 billion several months earlier than even the Romanian dictator had expected. Ceaușescu was formally reelected secretary general of the Romanian Communist Party—-the only political party of the Romanian Socialist Republic—-on 14 November at the party's XIVth Congress.
On 11 November 1989, before the party congress, on Bucharest's Brezoianu Street and Kogălniceanu Boulevard, students from Cluj-Napoca and Bucharest demonstrated with placards that read "We want Reforms against the Ceaușescu government." The students–Mihnea Paraschivescu, Grațian Vulpe, the economist Dan Căprariu from Cluj and others–were arrested and investigated by the Securitate at the Rahova Penitentiary [ro], accused of propaganda against the socialist society. They were released on 22 December 1989 at 14.00. There were other letters and other attempts to draw attention to the economic, cultural, and spiritual oppression of Romanians, but they served only to intensify the activity of the communist police and the Securitate.
Revolution
Main article: Romanian RevolutionOn 16 December, a protest broke out in Timișoara in response to an attempt by the government to evict the dissident pastor László Tőkés from his church flat. Tőkés had recently made critical comments against the regime to the Hungarian media, and the government alleged that he was inciting ethnic hatred. His parishioners gathered around his home to protect him from harassment and eviction. Many passers-by, including Romanian students, spontaneously joined the protest. Subsequently, police and Securitate forces showed up at the scene. By 7:30 pm, the protest had spread, and the original cause became largely irrelevant. Some of the protesters attempted to burn down the building that housed the District Committee of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR). The Securitate responded with tear gas and water jets, while the police attacked rioters and arrested many of them. Around 9:00 pm, the rioters withdrew. They regrouped eventually around the Romanian Orthodox Cathedral and started a protest march around the city, but again they were confronted by the security forces.
Riots and protests resumed the following day, 17 December. The rioters broke into the District Committee building. The army failed to establish order and chaos ensued, with gunfire, fighting, burning of cars, and casualties.
Unlike the Soviet Union at the same time, Romania had not developed a large, privileged elite. Ceausescu's family maintained all control of politics and Communist Party officials were paid poorly and often rotated from job to job, thus preventing any potential political rivals from developing a base of support. This prevented the rise of the Gorbachev-era reformist Communism found in Hungary or the Soviet Union. Ceausescu was so bitterly opposed to reform that he went as far as to call for a Warsaw Pact invasion of Poland after its Communists decided to treat with the opposition–a marked turn from his vehement opposition to the invasion of Czechoslovakia two decades earlier.
Similarly, unlike in Poland, Ceaușescu reacted to strikes entirely through a strategy of further oppression. Romania was nearly the last of the Eastern European communist governments to fall; its fall was also the most violent up to that time.
Protests and riots broke out in Timișoara on 17 December and soldiers opened fire on the protesters, killing about 100 people. After cutting short a two-day trip to Iran, Ceaușescu gave a televised speech on 20 December in which he condemned the events of Timișoara, saying he considered them an act of foreign intervention in the internal affairs of Romania and an aggression through foreign secret services on Romania's sovereignty, and declared National Curfew, convoking a mass meeting in his support in Bucharest for the next day. The uprising of Timișoara became known across the country, and on the morning of 21 December, protests spread to Sibiu, Bucharest and elsewhere.
Matters came to a head on 21 December, when Ceausescu's speech at the Central Committee Building (CC) in Bucharest turned into chaos. The crowd, in a reaction that would have been unthinkable for most of the previous quarter-century, openly booed and jeered Ceaușescu as he spoke. He was forced to hide himself in the CC Building after losing control of his own "supporters". The night of 21 December brought fighting between protesters and the Securitate, police and part of the army forces; more than 1100 protesters were killed during the fights over the next few days. On the morning of 22 December, it was announced that the army general Vasile Milea was dead by suicide. Believing that Milea had actually been murdered, the rank-and-file soldiers went over almost en masse to the budding rebellion. A second attempt at a speech the next day quickly failed. Soon, people were besieging the Central Committee Building, coming within a few meters of Ceaușescu himself; the Securitate did nothing to help him. Ceaușescu soon fled by helicopter from the rooftop of the CC Building, only to find himself abandoned in Târgoviște, where he and his wife Elena were finally tried by a drumhead court-martial, convicted after an hour and a half, and executed by firing squad moments after the verdict and sentence were announced on 25 December. The PCR dissolved soon afterward and has never been revived.
