THE ANTI-HUMANS
STUDENT RE-EDUCATION IN ROMANIAN PRISONS
by Dumitru Bacu
(c)
1971, Soldiers of the Cross,
Englewood, Colorado
The original Romanian manuscript, under the title,
Pitesti, Centru de Reeducare Studentesca,
was published at Madrid in 1963
Englewood, Colorado
The original Romanian manuscript, under the title,
Pitesti, Centru de Reeducare Studentesca,
was published at Madrid in 1963
IN
MEMORIAM
Dr. Simionescu Serban, Gheorghe Gafencu Limberea, Paul Oprisan, Constantin Onac et ceterorum |
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INTRODUCTION
by REVILO OLIVER
The author of this
book, a Romanian born in Greek territory, went to Romania for his university
education and there became a member of the anti-Communist organization that
flourished in that nation before and during the tragic and fratricidal Second
World War. After the Bolshevik conquest of Romania, the Soviets, undoubtedly on
orders from their masters, maintained a pretense that their occupation was
merely temporary and further disguised their purposes by keeping on the throne
as King of Romania the legitimate heir, a young man who was merely a puppet in
their hands, but served to give to the people an illusive hope that Romania,
though devastated and impoverished, might again become a free nation. In this
hope, of course, the Romanians (like many other captive peoples) were encouraged
by the governments of the Western nations that had won the military victory.
Those governments, especially in the United States, maintained a pretense that
they were not the servants of the Bolsheviks’ masters, and, whenever they
deemed it expedient to administer a little verbal paregoric to their own
population, manufactured oratory about “defending the Free World” and “containing
Communism.” Americans, who were so charmed by those phrases that they did not
notice what their own government was doing, cannot blame the Romanians (or the
others) for having supposed that the official verbiage was an indication of
national policy.
During the early
years of Soviet occupation, therefore, the Romanian people entertained delusive
hopes of eventual liberation, and the author of this book accordingly remained
in Romania, his true fatherland. When he was at last arrested and imprisoned on
suspicion of holding opinions inimical to Bolshevism, he, luckily, suffered only
the excruciating tortures and hardships that are normal in what is called a
Great Society. During his imprisonment, however, he had by chance an opportunity
to learn of an experiment conducted on a select group of young men, and he had
the acumen and patience to discover precisely what that experiment was. In this
book he discloses for the first time the facts about a practice of which the
peoples of the West still know nothing.
Bacu speaks only of
what he knows of what he witnessed with his own eyes and learned from the lips
of men who had, despite themselves, been stripped of their humanity by an
infallible scientific technique. His subject, therefore, is what the Bolsheviks
secretly did to human beings in the prison at Pitesti[1]
from 1949, when the experiment began, to 1951, when it seems to have been
temporarily discontinued for some reason unknown.
What is described
in these pages is not, however, an isolated event. Everyone who has had
experience in military intelligence dealing with the Bolsheviks, or who has made
a close study of information that is available from little known but authentic
sources, will recognize in Bacu’s pages a detailed description of a technique
that the implacable enemies of mankind have used in many lands perhaps in all
countries that are officially Communist for many years. The military
intelligence agencies of Western nations have long known that a film
demonstrating basic Pavlovian procedures was produced in Russia for training the
Bolshevik secret police in 1928, and that the intelligence service of at least
one nation succeeded in obtaining a copy of that film. After the notorious “purge”
trials in Russia in 1936, when the masters of that country for some reason
thought it advisable to exhibit to the world their ability to elicit the most
incredible confessions from highly-placed and hardened Bolsheviks, intelligent
observers naturally wondered what means could have been employed to produce such
amazing results. Certain Western intelligence services sought to ascertain what
means had been used, and eventually ascertained them in sufficient detail to
show that the essentials of the method were precisely those that Mr. Bacu has
described for us.
Military
intelligence services naturally do not publish what they have learned by their
secret and often perilous operations. Perhaps the first hint of the new method
given to the general public came from George Orwell, who, in his 1984,
portrayed the internationalists’ Utopia and described some parts of the
Communist technique, eliminating much that was too realistic for the taste of
the reading public at that time, and replacing it with some episodes that could
give a dramatic touch to what was in reality unspeakably vile and interminably
monotonous. From 1984, however, an alert reader could have surmised much
that was left unsaid. Since then, confirmatory evidence has become available
from many sources, often fragmentary, for victims who have the stamina to tell
what was done to them may nevertheless be understandably reticent about the
worst aspects of the degradation imposed on them. They often censor their
reports, to avoid harrowing unendurably the feelings of a humane reader or
arousing total disbelief in tender-minded individuals from whom miseducation or
innate sentimentality has concealed the ultimate horrors that lie hidden in
creatures anatomically indistinguishable from human beings.
It almost never
happens that we have a report from a survivor who at the time observed and
interviewed the piteous victims of scientific bestiality, but, by a lucky
chance, himself escaped the traumatic and mind-destroying shock of the torments
they had undergone. That is what makes the book here translated from the
Romanian unique. Bacu, to whom we owe our only authoritative report on the “Pitesti
Phenomenon,”[2] was such a survivor.
In these pages, the
reader will, for the first time, have at his disposal a fairly complete account
of Bolshevik techniques of dehumanization, including some details, here
mentioned as delicately as possible, of which we do not like to think. On these,
Bacu does not insist, but you will see their import. One aspect concerning which
he is silent is the sexual torments that form a standard part of the Bolshevik
method. That is a large omission, but scholars who have had the fortitude to
study the works of the celebrated “Marquis” de Sade[3]
and his peers will readily perceive what was involved, while a specific report
here would not only sicken most readers, but would prevent the distribution of
this book through the United States mails.[4]
This account, as I
have said, deals with prisons in Romania, but the procedures used there have
been and are used wherever the anti-humans have gained control. Identical
procedures, together with such improvements as may have been suggested by their
experiments and delights in Romania and other captive nations, will be used
everywhere that their power is extended including, of course, the United States,
if that nation reaches the goal toward which it is presently moving at a
vertiginous speed.
If the Americans
succumb, they will remember this book as a prophecy that was completely
fulfilled.
* * * * *
Apart from its
value to Americans as foreshadowing things to come certain to come, if the
operations now in progress in the United States are carried to a successful
conclusion this book, although not couched in the technical terminology of
psychology and psychiatry, should be of absorbing interest to everyone who,
regardless of his political desires or prognostications, is sincerely interested
in study of the human consciousness. It delineates the result of a crucial
experiment that could not have been performed on Occidentals outside Soviet
territory.
This book is a
landmark in the broad field now generally designated by a term adapted from the
Russian, psychopolitics. Psychopolitics, a technology rather than a
science since it is a practical application of data obtained by research in
several sciences, may be defined as the art of controlling a nation by
controlling the minds of the politically dominant majority of its population.
As a designation,
psychopolitics is preferable to psychological warfare, which, though
correct, is often taken to mean only operations directed against an enemy nation
in the course of armed conflict. An excellent example of such propaganda attacks
is President Wilson’s famous “fourteen points,” a group of fairy-stories
about the peace and justice that the American Santa Claus had in his bag for
good little boys and girls in Europe.[5] That high-sounding
nonsense, which seemed plausible to persons addicted to idealistic fantasies and
romantic fiction, is credited with having broken the will of the German people
and induced them to surrender in 1918, after which, of course, it was easy to
inflict on them suffering and starvation, Bolshevik outbreaks, and finally a
monetary inflation so enormous that the international people then in Germany
could “legally” appropriate most of the property in Germany that they had
not already acquired, “legality” being observed by handing a few American
dollars to famished and despairing Germans in return for land, buildings, or
factories worth a thousand or a million times that price.
The “fourteen
points” are justly regarded as one of the great triumphs of psychological
warfare, but under modern conditions verbal bombardments, unlike artillery fire,
cannot be aimed in one direction. Clever as the “fourteen points” were, we
may legitimately wonder whether they would have made the German populace simper,
if the populace had not been made susceptible to such gabble by the long and
patient work of enemy aliens and their hirelings. What is more significant,
substantially the same drivel was used, through Wilson and other mouthpieces, to
pep up the American people and make them glad to furnish cannon fodder and money
to “make the world safe for democracy” by devastating Europe in a “war to
end wars.” Wilson’s ideological barrage was directed against Americans as
much as against Germans, and we may wonder which nation, in the long run, was
the more damaged.
Under modern
conditions, psychological warfare is necessarily waged by a government against
its own subjects and only secondarily against a foreign country, and the real
beneficiary is invariably the international nation that controls both sides in
the war that it has arranged for its own purposes. Only if we keep that fact in
mind can we use the term psychological warfare correctly.
The tactical and
strategic use of psychopolitics that the Soviet recommends to its allies and
agents in the United States and other nations of the West yet uncaptured has
been set forth in a remarkable document of which several copies appear to have
reached the United States in the 1930’s and later. It is most widely known and
generally available as a booklet, Brain-washing, a Synthesis of the Russian
Textbook on Psychopolitics, with an introduction by the Reverend Mr. Kenneth
Goff, who was a member of the Communist Party in the United States from 1936 to
1939, and who had studied psychopolitics in a special Communist training school
in Milwaukee. He states that the textbook, although issued for the use of
English-speaking students in Lenin University, was also “used in America for
the training of Communist cadre.” An almost identical text was obtained from a
confidential source in 1955 by a Professor Charles Stickley of New York City and
published in that year.[6] A quite similar text, with only
minor variations, came into the possession of Mr. Louis Zoul, the well-known
author of Thugs and Communists, who published in The Soviet Inferno
the greater part of the text divided into short sections, each of which is
followed by copious corroboration from many sources, such as Anatoli Granovsky’s
I Was an NKVD Agent and Captain Robert A. Winston’s The Pentagon
Case, as well as letters from individuals who escaped from Cuba and other
proletarian paradises.[7]
In the publications
before Mr. Zoul’s, the text is preceded by a commendatory address, evidently
delivered at Lenin University by Lavrentiy Beria, the Jew who was Head Butcher
in the Russia satrapy from 1938 when he liquidated another Jew, the unspeakable
Yezhov until 1953, when he was in turn liquidated by another and even more
ferocious Jew. The date of the oration is not given, but it would seem to be
earlier than 1938 and to come from the time when Beria, in addition to feeding
his blood-lust in Transcaucasia, was presiding over the manufacture of “historical
studies” for the use of educated simpletons in the United States and
elsewhere.
The “synthesis,”
which deals with the uses of psychopolitics rather than techncal details, is
obviously a condensation and omits most of the Marxist jargon with which
admittedly Communist publications for the general public are almost invariably
larded.[8] It does, however, maintain the pretense,
discarded only on the very highest levels, that psychological warfare against
Western nations is directed from Moscow in the interests of Russia, and that the
goal is the destruction of “capitalism.” The text, though candid enough in
treating the American people as enemies who must be destroyed or enslaved, was
evidently designed for students who would forget that the Bolshevik capture of
Russia was, of course, planned, financed, and directed by the Schiffs, Warburgs,
and other wealthy Jews then living in the United States who used their control
over the governments of Germany, Great Britain, France, and the United States to
ensure the Bolsheviks’ triumph over the Russians.[9] The
students were also expected to believe or pretend that “capitalism” included
the international lords of finance, who have always found their Soviet colony an
extremely profitable investment both in itself and as a means of exploiting
their control over the money and banking of nations that are told that they are
“free.”
The text of Brain-washing[10]
deals primarily with means of inducing insanity or idiocy in selected victims
and is thus directly relevant to the Pitesti experiment described in the present
book. It is not, however, a complete treatise, even in outline, of
psychopolitics; it barely alludes to very important weapons of psychological
warfare. We cannot digress to discuss those weapons here, but no one should
overlook the efficacy of scientifically produced propaganda[11]
in the United States, where it is virtually a monopoly of the Jews, who, through
advertising, can control the ever diminishing number of newspapers, periodicals,
and broadcasting stations that they do not own outright. The best strategic
propaganda is produced by manufacturing impassioned argument and violent
controversy on “both sides” of a given question, so that the public accepts
as unquestionable fact everything that both sides” in the contrived
controversy seem to take for granted.
Propaganda, if
properly used, can always control a majority of a given population, but will
always be ineffective against both the critical intelligence of independent
minds and the faith of a religion that the propaganda line openly contradicts.
Although the minds can usually be hired, and theologians can be employed to “modernize”
the religion, there will always be troublesome exceptions, even after a century
of strenuous effort. In the conquest of a country by psychopolitics, the
exceptions must be put under physical restraint and either liquidated or made
harmless imbeciles or, if possible, converted into useful zombies.
This is the problem
with which the text of Brain-washing is principally concerned, and with
particular reference to the United States, where naked terrorism through the
government was impossible in the 1930’s, and is not yet feasible, even today.