Controversy over the events of December 1989
For several months after the events of December 1989, it was widely argued that Ion Iliescu and the National Salvation Front (FSN) had merely taken advantage of the chaos to stage a coup. While, ultimately, a great deal did change in Romania, it is still a subject of contention among Romanians and other observers as to whether this was their intent from the outset, or merely pragmatic playing of the cards they were dealt. By December 1989 Ceaușescu's harsh and counterproductive economic and political policies had cost him the support of many government officials and even the most loyal Communist Party cadres, most of whom joined forces with the popular revolution or simply refused to support him. This loss of support from government officials ultimately set the stage for Ceaușescu's demise. The Romanian army also was a factor in the regime's fall as it suffered from severe budget cuts while vast sums were spent on the Securitate, leaving them severely discontented and unwilling to save Ceaușescu.
Politics
See also: Politics of Romania and Economy of the Socialist Republic of RomaniaRSR's political framework was a socialist republic run by a single party, the Romanian Communist Party. All of its legislative meetings took place in Bucharest.
Foreign relations
Main article: Foreign relations of RomaniaRomania's foreign policy was aligned with all nations that were aligned with the Soviet Union. Under Ceaușescu it enjoyed strategic relations with the Western Bloc and the Non-Aligned Movement, and it was the only Eastern Bloc country not to boycott the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
Following the Sino-Soviet split, Romania also maintained relations with China and North Korea as well as the Chinese-backed Khmer Rouge-ruled Democratic Kampuchea.
Romania joined the United Nations on 14 December 1955 (see United Nations Security Council Resolution 109) as well as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in 1972. In July 1980, Romania signed a comprehensive trade agreement with the European Economic Community; which in turn became the European Union in 1993 when Romania joined in 2007.
Legacy
See also: Communist nostalgia § Romania, and Bans on communist symbols § RomaniaDespite the prolonged economic and social crisis between 1982 and 1989 and the following austerity measures; mostly due to the fast and stunning economic growth that was followed by the decline, many Romanians still view the Socialist era of their country positively, looking back nostalgically at an era of perceived stability and safety as opposed to the recent economic and political instability, and also the post-communist corruption that were resilient after 1989, being considered a major problem in the country. More than 53% of Romanians responded in polls that they would prefer to live once again under the Communist regime, and 63% think that their lives were better under it. The last and longest ruling leader of the Communist regime, Ceaușescu, also enjoys a high amount of approval in polls: In 2010, 41% of Romanians would vote for Ceaușescu, by 2014 this percentage reached 46%. In December 2018, 64% of people had a good opinion of Ceaușescu, making him the president with the highest amount of approval in the country.
On the other hand, after the fall of the communist regime, Romania began shifting its political and economic policies from support (albeit tepid) for Moscow to aligning itself with Brussels and Washington by joining NATO in 2004 and the European Union in 2007. Today, the "apologetic presentation" of Nazi and communists governments and denigrating their victims in the audio-visual media is forbidden by decision of the National Audiovisual Council. Dinel Staicu was fined 25,000 lei (approx. 9,000 United States dollars) for praising Ceaușescu and displaying his pictures on his private television channel (3TV Oltenia).
Gallery
See also
- Administrative divisions of the People's Republic of Romania
- History of Romania since 1989
- List of Romanian communists
- Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania
- Romania in World War II
- Scânteia, the Romanian Communist Party's newspaper.