The principles expounded in the text and the methods suggested are indisputably
authentic: they are the standard Soviet application of the discoveries made in
Russia, before the Bolshevik conquest, by Dr. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov, whose
scientific talents the shrewd Bolsheviks were able to take over and put to their
own use.[12] You will find the essentials stated in the
text.
The “synthesis”
of the textbook on psychopolitics recommends and prescribes for use against
Americans a propaganda campaign for “mental health” to obtain from the
stupid Americans acquiescence in legislation to authorize the “legal”
kidnapping of troublesome Americans and their incarceration in prisons (to be
called “hospitals”) in which “trained psychiatrists” of alien origin and
their brutish assistants can induce insanity, Imbecility, or, if necessary,
death by means of scientific tortures, especially “electric shock therapy”
(which can be used to break the backbone), or mind-destroying drugs, such as the
now famous L.S.D., which was only later produced by the Weizmann Laboratories in
Israel and shipped to the United States for surreptitious sale to adolescents
and children whose minds had been given a preliminary conditioning in the public
schools.
In the 1930’s,
the “mental health” scheme would doubtless have seemed preposterous and
ridiculous to the stolid and happy-go-lucky Americans, if they had heard of it.
It has now, however, been almost completely implemented, and has already been
used in a considerable number of cases, a few of which have attracted some
little attention, especially that of the abduction of General Edwin A. Walker,
which failed because he had prominent friends who acted before he could be
destroyed, of Frank Britton, who had dared to criticize Jews and was effectively
silenced, and of the journalist, Fred Seelig, who, through a miscalculation, was
prematurely released and had time to narrate his experience in print before he
died.[13] We may expect, however, that the procedure will
be used with increasing frequency and less secrecy, and that soon it will be
mere routine for Americans who make themselves obnoxious to their masters (for
example, by claiming that the “United Nations” or the Federal Reserve System
or the Marxist income tax is “un-Constitutional,” or by pretending that God’s
People do not have a right to use lesser breeds for their own profit and fun) to
be hauled to Springfield, Missouri, or some other equivalent of Pitesti on the
western side of the Atlantic, and there, with “loving care,” be restored to
“mental health” as vertebrate vegetables.
Despite the panoply
of refined techniques, such as surgical operations on the brain (“lobotomy”),
excruciating electrical torments, and subtle drugs, it is noteworthy that even
in the United States at the present time the favored procedure is to subject
inconvenient Americans to a kind of physical degradation of the same kind as
that used at Pitesti, though, for some reason, less intense and systematic. A
typical case is that of the American journalist, who, having come upon evidence
that compromised the nest of homosexual perverts in Washington, was kidnapped by
a U. S. Marshal and hustled to Springfield, Missouri, where he was stripped and
thrust naked into a small cell, of which the floor and three sides were of rough
concrete, while the fourth was a ponderous steel door. There was no furnishing
of any kind in the cell, and only two openings, one a round hole in the floor
leading to a sewer, and the other a ventilator, through which were sent blasts
of frigid air alternating with shrill, deafening, cacophonous, and rhythmically
disoriented “music,” intended both to damage the auditory nerves and to make
sure that the poor wretch in the cell could not possibly fall asleep as he
stretched his naked body on the rough concrete. Naturally, the victim’s skin,
abraded by the concrete, soon developed open sores, and his despairing mind
eventually took refuge in periods of total stupor that even the howling din
coming through the ventilator could not break. After being deprived of food and
water for three days and nights, the victim was forced to obtain them by
crawling on his hands and knees in minimum time to a pot placed on the sill of
the briefly opened door.[14]
In the United
States it has thus far been necessary to use a certain amount of discretion and
pretense in the destruction of anti-Communist nuisances, but in Romania, after
the completion of the take-over, more effective secrecy made precautions less
necessary.
The Pitesti
experiment dispensed with such complicated and expensive paraphernalia as
electrical apparatus, brain surgeons, and specially prepared drugs. It used only
the simplest tools, everywhere procurable: clubs, the bestiality of degenerates,
the weakness of human nature when attacked by Pavlov’s methods. The results of
the experiment were, as you will see, impressive and appalling. They proved that
no one could resist the techniques of the Anti-Humans, but whether the
experiment was entirely a success is a question that must be left to your
decision on the basis of your estimate of what the experimenters hoped to
discover or prove, while a critique of their methodology must be left to the few
Occidentals who have expert knowledge of psychobiological processes.
What no reader of
this book can fall to perceive, if only for a moment before he tries to forget
the “unthinkable,” is the unspeakably vile and sadistic lusts of the
contrivers of the experiment at Pitesti appetites so foreign to everything that
he regards as human that the creatures who are animated by them can be described
only as the “enemies of mankind,” or, concisely, as the Anti-Humans.
What is described
in this book happened in Romania after the Bolsheviks discarded the pretense
that they were tender-hearted humanitarians bringing “equality” and “civil
rights” to the downtrodden victims of the wicked “Fascists” and “anti-Semites.”
Before and even after the Anti-Humans stopped dissembling, some Romanians were,
by foresight or good luck, able to escape westward, and even to make their
sufferings known, as Mr. Bacu has done in this book, to peoples not yet
imprisoned.
When the United
States has progressed to the point reached by Romania in 1948, there will be no
place on earth to which Americans can flee, and there will be no one to hear
their screams.
* * * * *
All that remains to
be said to introduce Mr. Bacu’s book to American readers can be expressed in a
few pages giving such information about Romania as will enable Americans to
appreciate the human drama the pathos and the tragedy of this narrative.
Romania was for
centuries, even while it was under the comparatively mild and humane oppression
of the Moslems, the easternmost land of the West. The nation was born of the
Roman conquest of Dacia (101-106), and there Rome left an imprint that has thus
far been indelible and a spiritual heritage that survives in the heart of the
people.
The civilization of
Romania was the civilization of the West. The names of men and places may be
unfamiliar to your eyes, but the people you will recognize as your own kind and
their thoughts will be the thoughts of the Christian West.
There is, however,
one peculiarity of Romania that requires some preliminary explanation, for it is
the very opposite of what contemporary experience in the United States and, for
that matter, in most Western nations to varying degrees makes us take for
granted.
The persons whom
the Bolshevik beasts selected for dehumanization were a clearly defined group:
university students. That was because in Romania, in sharp antithesis to what we
see in the United States today, university students were a highly respected
elite and included men who combined the vigor and ardor of youth with
unsurpassed patriotism and a lucid conservatism, intellectual and religious.
This fact, which
will seem so paradoxical to Americans today, was the result of two concurrent
factors.
Romania was
essentially a land of peasants with limited industrial and commercial classes.
The four universities, at Iasi (founded by Prince Cuza in 1860), Bucharest
(founded in 1864), Cluj (1872) and Cernauti (1875), each divided into several
faculties (theology, philosophy, letters, science, law, and medicine), were open
to all who had completed their studies in a lyceum (liceu, translated ‘high
school’ in the present book). The lyceum had relatively high standards,
requiring, for example, the learning of French and German as well as either
Latin and Greek or English and Italian, and weeded out the intellectually
incompetent.[15] Only a small fraction, therefore, of
Romanian youth entered the universities, and consequently a considerable
prestige was attached to the very word student (i.e. university student,
since a pupil in a secondary school was an elev). It suggested a
considerable intellectual ability and a serious purpose, for the students in
Romanian universities were, for the most part, the children of hardworking
peasants or of earnest professional men; the scions of the wealthy more often
than not went abroad for their education.
To this fact we
must add a second, that will be even more astonishing to the American reader.
The Romanian universities were as much centers of ardent patriotism and
conservatism as American colleges, in the period of 1920-50, were centers of
internationalism and socialism. The prevailing atmosphere of staunch
conservatism also distinguished Romanian universities from other European
universities. For this there were several reasons.
Romania was
essentially an agrarian country and a large percentage of the studenti
had had closer contact with the realities of life than was usual in Germany and
France. More important, Romania was a small nation with a clear consciousness of
its national individuality as a Western nation, tracing its origins to the Roman
conquest of Dacia, and encompassed by peoples of Byzantine, Slavic, or Oriental
traditions. It had stubbornly maintained that consciousness through centuries of
alien domination, attaining a precarious and transient independence in 1600,
only to fall again under the rule of the Turks. After numerous interventions by
Russia, the enemy of Turkey, and after many episodes of valiant resistance to
both Russians and Turks, Romania, formed by the union of Wallachia and Moldavia,
gained autonomy in 1859, but remained under the suzerainty of the Turkish
Sultan, and did not become fully and formally independent until 1881.
Independence so recently attained and constantly threatened remained in the
Romanian mind the precious guerdon of nationality at a time when the larger
nations of Europe were taking themselves and their prosperous perpetuity for
granted.
Romania, moreover,
had Russia on its eastern frontier Russia which, in 1812, had seized and annexed
Bessarabia, a region containing a large population of Romanian blood. After the
International Conspiracy captured Russia in 1917, Romanians could not fail to
know what the beasts did in Russia and especially in Bessarabia. Moreover, it
was the Romanian army that in August 1919 occupied Budapest and freed Hungary
from the unspeakable vermin led by Israel Cohen, alias Bela Kun. The Romanians
knew what Bolshevism was, and whence it sprang. In the United States, separated
from the reality by thousands of miIes and an infected press, many stupid or
cunning professors could gabble about a “noble experiment” and a “people’s
regime,” but in Romania such nonsense, so utterly at variance with observed
reality, was recognized as either asinine or criminal.
To these
considerations must be added another equally important. Although, as was to be
expected, Romanian universities naturally tended to imitate the far older and
venerable universities of the great European powers, especially Germany and
France, there was a significant difference that limited the more deleterious
aspects of that influence. The faculties of Romanian universities, especially
Iasi and Bucharest, were predominantly composed of Romanians, whereas, of
course, elsewhere in Europe university teaching had been invaded by large
contingents of the international people. Before the Treaty of Adrianople in
1829, the Jews, for the most part, had ignored Romania, an impoverished land
under Turkish rule, and had by preference swarmed into nations where the
prospects of easy pickings from the natives were far more attractive.[16]
After 1829, hordes of Jews came over the borders, but, despite various efforts
by France and Germany to procure for these intruders in Romania the privileged
status they enjoyed elsewhere, Jews were, for all practical purposes, debarred
from citizenship until 1923, when the Romanian government then in office yielded
to the pressures of the “great powers.”[17] It thus
happened that in Romania, unlike France and Germany, the universities were still
largely staffed by men who in mind and spirit belonged to the nation, and they
were not dominated by an alien race whose members can, with the facility of
chameleons, take on the color of whatever the environment in which they choose
to reside. In Romanian universities, therefore, patriotism was intellectually
respectable, and, on the whole, taken for granted until 1918.
After 1918,
although faculties remained largely Romanian, the situation became confused.
Some professors seem to have been either bemused by the glib patter of Marxism,
a “doctrine” cleverly designed to addle mediocre brains that can be
fascinated by pseudo-intellectual verbiage, or intimidated by the Bolsheviks’
boast that they represent a mysterious but irresistible “wave of the future.”
Many others, perhaps fearing for their comfort or lives, concealed their real
sentiments and remained silent or took refuge in ambiguous pronouncements. A
few, however, fearlessly maintained Romanian traditions and asserted their
intellectual integrity. They provided the inspiration for the patriotic and
conservative movements among the university students.
The reaction of the
students was doubtless hastened by a simple sociological pressure. The Jews,
although they were numerically only a small part of the population even after
the great influx at the end of the World War, swarmed into the universities and
began to jostle out the natives. According to the official statistics, for
example, in the spring semester of 1920 at the University of Cernauti there were
enrolled in the College of Philosophy 574 Jews and only 174 Romanians; in the
College of Law, 547 Jews and 234 Romanians. At the University of Iasi 831 Jews
were enrolled in the College of Medicine as against 556 Romanians, and in the
College of Pharmacy, 229 Jews and 97 Romanians.[18] These
are, of course, some of the most striking disproportions, but everyone will see
why, especially in such academic institutions, young Romanians, finding
themselves a minority amidst a throng of pushing, versipellous, and disputatious
aliens, and doubtless also often finding themselves eclipsed scholastically by
the mental agility and Oriental subtlety of the Protean race, should have turned
ardently to patriotic movements.
There was a further
development that will be even more astonishing to the American reader. It may be
that before the First World War in Romania, a largely peasant nation but
recently emancipated from Moslem control, Christianity retained a greater vigor
and commanded a more general piety than in other countries of Europe, though it
would be difficult to make an accurate comparison between Romania and, for
example, Brittany, Bavaria, or Piedmont. Romanian universities were, of course,
profoundly affected by the intellectual climate of the great European
universities and necessarily reflected the dominant attitudes of thought, from
German “idealism” to the “religion of humanity” preached by Auguste
Comte in his more lucid intervals; from the stern pessimism of Schopenhauer to
the graceful and universal irony of Anatole France. To a very large extent the
intellectual life of Europe was dominated by the attitude that Christianity was
an historical phenomenon characteristic of an age whose passing one might view
with joy, indifference, or regret, but which, whether for better or worse, was
passing ineluctably away: religion was a waning superstition that still had
power only over the uneducated. These currents of European thought necessarily
affected educated Romanians, who, as a matter of course, read and wrote French
fluently and, in many cases, German also.
Romanians will, no
doubt, variously estimate the direct effect on their intellectual life of the
dire and immediate menace of Bolshevism in the period that followed the First
World War. Certainly all intelligent Romanians could see that their enemies were
anti-Christian were in both word and deed frantic enemies of the Western World,
whose culture had for fifteen centuries been specifically Christian, and whose
nations had been so distinctively set apart from others by their religion that
they had been little conscious of the underlying racial unity of the West. In
the 1920’s, it must be remembered, Bolshevik propaganda was stridently
anti-Christian, denouncing religion as “the opiate of the people,”
signalizing its victories by massacring ecclesiastics, defiling shrines, and
converting churches into stables or warehouses, and teaching militant atheism in
its schools.[19] It was not until much later that the
Bolsheviks could implement on any extensive scale their other and complementary
technique of utilizing renegade ministers and priests to spread the germs of
Bolshevism under the guise of a “social gospel” or “ecumenical
Christianity.” Until 1930, at least, the established Christian churches were
almost universally regarded as a bulwark against the International Conspiracy.
Furthermore, in 1919, the multitude of Jews residing in Romania, deeming a
Bolshevik victory imminent, had prematurely and indiscreetly dropped their
pretense and appeared openly as the instigators of “proletarian” riots and
sabotage, and the suborners of violence and treason, not troubling to disguise
their eager anticipation of a glorious butchery that would put the natives in
their place. Thus the fundamental and necessary hostility between Christianity
and the various doctrines of Judaism again made Christianity the symbol of
Romanian nationalism as opposed to its foreign and domestic enemies.
In these
circumstances, it was only to be expected that Romanian patriotic societies
would be specifically Christian, but some, I suspect, used Christianity
primarily as a symbol of their purpose. The first of the patriotic organizations
was the Guard of the National Conscience (Garda Constiintei Nationale),
founded by Constantin Pancu, a simple steelworker whom his fellows elected their
leader, primarily to expose the nonsense of the “proletarian” propaganda
with which the Bolsheviks were trying to confuse and utilize Romanian laborers
for the invariable but concealed Bolshevik purpose of ultimately reducing them
to brutalized slavery.
In 1923, the
National Christian Defense League (Liga Apararii Nationale Crestine) was
founded by one of Romania’s most distinguished scholars, A. C. Cuza, Professor
of Law in the University of Iasi, with the discreet support of the
internationally known historian, Prof. Nicolae Iorga, who is, perhaps, best
known in the United States for his History of the Byzantine Empire, which
has appeared in several English editions.[20] A league
headed by scholars of such eminence naturally had great prestige among
university students and educated men in general and it became a force of very
considerable political importance, particularly after it merged in 1935 with the
political party headed by Octavian Goga, prominent poet, litterateur, and
statesman. Although the National Christian Defense League sought the support of
the sincerely religious, its inner direction was rationalistic, basing its
avowed hostility to Jews and Bolsheviks on historical and scientific grounds.
From all that I can learn, Professor Cuza’s creed was essentially the elegant
scepticism of Renan. Professor forga’s historical works treat Christianity
with a cold objectivity. And Octavian Goga, if correctly quoted by Jerome and
Jean Tharaud, seems to have held at heart a view of Christianity similar to that
set forth in Nietzsche’s famous Genealogy of Morals.[21]
The greatest
influence over the Romanian students at this juncture was undoubtedly exerted by
Corneliu Z. Codreanu, the son of a teacher in a Moldavian secondary school. Born
13 September, 1899, he prepared himself in law at the University of Iasi, where
he studied under Professor Cuza, and he later studied abroad in both Germany and
France. A man of iron will, exalted faith, and ardent patriotism, Codreanu,
after participating in the Guard of the National Conscience from its inception
and in the National Christian Defense League, founded on 24 June, 1927 the
Legion of Michael the Archangel (Legiunea Archangelului Mihail). The
organization’s principles an unlimited love of country, a code of personal
honor and moral intransigence, the reciprocal loyalty of knighthood, and
rigorous subordination of body to spirit were all based by the founder on an
absolute faith in Christ. The Legion was “indissolubly united under the aegis
of God” and its members pledged themselves to sacrifice themselves without
limit or reservation for God and Country. This was the movement that by its high
and noble idealism attracted to itself all the young elite of the Romanian
universities, won their unqualified allegiance, and largely dominated the
thinking of even those who stood aloof or opposed it.
This is why the
Romanian university students were, in contrast to those of other Western
nations, profoundly Christian. I have been assured by Romanians that in many
cases the students’ firm religious convictions were shaped not so much by
their families or by their churches as by the inspiration of Codreanu and the
rigid Christian discipline he imposed on all his followers. There can be no
doubt but that, from a strictly religious point of view, Codreanu’s movement
represented the greatest and most intense revival of the Christian faith in any
nation during the Twentieth Century. Its influence on the spiritual and
intellectual life of the elite among young Romanians was enormous and
transcendent. That is what makes the Legion unique among the nationalist
movements of our age. The combination of ardent faith and intense nationalism
produced a generation of heroes. The Legion, also known as the Iron Guard (Garda
de Fier), sent an expeditionary force to Spain in 1936 to combat the
international vermin there and earned the enduring gratitude of the Spanish
people. And when the war with the Soviet began, the members of the Guard, taken
from the prisons to which they had been sent by the Antonescu dictatorship in an
effort to suppress their movement, formed the very flower of the Romanian army
and were distinguished for their valor and devotion in all the actions of that
war.
This is not the
place to summarize, however briefly, the career of Codreanu[22]
and the convulsed history of Romania after the precipitate and illegal return to
that country of Prince Carol, a royal débauché who, after many
offenses, had been disinherited and exiled by his own father. Carol, accompanied
by a Jewish harlot to whom he was completely subservient, returned to Romania in
1930, dethroned his own son to reign in his stead, and, finding no other way to
check the rising political power of the Iron Guard, overthrew the Constitution
in 1938 and made himself dictator of Romania. Codreanu, arrested on patently
false charges, was, together with thirteen of his lieutenants, taken from prison
on the night of 29 November 1938 and, in the early hours of the next morning,
murdered in the forest of Tancabesti at the orders of the royal degenerate.[23]
Carol, with the support of the lords of international finance, ruled Romania by
a combination of fraud and violence until September 1940, when the Iron Guard
drove him and his Oriental leman from the country, and restored his son to the
throne.
The gruesome
murders in the dark forest of Tancabesti that night in November 1938 were one of
the fateful and decisive events of modern history. King Carol, who gave the
orders, himself acted on the orders of his masters, the hidden and malevolent
powers that, through their puppets in the governments of Great Britain, France,
and the United States, were relentlessly herding the peoples of the West toward
the catastrophic and fatal war that Germany was trying so desperately to avert.
Carol’s owners were, of course, the powers that had installed the Bolsheviks
in Russia twenty-one years earlier, and the destruction of the Iron Guard, the
only organized and formidable anti-Bolshevik force in Romania, left Carol free
to carry out (as he did less than two years later) the plan to surrender Romania’s
fortified border in Bessarabia to the Soviet and thus open to the Communist
hordes the passes into the Balkans and southeastern Europe.
King Carol’s
commitment to subject Romania to the Soviet as soon as the projected war began
was, of course, known to the French government and doubtless in other circles
even before he gave the orders for the murders of Tancabesti, which thus changed
the strategic balance of Europe and were a preliminary to the dire and appalling
disaster that was in fact, as Prince Sturdza has so aptly termed it, the Suicide
of Europe.[24] It may even have been the decisive
turning-point.
No diplomat and
statesman of the Western world was more farsighted and sagacious than Prince
Michel Sturdza, whose long career as an ambassador in many capitals of the
Western world and corresponding contacts in the highest circles of many
governments gave him excellent sources of information, while his personal
position during the European disaster enabled him to observe and judge with a
dispassionate lucidity that could scarcely have been attained by even the
intelligence services of the great nations that were destroying one another in
the interests of their common enemy. Honest historians must therefore accord
great weight to Prince Sturdza’s conclusion that:
It was Codreanu’s
murder that prompted Hitler to a radical tactical change in his foreign policy
a change loaded with the most fateful consequences not only for Germany but
for the entire world of Western Civilization ... Hitler made two speedy
decisions: The first was of military character, the occupation of Czecho-Slovakia
... The second was a bold political decision ... he would negotiate an
understanding and an economic arrangement with Soviet Russia.[25]
By this estimate,
Corneliu Codreanu, although he could not have known or even imagined it, carried
with him the destiny of generations then living and yet unborn, and the crowned
hireling whose hand struck him down was, although his clotted mind could not
have guessed it, one of the most pernicious traitors of all time. By any
estimate, Codreanu was a great man.
The most eloquent
attestation of the nobility of Codreanu’s character and the purity of his
religious faith is the deep veneration for him and loyalty to his memory felt by
his surviving followers. Thirty years after his death, twenty years and more
after failure and the loss of their country, they are exiles in foreign lands
and menaced even there by the ubiquitous power of the anti-humans and the ever
accelerated conquest of the Western world by its furtive enemies. But for their
Captain and his vision they still feel the devotion that twenty-nine Romanian
writers express in their contributions to the recent volume, Corneliu
Codreanu, prezent.
The students of
Romania, patriots and Christians, were selected by the anti-humans as victims of
the process described in this book, not so much because they were the objects of
the beasts’ most venomous hatred, as because they provided material for an
experiment that would confirm the universal validity of a technique that the
world conquerors had elaborated long before and thus far used with uniform
success. The anti-humans rightly judged that if the courageous and devoted youth
of the Iron Guard, exalted by the most ardent Christian faith, could not resist
the application of a fiendish science, no humans could ever resist.
That is what makes
this narrative so tragic.
The Legion took its
motto from Seneca: “He who is willing to die need never be a slave.” Aye.
But what of those who are not permitted to die?
REVILO OLIVER
New York City, 1968
New York City, 1968
1)
|
-With the exceptions of names of places (e.g., Bucharest) and persons
(e.g., King Carol) that have well-known English forms, Romanian proper
names in this volume are given in their Romanian spelling, but without the
diacritical marks that are used in Romanian. To avoid excessive expense in
setting type, the use of these marks had to be restricted to actual
quotations from Romanian and the index, to which the reader is referred
for the exact form of names and titles requiring diacritics.
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2)
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-[Mr. OLIVER wrote before the publication, late in 1969, of Dr. Ion Carja’s
Intoarcerea din Infern: amintirile unui detinut din inchisorile
Romaniei bolsevizate (Madrid, Editura “Dacia”), a less detailed
and explicit book in its description of the methods used. Editor.]
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3)
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-Donatien Alphonse Sade (1740-1814), to whom we owe the word sadism,
was condemned to death by French courts for rape, murder by poison, and
almost unbelievable torture of persons whom he kidnapped for that purpose,
but the execution of the sentence was delayed by strange influences until
he was liberated from prison by the French Revolution, during which he was
honored and admired for his orations about “equality” and “brotherhood.”
Napoleon had him put in an insane asylum.
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4)
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-[Mr.Heath did not anticipate the full effect of decisions by the Supreme
Court in Washington. The mails and the newsstands and the public schools
are now open to every conceivable obscenity that the Jews in the United
States find it profitable to publish. American publishers would probably
enjoy the same immunity. Editor.]
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5)
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-It is probably true, but irrelevant, that Wilson half-believed himself
when he spun his rhetorical fantasies; if he did, he was selected for the
presidency precisely because he had that capacity for self-intoxication.
Colonel Curtis B. Dall in his excellent book (F. D. R., Tulsa,
Oklahoma, 1967, p. 137) reports that a prominent Jew, who had been an
eye-witness and a kind of errand boy for his elders, boasted that in 1912,
while Wilson was being trained for the presidency, Bernard Baruch, one of
the great Jewish satraps stationed in the United States, used to lead
Wilson about, “like a poodle on a string,” and make him recite at
Democratic Headquarters, while Baruch’s fellows were egging on Theodore
Roosevelt, whose candidacy, of course, ensured the popular votes for
Wilson needed to make Wilson’s appointment seem “democratic.” We may
be sure that Fido Wilson learned how to sit up and speak “new freedom,”
“make the world safe for democracy,” and the like to the satisfaction
of his masters and trainers before they had him perform before the
footlights for the edification of Americans who imagined that they had
selected (elected) him as their Leader. What Fido thinks while he responds
to his cues and performs on the stage is of interest only to Fido’s
biographers and to psychologists.