- Systematization (Romania)
- Captive Nations
Notes
References
- A Political Chronology of Europe. Europa Publications. 2001. p. 198. ISBN 0-203-40340-1. Retrieved 29 June 2023.
28 December 1989: The name of the country was changed by decree to Romania.
- ^ Horga, Ioan; Stoica, Alina (2012). "Totalitarianism in Europe. Case Study: Romania between Left-Wing and Right-Wing Dictatorships (1938-1989)". SSRN 2226915.
- ^ Thompson, M.R. (2010). "Totalitarian and Post-Totalitarian Regimes in Transitions and Non-Transitions from Communism". Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions. 3: 79–106. doi:10.1080/714005469. S2CID 145789019.
- ^ Dîrdală, Lucian-Dumitru (2011). The End of the Ceaușescu Regime – A Theoretical Convergence (PDF) (Report). Retrieved 21 May 2019.
- Binder, David; Times, Special to The New York (23 December 1989). "Upheaval in the East: Overview; Ceausescu Flees a Revolt in Rumania but Divided Security Forces Fight on". The New York Times.
- Human Development Report 1990, p. 111
- Zwass, Adam (1995). From Failed Communism to Underdeveloped Capitalism: Transformation of Eastern Europe, the Post-Soviet Union, and China. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 1563244616.
- "Final report" (PDF). www.ucis.pitt.edu. December 1989.
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- Balázs Szalontai, The Dynamics of Repression: The Global Impact of the Stalinist Model, 1944–1953. Russian History/Histoire Russe Vol. 29, Issue 2–4 (2003), pp. 415–442.
- Tony Judt, Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945, Penguin Press, 2005. ISBN 1-59420-065-3. "In addition to well over a million in detainees in prison, labor camps, and slave labor on the Danube-Black Sea Canal, of whom tens of thousands died and whose numbers don't include those deported to the Soviet Union, Romania was remarkable for the severity of its prison conditions."
- Cioroianu, Adrian (2005), Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc, Bucharest: Editura Curtea Veche, ISBN 978-973-669-175-1. During debates over the overall number of victims of the Communist government between 1947 and 1964, Corneliu Coposu spoke of 282,000 arrests and 190,000 deaths in custody.
- Anne Applebaum, Gulag: A History, Doubleday, April, 2003. ISBN 0-7679-0056-1. The author gives an estimate of 200,000 dead at the Danube-Black Sea Canal alone.
- Romulus Rusan (dir.), in Du passé faisons table rase ! Histoire et mémoire du communisme en Europe, Robert Laffont, Paris, 2002, p. 376–377
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- Rădulescu-Motru, in Cioroianu, p.65
- Frucht, R. Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture, Volume 1, p. 759. ABC-CLIO (2005).
- Marian Chiriac, Provocările diversității: politici publice privind minoritățile naționale și religioase în România, p. 111. Bucharest: Centrul de Resurse pentru Diversitate Etnoculturală, 2005, ISBN 978-9738-623-97-2
- Lavinia Stan; Lucian Turcescu (25 October 2007). Religion and Politics in Post-Communist Romania. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 46–49. ISBN 978-0-19-530853-2.
- Ageing, Ritual and Social Change: Comparing the Secular and Religious in Eastern and Western Europe; Ashgate AHRC/ESRC Religion and Society Series; Daniela Koleva; Peter Coleman; Routledge Press, 2016; Pgs. 6–7; "The Romanian Orthodox Church by contrast has shown a much stronger development since the Second World War. After the initial waves of militant atheism were spent, a strong spiritual renewal movement took place in the late 1950s, and there has been a stream of notable spiritual figures both before and after communism. ... There was also a lack of consistent suppression of the Romanian Orthodox church by communist authorities. A large number of churches were left open, and monasteries continued to function."
- ^ "Communist Dictatorship in Romania (1947-1989)". Communist Crimes. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
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- "Trei mii de studenți timișoreni, arestați și torturați", România liberă, 25 October 2007.