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6)
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-Mr.Goff’s booklet is available from Soldiers of the Cross, $1.00. It is
hard to tell which of the many other printings are still in print. One,
containing an excellent introduction by Eric D. Butler, the well-known
Australian publicist and editor of the New Times of Melbourne, was
published by the Victorian League of Rights in Melbourne, Victoria, in
1956, then priced at 4/-. Another, with a foreword discussing the Soviet
textbook as an obvious source of the “mental health” agitation in the
United States, was published at about the same time by the American Public
Relations Forum, Burbank, California; $1.00.
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7)
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-The Soviet Inferno is published by
Public Opinion, P. O. Box 4044, Long Island City, New York; 2nd edition,
1967, $2.00.
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8)
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-Marxist doctrine, though very useful for befuddling low-grade minds
(which normally accept as profound any highly touted mass of intricate
verbiage that they are unable to untangle), is believed only by the lowest
ranks in the Communist hierarchy. As Duane Thorin perceived when he was a
prisoner of the Communists in China (A Ride to Panmunjon, Chicago,
1956; p. 39): “Intellects that failed to see through the falsities of
communism were so arrested that they were of only limited use in the
totalitarian state.” Persons with such inert minds are, naturally, not
promoted to really responsible positions, no matter how hard they work or
how sadistic they are. The policy of denying them promotion, which is
certainly sound from an organizational standpoint, has led to some
defections which are of no real consequence, since the dullards do not
know very much to reveal and they are easily replaced although, where
circumstances make it convenient, such tools are usually scrapped and
liquidated when they begin to show discontent or claim promised rewards as
you will see in Chapter XXVIII of the present book. In the middle echelons
of the organization, comparable to companygrade and field-grade officers
in an army, the ambitious career men, naturally too intelligent to take
their own propaganda seriously, are careful to use the official “ideology”
even among themselves, partly for exercise in unremitting hypocrisy, and
partly because they find Marxist dialectics a game as entertaining as
chess. This sport, which may be played for high stakes, gives rise to
clever syllogisms about “deviationism,” “Stalinism,” etc., which
often trap the players. A good example may be found in the work of the
Soviet physician, J. Landowsky, available in a Spanish translation, Sinfonía
en rojo mayor (Madrid, 1949), of which one chapter has appeared in
English, translated by George Knupffer, Red Symphony (London,
1968).
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9)
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-Pretense is often dropped on the highest levels in talks with outsiders
who are too well informed to be deceived. Prince Sturdza, in the authentic
text of his memoirs (see the footnote on p. xxxv below)
pp. 346 f., reports that when he came to New York in 1929 to obtain a loan
for the Romanian government, he had to plead his country’s case with the
mighty Jewish lawyer who represented the great international banking
houses of New York that had directed the Bolshevik seizure of Russia. This
lawyer, known as Louis Marshall (a good Scottish name!), was, as Prince
Sturdza says, “a second Bernard Baruch, less conspicuous but just as
influential as the famous proconsul of Judaism (rather than Jewry) in the
United States.” (A proconsul, it will be remembered, was in the Roman
Empire a governor sent into conquered territory to direct and supervise
the native governments, which were allowed some autonomy in local matters
that did not directly affect the interests of the Empire.) Marshall, like
other great potentates, disdained to play a comedy with the suppliant: he
took Prince Sturdza to the window, pointed at Wall Street and said with
lordly bluntness: “Look what we can do for a country we like; in
Russia we have show the world what we can do to a country and government
we hate.” Prince Sturdza adds, “Mr. Marshall, a few days later,
reiterated that statement to Mr. Gheorghe Boncescu, the Financial Adviser
of our [Romanian] Legation [in Washington].” Marshall naturally thought
it best to profess a liking for the United States, a country which he and
his fellows were about to afflict with an “economic depression,”
neatly arranged by a squeeze through their banks, to ruin influential
natives, appropriate their property through foreclosures, and create the
atmosphere of crisis and poverty that would facilitate the “election”
of their talented servant, Franklin Roosevelt.
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10)
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-The word brain-washing is “an English translation of a Chinese
euphemism,” according to an article by Professor Revilo P. Oliver in the
Birch magazine, American Opinion, November 1964, pp. 29-40. This
article is an excellent discussion of the whole subject in brief compass,
and gives some telling examples of tricks used in public schools and
newspapers, but unfortunately fails to treat the strictly scientific
(psychological) principles of propaganda, which can (and indeed must) be
used to create “public opinion” in modern circumstances. The
techniques of propaganda are no more “Communist” than rifles or
airplanes; like all weapons, they work for whomever uses them, but do not
hit the target, if they are not well aimed. In all wars, victory goes to
the side that has the best weapons and uses them most expertly.
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11)
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-The best technical treatises on the subject are in French: Jean Stoetzel,
Esquisse d’une theorie des opinions (Paris, 1943), and Jacques
Ellul, Propagandes (Paris, 1962). One cannot too much emphasize the
fact, ignored by Professor Oliver and other American writers, that the
techniques of propaganda, like the technology that makes possible
television and computers, have no political or social content. The
results that are obtained by means of a television station or a computer
depend entirely on who uses it for what purpose. It is true
that all technological advances place the people who are too stupid or
lazy to use them at a hopeless disadvantage. A nation that neglected or
refused to use airplanes, for example, would necessarily be defeated in
war and disappear (except as a political fiction, if that suited the
purpose of the conquerors), but that is not the fault of the Wright
Brothers and General Sikorsky. The effectiveness of propaganda, in the
strict sense of that word, depends largely upon what is technically called
pre-propaganda, i.e., the ideas injected into the minds of children
by their education. In the United States, the public schools were early
converted into a very efficient machine to stunt the minds, pervert the
morals, and destroy the self-respect of children, but the Americans seem
pleased with the results, even after they have had a preliminary view of
them in the unwashed derelicts, sexual perverts, drug-addicts, and crazed
revolutionaries that their public schools are systematically producing at
their expense. It seems likely, therefore, that the Americans no longer
have either the intelligence or the will to resist their enemies, and will
dumbly acquiesce in the fate prepared for them. Since the number of
Americans who are still permitted to have liquid capital is very small,
the ever increasing number of foresighted refugees who are fleeing from
the United States to other countries is significant, though statistically
small.
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12)
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-For an account of the way in which this was done, and a transcription of
the preliminary negotiations with Dr. Pavlov, see Dr. Boris Sokoloff’s
authoritative report in his book, The White Nights (New York,
1956), especially pp. 66-72.
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13)
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-Frederick Seelig, Destroy the Accuser, with a foreword by
Westbrook Pegler and a commentary by Dr. Revilo P. Oliver (Miami, Florida,
Freedom Press, 1967). This book, which I have seen, has become
unprocurable, and I do not have a copy at hand. The author is said to have
died of heart failure in Valparaiso, Indiana, not long after his book was
published, and a letter to the publisher was returned to me with the
notation “unknown”! The book, as I remember, contained some details
about the eagerness of the staff at Springfield to start torturing General
Walker, who was kidnapped through the complicity of Federal judges
(compare Judge Petrescu in Chapter XXVIII of the present book) while the
author was a prisoner there.
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14)
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-The unfortunate journalist was almost certainly Frederick Seelig, but,
for reasons stated in the preceding note, I have had to quote from the
article in American Opinion, November 1964, p. 31, mentioned above.
The writer of that article, Professor Oliver, does not give the victim’s
name, but the circumstances make the identification certain. One wonders
how (or why) Oliver’s article was printed in a Birch publication.
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15)
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-Romanian children began the formal study of their first foreign language,
French, in the year corresponding to the fifth grade in American public
schools. By the time that they reached the point that corresponds to the
first year of high school in the United States, Romanian children were
reading Cicero in Latin and mastering trigonometry. Such progress is, of
course, merely normal in serious educational institutions. The public
schools in the United States, on the other hand, are designed to blight
native intelligence and produce a nation of nitwits that can be easily
manipulated and fleeced by professional “educators” and other
shysters.
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16)
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-A concise account of this aspect of Romanian history will be found in the
opening chapters of L’Envoye de l’Archange by the distinguished
French authors, Jerome and Jean Tharaud (Paris, 1939).
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17)
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-Strictly speaking, Romania, coerced by a scarcely veiled threat of
invasion by Germany and Great Britain, in 1879 repealed the article in her
constitution which, like the constitution of the State of Pennsylvania
that was framed and adopted under the leadership of Benjamin Franklin,
restricted citizenship to Christians. After 1879, the legal privileges of
citizenship were available to all Jews, provided that they either (a) had
served in the armed forces of Romania or (b) applied for such rights and
were found on investigation not to be guilty of political or moral
subversion and corruption. Naturally, only a few thousand thus obtained
the legal status of citizens, and it was not until 1923 they could all
swarm into Romanian politics and begin to take over the country “legally”
by manipulating greedy politicians. Everyone knows that the Jews are, as
they themselves frankly boast, an international race or “peopledom”
who never become in fact citizens of the nations in which they find it
profitable to dwell. As Albert Einstein said, “There is no such thing as
a German Jew, Russian Jew, or American Jew: there are only Jews.”
Hundreds of the most accomplished and intellectually prominent Jews
throughout the world have frankly said the same thing, and all the
admitted Zionists have proclaimed it year after year, but, unaccountably,
the people of the Christian West perversely refuse to believe them and
then secretly complain to one another in private that Jews are not good
Christians and not good Englishmen or Americans. Although Europeans do
understand that a European who lives in China is not a Chinaman, most of
them have a curious mania to pretend that a Jew who resides in Europe is a
European and even a mania to punish other Europeans who will not join in
the absurd pretense. The Jews, whose leaders have told the truth often
enough, can scarcely be blamed for taking advantage of the folly of the
peoples whom they despise and exploit.
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18)
|
-These figures are quoted from official sources by Prof. Ion Gavenescul in
his Imperativul momentului istoric, pp. 67 ff.
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19)
|
-Hence the cliche, “atheistic Communism,” that is still used in many
conservative circles in the United States. To recapture the patriotic
outlook of the 1920’s, the reader will do well to turn to R. M. Whitney’s
fundamental Reds in America (New York, 1924), in which accurate
analysis of Bolshevik plans (including the plans for the “Civil Riots”
agitation of the 1960’s) accompanies an implicit confidence that
Christian Churches will remain Christian!
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20)
|
-Professor Iorga became Prime Minister of Romania for a time in 1931. An
estimate of his conduct in office is beyond the scope of this notice. [His
History of Romania, translated by Joseph McCabe, was published in
London in 1925. Ed.]
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21)
|
-This sufficiently explains why there could be no cooperation between the
Christian Defense League and Codreanu’s Legion of Michael the Archangel,
and it is not necessary to endorse the suspicions of Professor Cuza
expressed by Ion Mota in an essay, “Legiunea si L.A.N.C.”, in the
volume Corneliu Codreanu, prezent! (Madrid, 1966).
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22)
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-For non-partisan and critical accounts of Codreanu’s career, see Paul
Guiraud, Codreanu et la Garde de Fer (Paris, 1940), and the
distinctly unsympathetic work by the brothers Tharaud, L’Envoye de l’Archange,
cited above. Brief appreciations by his followers will be found in Vasile
Iasinschi’s Facing the Truth (Madrid, 1966), and in two volumes
of essays by various hands, Corneliu Z. Codreanu in perspectiva a
douazeci de ani (Madrid, 1959) and Corneliu Codreanu, prezent
(Madrid, 1966). On the significance of Codreanu and his movement in the
history of Europe during the climacteric years that ended in what may have
been the Suicide of the West, see the work of the distinguisbed diplomat
and scholar, Prince Sturdza, cited below.
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23)
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-The method of the murders was singular and remarkable. The fourteen men
were taken in buses to the forest and there each of the men, who had been
bound in an odd way, was strangled with a rope thrown over his head by a
gendarme stationed behind him for that purpose. Then, to give some color
to the official story that Codreanu and his ranking Leqionaries had been
“killed while trying to escape,” each corpse was shot in the back
several times before it was thrown into the waiting grave. Prince Sturdza,
in the Romanian text of his memoirs (Madrid, 1966; pp. 133 f.), asks the
inevitable question: “Let us ask ourselves why there was that resort to
strangulation, a procedure that was awkward and complicated in the
circumstances, instead of a bullet in the back of the bead, the simple and
usual method and the obvious one to have used, since an hour later, to
simulate an escape, the lifeless bodies were riddled with bullets.”
(There is the further consideration that the bullet, unlike strangulation,
would not have left the marks that were detected by autopsy when, after
the flight of Carol, the bodies were exhumed and the officers who had
carried out the murders under orders testified what they had done). Prince
Sturdza then points out that the elaborate and peculiar way in which the
victims were strangled corresponds in every detail to the method by which
Jews are instructed to kill their enemies in a passage of the Talmud that
he quotes (p. 134). Needless to say, this part of Prince Sturdza’s book,
like many others, was omitted in the heavily censored English translation
cited in our footnote below.
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24)
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-Prince Michel Sturdza wrote his brilliant analysis of the origin of the
Second World War in French: La Bête sans nom enquête sur les
responsabilités (Copenhagen, 1944). Unfortunately he chose to publish
his memoirs, which include a comprehensive study of the European
catastrophe and are an absolutely indispensable source for all serious
historians, in Romanian: Romania si sfarsitul Europei amintiri din tara
pierduta (Madrid & Rio de Janeiro, 1966). It is a misfortune that
the observations of one of the wisest and most experienced diplomats of
Europe perhaps the only one who witnessed events from a peculiarly
advantageous position, recorded them with philosophical detachment, and
then was free to publish his book without being constrained by a need to
apologize for himself or for a political party or government at the
expense of historical truth were written in a language that so few of our
people can read. To make the work generally available, a wealthy American
hired the John Birch Society to perform the technical work of supervising
translation and printing and to distribute the book when it was published:
The Suicide of Europe (Boston, 1968). The choice was unfortunate.
The greater part of Prince Sturdza’s book was accurately and even ably
translated, although the material was drastically rearranged and often
curtailed: for example, the concluding paragraphs of Prince Sturdza’s
text (p. 323 of the original) were reduced to a few lines and buried in a
footnote at the bottom of page 23 of the English version. But the text was
diligently censored to eliminate every statement, direct or indirect, that
could offend the Birch Society’s Jewish masters. A great many passages
of historical importance were “lost” as the contents of the book were
shuffled around, and in what was left, for example, the word evrei
(“Jews”) is almost invariably translated as “some people” or “certain
individuals,” wherever it could not conveniently be ignored. And,
naturally, a long passage was interpolated to commend and advertise the
Birch business. But even in this mutilated form, The Suicide of Europe
is a very valuable book and must be recommended to everyone (except the
few who can read the original) who wishes to understand the age in which
we live.
|
25)
|
-The Suicide of Europe, pp. 120-23; in
the original, pp. 137 f. These two sudden shifts of policy made it seem to
the rest of the world that Germany had acted in bad faith at Munich and
that even its opposition to the Soviet was insincere; that certainly
facilitated the work of the international lords who finally forced on the
West the suicidal war which, as the British historian, H. R. Trevor-Roper
candidly admits, “Hitler would have done anything to avoid.” By far
the most complete and accurate study of the complicated diplomatic
manoeuvres and intrigues that were needed to start that war is the
carefully documented treatise by Professor David L. Hoggan, which, since
it has been mysteriously “delayed” by the American publisher who had
it set in type many years ago, is thus far available only in the German
translation: Der erzwungene Krieg (Tubingen, 1963). Much less
complete, but valuable, are the late Professor Charles Callan Tansill’s Back
Door to War (Chicago, 1952) and Professor A. J. P. Taylor’s The
Origins of the Second World War (New York, 1962). The facts are
indisputable, but many Americans believe that the devastation of Europe
and the slaughter of millions of Europeans was admirable because it
pleased Jews.
|
CHAPTER I
PROLOGUE
“One
commits crimes of passion and crimes of logic. The line that separates them is
not clear. But the Penal Code distinguishes between them on the concept of
premeditation. We are now living in the era of premeditation and perfect
crime. Our criminals are no longer those helpless children who plead love as
their excuse; on the contrary, they are adults and their alibi is an
irrefutable one: ‘Philosophy,’ which can be used for anything, even for
transforming murderers into judges.”
These words were
written by Albert Camus in the preface of his novel, The Rebel. He, for
all his masterly discontent, did not know that in a country not too distant from
his own France, one engendered and nurtured in the spirit of French thought, in
fact, Romania, the paroxysm of a whole series of crimes was reached in secrecy
after August 23, 1944 crimes of a nature so different and unnatural that neither
Camus nor any other Westerner could have believed them possible, or even have
imagined them.
An operation to
invert and reverse human nature is something that defies the imagination of any
normal human being. Except for the victims and their torturers, only a few, a
very few, persons, who have had the opportunity of informing themselves, can
give credence to those crimes, and furthermore can understand the deeper
significance lying beneath the physical facts.
It is true that the
last four decades constitute an era of crime, crime coldly and logically
calculated, even justified as rational. Such crime now dominates the whole
world. It enters into everyday preoccupations. It has become something normal,
often commonplace. It has come to be accepted as natural, so that people no
longer take cognizance of it or comprehend the real threat to the very existence
of humanity.
No one can have the
patience to compile a list of all the crimes consummated in these four decades,
nor could he do it in a lifetime. They would have to encompass the civil war in
post-Czarist Russia with its forced collectivization, the crimes of which have
since become well known and recognized as such by the world’s leaders. They
would have to include the Greek civil war in which the Communists ravaged whole
regions; also the so-called “People’s Tribunals” that came into being
after the war; the bombing of defenseless cities and hospitals; the present
camps of slavery and death in all countries under Communist control; Budapest in
1956. But all these are but a few chapters selected from the long story of
unleashed evil. They prove either that man has come to feel the necessity to
kill as intensely as he has felt the desire to live, or that through a logical
perversion of a desire to accomplish an ideal he can easily and with scarcely a
twinge of conscience be made to murder the very persons to whom he once intended
to give happiness destroy them in the conviction that this is what he must do,
that there is no other way.
All such crimes
have one characteristic in common: they are perpetrated in the name of humanity,
the class struggle, the liberation of the people, the right of the strongest,
all at the discretion of the individual. They all have the same goal: the
biological destruction of the enemy, a principle applied by Stalin with
fanaticism. The dead cannot defend themselves, nor can they accuse.
Such crimes have
long been notorious and endlessly repeated. They have become commonplace and
trite. But there is a deeper horror one of which the world as yet knows nothing.
What happened in the prisons of Romania after the nation was subjugated by the
Soviets enlarged the domain of crime beyond what people believed possible. Crime
has been expanded beyond the biological limits and placed on other coordinates
and in a dimension heretofore unknown. Perpetrated in cold blood and cynically,
with sadism never met before, crime now aims not to destroy the body, but the
soul.
The biological
destruction of an adversary no longer satisfies, or pleases; or maybe it does
not pay any more. The wrecking of the victim’s mind and soul is more appealing
and more useful: the destruction of human characteristics; the reduction of man
to a level of total animality; a definitive dehumanization that transforms what
was human into a docile, malleable protoplasm, instinctively responsive to all
the trainer’s whims a zombie.
What is about to be
told is, I believe, a unique experience. But it did not spring from fancy, from
a brain that had passed beyond the threshold of rationality. In order for it to
be possible, a distinct evolution was necessary on a plane of thought, on a
philosophic plane, through a long period of upheavals, of breaking down and
replacing all values in which man has so far believed. It was necessary that “speculations
of pure reason and physical determinism converge with human sciences from which
man is virtually eliminated.” (G. Thibau, Babel ou le vertige technique)
What up till now
was considered an unassailable truth that man is a divine creation has been
replaced by a desiderate taken as truth that man is a creative divinity. The old
values and the concept of man have been discarded. In the light of new realities
and relationships, the experimenters crystallized the entire materialistic
harvest of the last centuries into a venom worthy of the concept which spawned
it. It was necessary that God be dethroned, and that in His stead man be
exalted; not an actual man but a hypothetical one, one existing only in the
imagination of his creators. The divinization of matter resulted in the
confusion of man and matter, with man’s submission to matter. This last
conclusion permitted the experiment to be made without inhibitions.
When no difference
is recognized between a piece of iron subjected to shaping and a man subjected
to psychological experimentation, the same working methods may be applied both
to iron and to man and the same desired result will be obtained. By virtue of
such reasoning, stripped of all human sentiment, it was possible to have toward
man the same attitude the sculptor has toward a piece of marble. He carves away
to produce from amorphous rock a model existing in his imagination. It does not
matter if he is not successful there is plenty of marble; and if the treatment
applied to man is also unsuccessful, again it does not matter of men there are
more than enough.
One single thing
may seem paradoxical that men have dared treat others of their own kind as
though they were unlike themselves. Those of whom I shall tell arbitrarily
considered themselves different from their fellow men and felt justified in
subjecting them to unprecedented treatment. They assumed for themselves the role
of creator but denied this to others, as if the latter were kneaded from a
different and inferior matter. This was possible because the normal sense of
values had become so distorted that even the experimenters themselves were not
sure but that a deed conforming to the “principle” today would not be
declared tomorrow a crime and they be punished accordingly. But until then, for
them the crime was legal. What is worse, they even proclaimed it a salutary act.
They gave the torturer an educator’s certificate, and his victim, by virtue of
the same contorted logic, they accused of being an odious criminal.
What were the
methods used and what were the results of this experimentation in which the
fashioning of a new kind of man was attempted, a man of whom even the most
primitive savages would be ashamed?
Only the simple
facts can tell us. They, above all other considerations, remain irrefutable
proof of an era in which disdain for the human condition has reached its lowest
level, greatly exceeding anything thus far found in concentration camps.
This is a
characteristic of the Twentieth Century, and the contribution of Soviet Russia
to the history of mankind, to the history of the nations she has been
subjugating, that of having given, through Communist methods, the name to this
century: the “Century of Crime.”
CHAPTER II
SIGNS
It was in 1951 that
I had the first indications that something of a very disturbing nature was
taking place. This was exactly the time at which the experiment reached its
paroxysm in utmost secrecy. It was completely unknown to those who remained
outside the immediate circle of involvement.
I had been
condemned, and was serving my sentence in the Aiud penitentiary when one morning
I was taken by two officers and transported to the Securitate[1]
in Cluj without being given any reason. My anxiety was only natural in a
penitentiary regime in which one could never know for certain whether or not his
fate had been decided. I was particularly disquieted now by the fact that I had
engaged in no anti-Communist activity in Cluj: I had never been there.
My first night in
Cluj I spent in a vain attempt to adjust to a cell six and a half feet long and
two feet wide. The second night I was taken out into the searchroom and there I
found myself in the company of three other prisoners, who had been brought from
the prison of Gherla. I knew them. Two were students from Bucharest; the third
was a worker. Although we had been tried separately, the two students had been
engaged in activities connected with mine. We were placed in an automobile and
taken to the depot. At eleven that night we left for Bucharest on a fast express
train, guarded by two Securitate officers and a guard-sergeant. Bound in pairs
by handcuffs, we were kept in a compartment that was unlighted to prevent our
being recognized by other travelers.
It was night. Now
and then the moon shone through the car window lighting the faces of the three.
They were strange faces. I had passed through many prisons in Romania; I had met
thousands of prisoners, but never had my eyes rested on such faces. Beneath the
pallor common to all prisoners their faces reflected an exceptional physical
weakness. And over the emaciated faces a shadow of terror a fixed expression of
terror which stemmed from some uncommon experience gave all three a frightening
appearance. When, late in the night, the student who was handcuffed to me fell
asleep from exhaustion and rested his head on my shoulder, I could no longer
suppress a reaction to the fear that overcame me; I moved my shoulder to wake
him up. His head, illuminated by the light of the moon, appeared to be that of
the corpse of one who had died surprised by a horror so hideous that it had
accompanied him into the world beyond. In former times he had been a swimming
champion and a man of courage.
Speech among
ourselves was strictly forbidden. Every now and then our eyes met, and there I
could read the same terror that was impressed on their faces a terror akin to
madness. As we passed through Predeal, the worker, who sat opposite me, asked me
unexpectedly, “Your mother is a small dark-complexioned woman, is she not?”
His accurate description of my mother surprised me; he had never seen her for
the simple reason that she had never been in Romania.[2] I
did not answer him.
Later he spoke to
me again, but this time about another matter. “Have we passed Pirinei?” “We
are approaching Sinaia,” I answered, convinced though that he was not hearing
me and that he was present only in body.