- Valentino, Benjamin A (2005). Final solutions: mass killing and genocide in the twentieth century. Cornell University Press. pp. 91–151.
- Rummel, Rudolph, Statistics of Democide, 1997.
- "Henry Shapiro, "Red Cultural Influence Vanishing in Romania", United Press International published in the Wilmington (N.C.) Star-News, July 16, 1965". 17 July 1965. Retrieved 16 May 2013.
- ^ The contradictions between domestic and foreign policies in the Cold War Romania (1956-1975), Ferrero, M.D, 2006, Historia Actual Online
- "Decretul 770/1966 – Legislatie gratuita". www.legex.ro.
- ESHRE Capri Workshop Group (2010). "Europe the continent with the lowest fertility". Human Reproduction Update. 16 (6): 590–602. doi:10.1093/humupd/dmq023. PMID 20603286.
- Horga, Mihai; Gerdts, Caitlin; Potts, Malcolm (2013). "The remarkable story of Romanian women's struggle to manage their fertility". Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care. 39 (1): 2–4. doi:10.1136/jfprhc-2012-100498. PMID 23296845.
- Kligman, Gail. "Political Demography: The Banning of Abortion in Ceausescu's Romania". In Ginsburg, Faye D.; Rapp, Rayna, eds. Conceiving the New World Order: The Global Politics of Reproduction. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1995 :234–255. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE KIE/49442.
- "Romania : a country study". Library of Congress. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
- Hunt, Kathleen (24 June 1990). "ROMANIA'S LOST CHILDREN: A Photo Essay by James Nachtwey". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
- Gorky, Patricia. "Romania: 30 years removed from socialism – Liberation News". Retrieved 14 January 2021.
- ^ International Affairs, No. 3, Vol.31, 1985, page(s): 141–152
- "- Human Development Reports" (PDF). hdr.undp.org.
- Emil Hurezeanu, as quoted (see note below) by: (in Romanian) "Ziua care nu se uită. 15 noiembrie 1987, Brașov", Polirom, 2002, ISBN 973-681-136-0.
This is documented by the book's revision, available at (in Romanian) librarie.net - Brubaker, Rogers: Nationalist politics and everyday ethnicity in a Transylvanian town. Princeton University Press, 2006, page 119. ISBN 0691128340
- Sebetsyen, Victor (2009). Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. New York City: Pantheon Books. ISBN 978-0-375-42532-5.
- Meyer, Michael (2009). The Year That Changed the World: The Untold Story Behind the Fall of the Berlin Wall. Simon & Schuster. p. 196. ISBN 978-1-4165-5845-3.
- Stanescu, Iulian (July 2019). "Quality of life in Romania 1918-2018: An overview". Calitatea Vietii. 02 (29): 107–144.
- Manuela, Marin (11 July 2016). "Assessing communist nostalgia in Romania: chronological framework and opinion polls". Twentieth Century Communism (11). Gale Academic OneFile: 10.
- Kligman, Gail; Verdery, Katherine (2011). Peasants under siege: the collectivization of Romanian agriculture, 1949–1962. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-1400840434. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
- Odobescu, Vlad (30 August 2012). "Struggling Romanians yearn for communism". The Washington Times. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
- "In Romania, Opinion Polls Show Nostalgia for Communism". Balkanalysis. 27 December 2011. Archived from the original on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- "Noul Partid Comunist Român, condus de un șofer de taxi". Adevarul. 7 November 2010. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- "Ceaușescu still most beloved President of Romania". 27 December 2018.
- Official communique of the National Board of the Audio-Visual at the Wayback Machine (archived 20 December 2007), originally at cna.org but now removed, accessible through web.archive.org
External links
- ceausescu.org, an extensive website on Communist Romania.
- memorialsighet.ro, a memorial site dedicated to the victims of Communism in Romania, based at Sighet prison.
- Euxeinos 3/2011: Romanian Communism between Commemoration, Nostalgia, and Scientific Debate
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