The two students
hardly spoke. In the morning we arrived in Bucharest. We were taken into the
depot’s police office which was an indication that we were to continue our
trip. Our escorts left us for a few moments. It was then that one of the two,
the one shackled to me, began to extol Communism! It seemed that what he had to
say was directed to the other two, not so much to convince as to demonstrate
that he could correctly repeat a learned lesson. And he seemed in a hurry to
prevent the other two from being first. He uttered the hackneyed meaningless
words repeated by the Communists on all street corners, but coming from his
mouth they took on for me a profound significance. I was amazed to hear him
speak thus because I knew him well and knew how he had felt about Communism. And
it was generally true of all prisoners that life in prison tended to strengthen
the convictions we had held previously. And then he uttered a flagrant lie
claiming that there was decency in the officers of the Securitate.
Again at night we
resumed our travel toward Constanta I recognized the railway line. When the
sergeant, a farmer from the Apuseni Mountains, asked with some hesitancy, “Do
you believe in God?” the same student hastened to answer that neither he nor
any of his acquaintances had ever believed in God. This statement came from one
who, I knew well, was educated in the Christian faith. This time again I read
terror in his eyes. Again he answered with the same haste as though to prevent a
statement from someone else that might be disastrous, and his eyes seemed to
express the same desire for approval by the other two prisoners. But they only
looked into emptiness. The sergeant lowered his head. He certainly had expected
a different answer.
“Why were you
arrested?” the other student was asked later by one of the Securitate
officers. “I was a member of a terroristic organization at the Faculty[3]
of Letters in Bucharest. I was so fanatical that during the interrogation I
denounced no one not even the greatest criminals in the group.” And then, as
if feeling embarrassed (or “unmasked” as I was later to learn) he endeavored
to correct his statement “not even the most responsible of the group, those
who led the secret organization.” My bewilderment was shared this time also by
the two officers who, as myself, heard perhaps for the first time from the mouth
of a political prisoner such a characterization of his own activity. No one
could possibly answer my own unspoken questions. The other two were still
staring into nothingness. How could I suspect at that time everything they had
gone through, conditioning them to make statements of which, a few minutes
earlier, I would not have believed them capable?
Then we arrived. In
the search room, taking advantage of a moment when the guards were not present,
I asked the oldest, “What position are you going to adopt during the
investigation?” “We must confess the whole truth. What’s the use of
suffering torture now that everything is lost? The Communists have won the game
and are on the right track.” I did not listen any further. His answer was a
non-sequitur; I was trying to develop a posture which would avoid implicating
our friends in activities which had been a subject of previous interrogations,
and which we could anticipate would be again taken up in the forthcoming
questioning. But he was broken.
There followed the
isolation, hunger and terror of the unending inquisition. Alone in my cell,
completely cut off from mankind except for my stone-faced investigators, I began
to forget the three. Every now and then the officers reminded me of them by
reading statements concerning matters of which only they and I had known. But my
own suffering did not allow me to dwell too long on this; it remained an ominous
enigma that troubled me from time to time.
Later on, in the
summer of 1952 I again came into contact with individuals who reminded me of the
puzzle I had partly forgotten. Other prisoners, transferred from the forced
labor camps on the Danube-Black Sea Canal, brought news that increased my
suspicions regarding an entire category of prisoners who had once been most
dedicated and most faithful defenders of the nation’s freedom the student
body. Accusations were brought against them which to the unknowing observer
seemed utterly revolting. And yet the men who told me could not be lying. For
they were speaking from experience, of what they had themselves suffered. The
“re-educated students,” they said, beat them, denounced them, were spies for
the secret police, increased the work norms, and tortured any who could not meet
them. All these were accusations of an enormous gravity. I wanted to believe
that because the majority of these men were simple and untutored they erred,
making generalizations on the basis of their own personal experience, for I had
known the students in a totally different light.
But further news,
instead of refuting what I hoped was not true, actually confirmed aspects which
entered the domain of the tragic. This time it was a student who spoke to me. I
had known him in years past at the Polytechnical School in Bucharest. At first
he would not speak; he was afraid of everyone. But when I told him I came to
Constanta from Aiud where, up to a few months previously, nothing out of the
ordinary had happened, he loosened his tongue. It was from him that I found out
for the first time about the “unmaskings.” All the students who were at
Pitesti passed through these “unmaskings.” He told me it was impossible for
him to explain, but that something terrifying took place there. They were
tortured in such a manner that all absolutely all students became informers, so
that they were robbed of their manly nature and became simple robots in the
hands of political officers. They were de-personalized.
“Who did the
torturing?”
“The ‘re-educated’
ones.”
“Who were these
‘re-educated’ ones?”
“Other students
who preceded us in ‘re-education’, in ‘unmasking’ as it is also called.”
“Who began that
and where?”
“I know neither
for sure, but I believe it to be a general phenomenon in all prisons. And
wherever it has not yet occurred, it will, sooner or later. It is said that the
initiators were three students from Iasi: Turcanu, Titus Leonida, and Prisacaru.”
He stayed a little
longer in our cell, but he avoided talking any more. “If they ever hear I have
been talking, I am a man sentenced to death,” he whispered as he was taken out
of the cell.
A month later other
acquaintances completely verified what had happened in the canal labor compound.
“Beware of the students as you would of Satan in person, even if they come
under a mask of friendship. They are perfidious. They have done a lot of evil
and some continue in their wrongdoing.”
“Why is it that
everybody talks thus about students? What happened to them that they became so
depraved? For you know well that they were not like this before.”
“I do not know
and I do not want to know what happened to them. I am telling you only that they
bite badly on the sly. Beware!” We did not know at that time and perhaps he is
still ignorant of the fact today that in the process of degradation, their souls
were killed. They had passed through hell.
I learned more from
another youth who had passed through the Pitesti prison. He talked to me about
the “unmaskings” in a more precise manner. He mentioned students whom I had
known and what they had become after they passed through there dispirited,
broken, transformed individuals. But he could not explain through what kind of
inner crisis he himself had gone in order to reach that stage. The ordeal
through which he passed was, as he told it, a sequence of tortures truly unique
as to length and depth. But what he told me was still inadequate to permit me to
fathom the depth of the transformation of soul that had to take place to produce
such results. His fragmentary story brought to my mind another case of several
years past which struck me as unique.
In February of
1951, on our way to Aiud, the group of prisoners, of which I was a member, were
lodged in transit at Pitesti, where we awaited the prison van in which we were
to be transported on the last leg of the trip. I was surprised by the
thoroughness of the search to which we were subjected there much more strict
than the one at Jilava. And Jilava was considered the toughest prison in the
whole of Romania. Then followed a rigid isolation. I could not see even a single
face of another prisoner in the Pitesti prison. Occasionally at night, but more
often during the day, indistinct groans reached my ears from beyond the wall
separating us from the prison proper. I attributed them to the usual tortures
found in all prisons. On leaving, a young man from this prison was added to our
group. He was an engineer named Eugen Bolfosu. For the next two days, the time
it took us to reach Aiud, he spoke but rarely and then only in monosyllabic
answers to my questions. But on his face was imprinted the same terror I later
read on the faces of my travelling companions from Cluj. Having arrived at Aiud,
during the search the engineer was asked from whence he came. When he uttered
the word “Pitesti”, he was immediately isolated for several days. Later he
was taken out, and I met him in the prison shop. He would riot tell me the
reason for his isolation. The Aiud political officers knew what was happening in
Pitesti, and the engineer dared not talk lest he suffer the consequences. Or
perhaps he was at that time a simple robot who acted only at the command of the “politruks.”[4]
I asked the young
man who had passed through Pitesti if he had met engineer Bolfosu previously. He
told me they had gone through the “unmaskings” together and that he also had
been sent to Aiud a little later, but that before leaving Pitesti they were
specifically warned by the prison director not to talk. An indiscretion could
cost them a return to Pitesti if unmaskings were not to be started at Aiud as
well and thus a new passing through the awful ordeal. Who could disregard that
threat without his flesh trembling?
* * * * *
My detention in the
cellars of the Securitate of Constanta ended in May 1953. Following twenty
months of inquisition I was sent to the Gherla prison to continue serving my
sentence. I arrived there on the morning of May 6. I was immediately isolated,
but in an hour or two another prisoner was introduced into the cell. He arrived
from Bucharest, where he had been taken for a supplementary investigation, from
Gherla, a month earlier. We knew each other. He asked me:
“Have you been
here before?”
“No, this is my
first time.”
“Beware of the
students as you would of Satan. If you do not, you shall experience very
unpleasant surprises. And moreover, you will suffer much needlessly.”
“Why, sir, is
this the case? What have the students done, or rather, what has been done to
them that they have reached such a state? You are not the first person to warn
me.”
“Personally I
cannot explain it to you. Something has happened to them which for me is
inexplicable. And I certainly know them, for it has not been long since I was a
student myself. I simply cannot understand the nature of the profound
transformations which were forcibly induced. I do know they were tortured; yet
torture alone cannot account for their behavior. All of us have passed through
the hands of the Securitate and, after some more or less serious lapses, we
recovered. But the students persist on an infernal path. It is said they went
through ‘unmaskings’. What the ‘unmasking’ consisted of, only time and
perhaps the recovery of some students could explain to us. But I am wary, and
that is why I advise prudence.”
After fifteen days
of quarantine, I was taken to the prison’s shop for work. They put me on the
night shift from six in the evening till six in the morning. The first prisoner
I met there, or rather, to whom I was introduced by a supervisor, was a former
student of philosophy. After he asked me the reasons for my condemnation and my
place of origin inevitable inquiries addressed to all newcomers in any prison he
told me with an impassive voice, while he avoided looking at me, “Beware of
me! I am a student. And this ought to tell you much. Beware not only of me but
of all students, especially of those who are your friends. They can hurt you
much more because you cannot perceive behind the mask each of us wears the vast
abyss that now separates us from what we were not too long ago or what we wanted
to be.”
Here, then, was one
of them, one of those “unmasked”, who put me on guard against himself
as well as against others like him or possibly worse. But for him to have done
this, there must have yet existed in his soul a vestige of dignity and courage.
Did he succeed in his comeback? Did he escape the catastrophe without a
definitive mutilation? This was a puzzle which I was only later to unravel.
“Why do you warn
me? I have nothing to hide. I serve a sentence for the attitude I adopted
against the regime. What importance may details have? And why do you sound a
warning even against yourself?”
“Because, if the
‘unmaskings’ are going to be repeated, I will not be able to keep quiet upon
questioning, and I am afraid that you would talk before I do. An unconfessed
detail can cost one his life. For by now we have been brought to the point of
fearing for our lives. We have become more cowardly than you can imagine.”
I was afraid to
pursue the discussion any further. Who could tell me that this was not a subtle
trap set for me into which I might let myself fall, the more easily deceived by
his frankness? I let the passing of time bring the facts to light. But with this
student I made friends rather quickly. Shortly afterwards the ice thawed
completely, opening up an exchange of communications without reservation. It was
from him that I obtained the first elements of an explanation. For he was, in
spite of his youth, a thinker possessing a rare power of analysis.
What happened there
at Pitesti could not be described in simple terms. In this, as in many other
instances, language is inadequate to express all we want to say. For this reason
we often have the impression that something is missing from the whole story.
This void can be filled only by the voice of our own soul as we try to live in
our imagination what others have lived through in reality.
It is a profound
drama touching the most delicate fibers of the human spirit, having origins that
transcend the material manifestations of the everyday conflict. Little by little
this drama became my overwhelming preoccupation. During the three years I
remained in prison and for two more after my release, until 1959, my
preoccupation was to penetrate as deeply as possible into the secrets of this
phenomenon in order to comprehend it. Investigating discreetly, gathering even
the tiniest admissions and hints, listening to the revelations of those who had
been victims, only to become torturers themselves later on, I came to comprehend
the tragedy that had been consummated within the prison walls of Romania, and to
understand how a psychological experiment, as novel as it was criminal and
degrading, could, over a period of time transform humanity into inhumanity.
Several scores of students with whom I discussed what happened to them and whose
confessions of their own experiences and personal ruin I heard, provided me with
the basic information. The present work is a composite picture of their tragedy.
It has been written to call attention to the “Pitesti Phenomenon,” but is by
no means an effort to exhaust the subject.
As incomplete as it
is for the magnitude of the subject exceeds the powers of any single individual
I bring this book as a witness to my brothers in exile so they may more clearly
visualize the hell unleashed over their fatherland and over all the countries
engulfed by the Soviet Empire. What happened in Romania could have happened
probably did happen in every other captive country, the authors and perpetrators
of the terrors being one and the same people in all lands.
This is a testimony
from behind the curtain, from beyond the tomb. I leave to the victims the right
to judge.
CHAPTER III
THE BEGINNING
The inauguration of
the Communist regime in Romania was the result of historical circumstances in
which the Romanian people undoubtedly played the least important role. Whether
it was short-sightedness or self-interest that caused Communism’s advent in
Romania, has now become a question for history to answer; to search today for
the determinants of this tragedy is perhaps useless, or in any event merely
academic. One fact, however, is certain. The Romanians not only did not want
such a regime, they did not even dream that something like it was possible,
because perhaps as in no other European country no Communist Party had existed
in pre-war Romania, not even a Communist problem. The clandestine Communist
organization, according to both its boss and the files of the police, had a
total of 820 members and almost half of those were agents of the state police! I
met many of them in prisons, sentenced after 1945 for “crimes against humanity”!
The surprise which
benumbed the nation at first, later gave way to anxiety. The public in its
entirety reacted from the start against Communist violence, which was initially
supported by the short-sightedness of political parties and adventurers, but
later on only by the Soviet battalions and secret police.
The downfall of the
monarchy on Dec. 30, 1947 marked the starting point; it was the signal for a
Communist offensive on all fronts to destroy the foundations of the nation and
replace them with Soviet tyranny. This new state of affairs compelled the
Romanian citizen to choose between two alternatives; one being collaboration
with the Communists, offering honors, a life free from want, and high position;
the other carrying the risk of joblessness, incarceration in the cellars of the
Securitate, or even loss of life itself.
Instinctively or
deliberately, the great majority chose the second, even though they could not
influence the course of events in their favor. The fight was so tragically
unequal. On the one side we have the live organism of Communism, perfectly
disciplined, with strategy perfected over three decades of subjugating the
Russian people. This force was small in number, to be sure, but the stakes were
high, and knowing the risks, it was not disposed to make any concessions that
might weaken its position as victor or “jeopardize its legal status.” It was
in fact a foreign body determined to embed its fangs in the arteries of the
Romanian nation.
On the other side
of the conflict we have an organically unblended community, discouraged by the
loss of a war, with the feeling of an unjust defeat yet in its heart, and aware
that it had been left to make the best of things by its own means the attitude
of the Westerners being more than manifestly one of disinterest in what happened
in Romania. In view of this unfavorable attitude of the Western powers, and
because of a lack of leadership to channel its efforts toward a possible and
advantageous solution, a mass reaction was impossible. To this, one could also
add not too small a dose of naivete, especially among politicians, who many
times believed the opposite of the obvious. They believed, for example, that the
Communist occupation and the imposed regime were but transitory stages and that
sooner or later everything was going to revert to normal, without the slightest
effort on their part. While the people’s zeal was being wasted in fruitless
effort, the Communist Party was winning victory after victory, and the
politicians were making deals behind-the-scenes or forming tentative governments
in anticipation of the arrival of the Americans!
In the face of the
new events, one observed a change in the make-up of the populace. To the ranks
of several hundred Communist conspirators and their international brethren was
gradually added a stratum of individuals of uncertain background, in large part
roustabouts and creatures from the more degraded and contemptible sectors of
humanity. To these were added in quite large numbers members of the minority
groups who were now installed in government jobs, most of the time without
having the slightest competence. Contrary to the professed principles of “class
struggle,” the Communists that were brought in from the Soviet Union (Ana
Pauker, Bodnarenco, Chisinevski, Tescovici, Moscovici, et al.,) encouraged
ethnical dissension and the centrifugal tendencies of national minorities, thus
arousing and exploiting strongly anti-Romanian sentiments by favoring
non-Romanians for admission into Party membership and appointment to low-echelon
administrative positions.
On the “counter-revolutionary”
front stood the flower of the Romanian nation, with the front ranks occupied by
students and young intellectuals, mostly of peasant or middle-class origin. The
young people had been anti-Communist for years prior to the direct confrontation
with the invaders for the Russians have always been looked upon as such possibly
because of the national instinct, or their education, or a natural pride. The
reasons for this anti-Communist posture are as various as are the forms taken
throughout the whole anti-Communist struggle.
Confronted by this
situation, the Communists adopted measures which they deemed appropriate.
Completely disregarding all principles of social ethics, human decency, and the
Peace Treaty of Paris, which supposedly guaranteed freedom of speech, they
unleashed a wave of arrests. Every social stratum of Romania contributed its
share of victims, but the hardest hit were the students. How many of them passed
under the “protection” of the police, one cannot tell. From 1948, then,
until the present time, violent repression of discontent has continued, its
intensity depending on the perspicacity of the Securitate’s informers or on
increase or decrease of the people’s resignation to their fate. For manner and
magnitude, the arrests of the night of May 14/15, 1948 remain memorable. For on
that one night, in the three most important university centers (Bucharest, Iasi
and Cluj) no fewer than 1,000 students were arrested. This figure represents
about 2% of all students at the time.
The methods of
torture most commonly used by the Communist Secret Police were freely applied in
the interrogation of prisoners. For months, the military tribunals pronounced
sentences prepared by the Ministry of the Interior in advance of the “trials”,
either behind closed doors or in public for the benefit of journalists and Party
activists. Sentences ranged from hard labor for life down to five years’
imprisonment. Sentences of only two or three years were extremely rare and given
only where there was no evidence at all against the accused.
Using a method long
practiced in the U.S.S.R., that of segregating prisoners according to their
professional background and intellectual capacity, the Communists in Romania
grouped the students in a category apart from the others, and designated as
their place for detention the prison at Pitesti. This measure served another
purpose, also that of preventing them from exercising their influence (which was
considerable) over the great number of peasants and workers who continually
swelled the ranks of political prisoners. The influence of the students in
Romanian society after the Second World War was as great as it had been before
the war.
One single fact is
worthy of note here. Among the large numbers of arrested students, hardly any
were of minority origin! The “class struggle” theory here was undeniably
violated. According to the theory, of course, the enemies of Communism would
have included large numbers of the foreign ethnic groups that enjoyed a favored
economic position prior to the takeover and had presumably suffered
correspondingly great economic losses with the liquidation of “capitalism.”
Also it is worth
noting that, just as the wealthy resident aliens had aroused no apprehension in
the Communist rulers, so the sons of rich Romanians were conspicuously lacking
among the students arrested. The basis for this remarkable discrimination may
lie in a conflict between two worlds based on motives entirely other than those
taught in Communist classes in Marxism-Leninism and in the “history” of the
Party and the working-class.
During the trials,
sometimes relatives of the accused were permitted to see him once more, but
after sentence was pronounced, the doors were locked behind him, and tight
secrecy deprived the family of all news of him, until he was released if ever he
was. Oftentimes prisoners had been dead for years while the family waited and
waited at home for news, hoping that after 10 or 20 years they might be
re-united with the loved one who had disappeared. It was to be expected that
such rigorous secrecy would prevent leakage outside the prison walls of any
report or even rumor of the crimes committed within.
CHAPTER IV
THE PRISONS OF SUCEAVA AND PITESTI
When the wholesale
arrests of students began, the Moldavian region was one of the hardest hit.
Since the university in Iasi, Moldavia’s capital, had for a long time been a
major center of all student movements of nationalistic character, an extremely
large number of students in the Faculties of Letters, Law, and Medicine of that
university were immediately seized and confined. The former Suceava Fort outside
the town was used as the place of temporary imprisonment for these students,
inasmuch as both the Securitate’s investigating offices and the trial chambers
were within the fort, so the prisoners could be produced at a moment’s notice
by the penitentiary officials. Living conditions in the fort (later transformed
into a disciplinary prison) were considered among the most severe of all the
prisons of Romania, excepting perhaps only Jilava. To the inhuman treatment and
indescribable sanitary conditions (the fort is permanently humid and without
sunlight for most of the day) was added psychological terror produced by the
presence of inquisitors who were notorious for their sadism and their cruelty in
torturing prisoners. One of these officers was the Commissar Pompilian, whom the
Communists had inherited from the old regime; another was a certain Fischer from
somewhere in the vicinity of Iasi, where he had been a small shopkeeper until he
was transformed into a police officer overnight.
Ostensibly for
administrative reasons, but in reality to prepare for the coming experiment, the
Moldavian students were kept in this fort for quite some time, even after their
trials, and were only later transported to Pitesti.
Among them must be
mentioned one, Turcanu, a student of law originally from around Radauti, who
from the very first played the leading role in the tragedy. Turcanu had been a
member of the Communist Party in Iasi; after his record had been verified by the
Soviet occupation of Romania, he was assigned to lead a “voluntary” team,
part of an “international working brigade”, on a railway construction
project in Bulgaria. After completing this probationary work to the satisfaction
of his masters, he was sent to a school of Communist diplomacy and destined for
a diplomatic post abroad. Then, ostensibly, his brilliant prospects were
shattered by a sudden arrest.
The reasons for his
trial and subsequent imprisonment at Suceava are obscure. While a high school
student, he knew that some of his classmates were members of an anti-Communist
organization, with which, it was said, he had sympathized or even associated
himself.
Later at college he
continued to maintain friendly relations with those former classmates in high
school who were now his fellow students in Iasi, and were continuing
clandestinely their fight against Communism. Whether Turcanu came to the
university as a Communist or joined the apparatus there, his superiors must have
known at the time that he was maintaining his acquaintance with the unsuspecting
anti-Communists, but that fact was “discovered” while the Communists were
preparing him for a diplomatic career and provided the legal pretext for a
formal trial at which Turcanu was sentenced to seven years in correctional
prison for “conspiracy.” The real reason for sending him to prison was a
subtle one. He was considered by the Communists to be sufficiently reliable to
become their principal instrument in the initial phases of their experiment.
It is significant
that both before the beginning of “political re-education” at Suceava as
well as throughout the experiment, Turcanu kept in direct and constant touch
with individuals who were not members of the Securitate’s inquisitorial staff
at the prisons. These individuals, who usually came from the Ministry of the
Interior in Bucharest, must have been of superior rank to those stationed in the
prisons.
From his first days
in the prison, Turcanu began to apply a plan previously formulated by the
officers of the Securitate, who were themselves no more than instruments in the
hands of their masters.
The initial phase
of the plan consisted of a campaign of so-called “re-education” of the
students a process calculated to “integrate” the students into the Communist
society; in other words, forced political indoctrination.
From the beginning,
Turcanu had as close collaborator the college student Titus Leonida, also from
the northern part of Moldavia, as well as another youth, Bogdanovici, who had
been still in high school.
The first step was
the completion of statistical tables showing the origin of those imprisoned at
Suceava, their property, education, political affiliations, and other items of
personal information. The purpose of these statistics was to show that the great
majority of students were merely victims of the bourgeois reactionary education
and that, considering their social status, or “social class” as Communists
say, their place was not in the ranks of those opposing “Socialism” but, on
the contrary, alongside the Communists. If for reasons of opportunism, some
peasants went along at the beginning of this indoctrination, the great majority
of the university students reacted against the “re-education” propaganda
with so firm a rejection that no doubt was left in the minds of the “teachers”
that such methods were futile. Neither promises of liberation from prison as a
reward for “re-education”, nor promises that they would be given holdings
from the land that had been taken for distribution to the peasants could shake
the convictions of the prisoners. They knew the realities of Communist rule too
well to degrade themselves by playing in such a farce.
To the lectures
based on Communist pamphlets which political officers placed at the disposal of
Turcanu and his accomplices, the students responded with ridicule and mockery.
The Communist songs in “meetings of political re-education” were turned into
improvised parodies so clever and devastating that after a time the political
officers forbade Turcanu to allow singing at all.
Practically
speaking, the “re-education” period at Suceava ended in failure, and Turcanu’s
activity was suspended when the prisoners were at last transferred from Suceava.
That preliminary phase had been designed simply to test the “fanaticism” of
those who were thus selected for the real experiment that was to begin at
Pitesti.
Since they came
from the same region, many of the students at Suceava had been acquainted even
before they entered the university and most of them knew one another, so
contacts were easily kept. At Pitesti, however, they were mingled with hundreds
of students from all the other universities of Romania.
The various groups
thus assembled at Pitesti were of quite diverse social backgrounds and political
principles. The great majority of them were either Legionaries,[1]
or members of the National Peasant Party; a few were members of the Liberal
Party, and there were several groups united only by their loyalty to the
monarchy. There was also a goodly number of small groups, lacking a clearly
stated political position the so-called “mushroom” organizations likened to
the growth of mushrooms following a rain. The proliferation of such groups was a
consequence of the climate created by the Communist Party itself. These groups
also differed among themselves in the degree of their dedication to the
anti-Communist cause the criterion, incidentally, by which the “dangerousness”
of the accused was judged, and the basis on which the Communist Securitate
determined his punishment. Thus it was possible that for one and the same
offense the sentence could be five, or twenty-five, years, depending upon the
investigating officer’s own estimate of the degree of the victim’s “fanaticism.”
The regimen of
detention at Pitesti was very severe. In the world outside the prison nothing
was known of what was taking place within the walls. The Communists brazenly
called the Pitesti prison “The Center for Student Re-education,” a clever
title which actually did tell the truth, but ambiguously, the man in the street
understanding one thing by “re-education,” and those who were implementing
it, another. Rumors whose origin could not be traced, but which certainly
emanated from the Ministry of the Interior, were designed to create the
impression that the lives of students were not endangered; that on the contrary,
truly humane conditions were created for them; that in addition to decent food,
they had at their disposal lecture halls, movies, courses of professional
readjustment, entertainment, and other privileges. Since there were no other
sources of information, people somehow began to believe these rumors,
particularly the parents of the prisoners who hoped against hope that they might
soon see their sons again; but this hope was illusory.
The prison at
Pitesti was relatively new as compared to other prisons in Romania. Built by
King Carol’s regime, it was meant to shelter dangerous common criminals.
Transformed into a political prison by Antonescu in 1941, it reverted to its
original purpose after 1944. In 1947-48[2] it was used for
the first time by Communists as an internment center for the National-Peasant
Congressmen arrested for their anti-Communist attitude in Parliament. A little
later it was called the “Center for Student Re-education,” under which name
it was operated until 1951.
Situated to the
northwest, outside the town limits, close to a small river and far from any
dwelling, it was a location almost ideal for torture, since no scream from
within its walls could be heard by outsiders.
In this “Center,”
ideal for experimentation, were brought together all students arrested up to the
fall of 1948. They were divided into four categories according to the
classifications given when sentenced.
Category I
consisted of students “retained” without even a pretense of legality, on the
simple basis of their political sympathies; for lack of proof of any offenses
they could not be convicted of anything. This did not prevent, however, their
imprisonment for as much as six or seven years!
Category II
consisted of those sentenced to “correctional” prison terms for minor
offenses: sheltering persons suspected of anti-Communist sentiments, or failure
to denounce them; favoritism, membership in the Communist Party without activity
on its behalf, or simply suspicion based on some reported statement! Most of
these had no political orientation and were victims of their own refractoriness,
of special circumstances, or of the “subversive” organizations fabricated by
the Ministry of the Interior to keep its spies and agents busy and to force the
Communist cadres to be perpetually vigilant for signs and dissatisfaction or “deviationism.”
The sentences of those in this category varied from three to five years of “correctional”
imprisonment.
Category III
consisted of individuals condemned, with some legal justification, for offenses
classified as “plotting against the social order.” These received sentences
of from eight to fifteen years of imprisonment under a severe regimen. The
greatest number of students fell into this category, which contained those whose
activity was discovered but not in all cases confessed.
Those in category
IV were sentenced to from ten to twenty-five years hard labor. They were fewer
than in category III. Here one found group leaders, men who had been charged
with special assignments, individuals of the student world having an unusual
influence over those around them, and members of groups that were thought to be
prepared for armed resistance.
In theory, this was
the classification according to the gravity of the offense that is practiced in
prisons all over the world. But in practice, this classification and segregation
served to isolate the categories from one another, isolating the less “contaminated”
from the “fanatics.” Thus separated, the “minor” categories, deprived of
their former leaders, were less able to resist the pressures to which they were
subjected. This was especially true in the second category, which contained a
large number of unstable individuals who were somehow predisposed to submit more
or less easily or, at worst, to offer less resistance.
Until the beginning
of 1949, prisoners in the first three categories were allowed to correspond with
their families. once a month they were permitted to write and receive a few
censored lines and a food package of three to five kilograms according to their
category. Those in category IV were excluded from both privileges.
The food given
prisoners was very poor. While a minimum of 1800 calories was officially
specified by the administration, the food actually given to students, as to all
other prisoners in Communist Romania, was normally limited to 700-800 calories,
although on very rare occasions as much as 1000 was given. Within a few weeks
following arrest, the effects of this substandard diet, aggravated by
punishments inflicted mercilessly, could be seen very clearly. All, especially
the sick, became so physically weak that, when not coerced, they would commonly
spend hours on end in almost total immobility to avoid using energy. Thus, for
those fortunate enough to receive them, packages of food from the outside were
the most precious of gifts.
Medical assistance
in the prison was practically nonexistent. It was limited either to dispensing
an aspirin, irrespective of the ailment, or to strychnine shots for those whose
nerves were shattered, a mere token treatment, and usually the number of
injections was limited to from two to four.
During this
preliminary period, the prisoners of the first three categories, who could
receive monthly packages of food from their families, devised an ingenious
system to help the prisoners of the fourth category, who, sentenced to hard
labor, were denied all communication with the outside. The latter were
incarcerated on the top floor of the building. Thus the prisoners below, by
having a rope lowered from the windows above, could send up small quantities of
food, especially to the sick and infirm. This was done, however, at great risk,
for those caught were sent to “cazinca” a special room in the prison’s
cellar full of dirt, with walls permanently dripping with moisture. The prisoner
was stripped down to a minimum of clothing and left without food for a period of
time that depended on the whims of the warden or political officer and which
usually was in direct proportion to the degree of “fanaticism” of the
prisoner. And as the “cazinca” never lacked for prisoners, an increase in
the number of tuberculosis cases was soon observed.
It was under these
conditions that the Ministry of the Interior, after the preliminaries were
judged adequate, decided to begin the real experiment. Food packages and
correspondence with the outside were permanently discontinued. The guards’
terrorism increased in intensity. Torturings in the prison basement increased in
frequency, oftentimes for reasons patently trumped up. Threats, with mysterious
meanings implied, frequent visits of the warden and political officers to the
cells, unexpected searches at all hours of day and night, and prohibition of
every kind of activity under stiff penalty, were signs of fast-approaching
changes.
* * * * *
The group from
Suceava, accompanied by Turcanu, had recently arrived at Pitesti. Within the
small circle of advocates of “re-education” at Suceava, a schism had
occurred. Bogdanovici son of the prefect of Iasi County who had threatened to
disclaim him and deprive him of his name if he refused re-education continued to
champion a system of re-education by persuasion, limited to Communist
ideological lectures and study of printed brochures supplied by the prison
administration. He later confessed, just before he was executed, that his aim
was to limit brainwashing to theoretical discussions and thus, by averting
brutality, protect the students from compromising themselves; he hoped, he said,
to deceive the organizers of the experiment and to tergiversate in anticipation
of possible liberation.
On the other hand
Turcanu and Titus Leonida professed the necessity of a system of “re-education
by force”, a system which by its very nature was elastic and unrestricted, and
which permitted any means for attaining its objective. It is, of course,
understood that no decision concerning the means to be employed could have been
made without a formal order from the prison’s administration. The proposal to
use physical means was much more complicated than the Bogdanovici approach, for
its purpose was not simply torture in order to elicit true or even fictitious
confessions from individuals; its avowed purpose was to change the convictions
of one thousand students hostile to the Communist regime. Turcanu and his
collaborators would not have dared even to think of doing such a thing without
knowing in advance that they had the total support of the Securitate and thus of
the Communist Party, and it is not likely that they did more than pretend to
advocate as their own a procedure they had been instructed to use.
Just before he
began to implement the “re-education by force,” Turcanu, we learned, had
been visited several times by emissaries from the Ministry of the Interior, with
whom he held private discussions for hours on end.[3] Also,
he himself was absent from Pitesti for days, and no one knew whither he had gone
or for what purpose. What was the subject of his discussions and what promises
he received could not be learned even by his closest collaborators. Once the
tragedy began to unfold, his role appeared clearly and hideously. He was a
simple agent carrying out an assigned mission.
The first act was
the formation among the prisoners of an ostensibly spontaneous and voluntary
organization known as “the Organization of Detainees of Communist Convictions.”[4]
It was obvious that this organization was officially approved: its members
claimed to be Party members, and their actions were to be for the “benefit of
the working class.” The organization being thus established, the process of
implementing the instructions given by the Securitate was begun.
CHAPTER V
HOSPITAL ROOM FOUR
On the northern
edge of the prison building, on the ground floor, there is a room bearing the
number 4. Initially it was meant for the sick; that is why it retained the name
and was known to the prisoners as “Hospital Room Four.” This room, fairly
large, was selected for beginning the experiment for it was secluded from the
cells in which the students were confined.
Here is the
description of what happened there given to me by a student who was among the
first victims.
“One evening we
were taken from a ground-floor cell, where we had spent some time, and walked to
Hospital Room Four. We were about ten students, all from ‘correction’.[1]
In Room Four we found another group of students already there about twenty
including Turcanu and Titus Leonida. We suspected nothing untoward, for transfer
of prisoners from one room to another was quite frequent and had become almost
routine. After six o’clock, the time at which the cells of the prison were
normally secured for the night, Turcanu stood up and menacingly posting himself
in front of us, began to talk.
“‘We, a group
of detained students,’ he said, ‘decided to rehabilitate ourselves in the
eyes of the workers’ regime, for we realize that what we did was against the
interests of the working people and Party. We consider that you are an obstacle
to our desired rehabilitation because of your “anti-workers” attitude. That
is why we request you to renounce your previous convictions and to join our
group. If you will not do this in a normal manner, we will use against you all
means at our disposal. We are determined to carry out the action to its end and
will crush any resistance.’
“As I was
unfamiliar with what had happened in Suceava, at first I thought this was a joke
in bad taste. I had never heard such an impertinence, not even from the most
fanatical men of the prison administration. I never was one of the ‘strong’
ones, and to this day I cannot understand why I was selected among the first
ones to be worked on. You can imagine the answer I gave together with all those
who had been brought with me into Room Four by the chief of our section. A sane
man, we thought, could not utter such stupidities. So we took his speech as a
joke, and began to jest.
“Turcanu expected
such a reaction, for he knew quite well the student mentality and convictions.
That is why he was prepared. All those who were with him in the room when we
arrived, remained quiet, waiting. All of them had handy, hidden under the nearby
bunk blankets, a bludgeon, cudgel, post, belt, or board, supplied naturally by
the administration, for it would have been impossible for anyone to procure them
otherwise.
“Our reply gave
Turcanu the opportunity to start. He furiously raised his cap, and then at once,
at that signal, the bludgeons and cudgels were brought out from under the
blankets. Every one of them was armed and, without warning, struck the one of us
nearest him. As a matter of fact they had so placed themselves by prearrangement
that each had a victim handy. Taken by surprise, we were confused. But we came
to our senses immediately and began to defend ourselves each as best he could.
In desperation, we started to attack. We were at an advantage, in fact, for we
were defending our own skins while the others struck by command. As they later
admitted, they really had not expected that matters would go so far. We began to
disarm them. In the room one could hear only the whacks of the bludgeons and the
groans of those stricken. In the confusion one could not distinguish the
original groups. All were striking to defend themselves, and the fight turned
into a life and death struggle, in which each man fought furiously to overcome
his antagonist. After a while the situation became less confused. Although they
were twenty against our ten, all those who had attacked us were sprawled on the
floor, Turcanu included. This was definitely not what the devisers of the
experiment had expected, so intervention was needed to prove to us that all
opposition was vain.
“During the
entire fight the warden, Lieutenant Dumitrescu, had watched through the peephole
in the door. When he realized that Turcanu and his minions had been worsted, he
brusquely opened the door, and, surrounded by some twenty prison guards, his
leading subordinates and officers of the Securitate, he entered the room. All
were armed with cudgels, even the warden. Silence ensued. Only a muffled groan
could be heard now and then. The director ordered everyone to stay where he was.
Then followed a dialogue between the director and Turcanu.
“‘What is
happening here, you bandits?’ (The term ‘bandit’ was the epithet with
which prisoners were addressed by the prison administrators). Turcanu took a
step forward and replied:
“‘Sir, we, a
group of students, realizing that we had sinned against the working class,
opposing its well being and that of the people, decided to rehabilitate
ourselves in the eyes of the Party. We therefore considered it necessary to
respect the wishes of the prison administration, to do all that is asked of us,
and to re-educate ourselves in a Marxist spirit, in order to shorten the period
of our detention, and to be of use to the working class after our release. But
when we began to discuss our intentions, the bandits who are here with us sprang
upon us with their concealed bludgeons and tried to kill us. We defended
ourselves as best we could. We therefore beg the administration to protect us
from these criminals and to ensure our lives and safety.’
“There followed
several exchanges of questions and answers in which the warden, simulating
astonishment, asked Turcanu for further explanations. Then he turned brusquely
to us and said: ‘So that’s it, bandits’?
“That was all! At
his signal the guards all attacked us, while Turcanu’s group quickly slipping
around behind the warden, left our group fully exposed.
“Who could raise
his hand against a uniformed official? We were already bruised and exhausted,
and we well knew that such resistance meant immediate shooting.
“There followed a
terrible scene, lasting unbelievably for several hours, during which one could
hear only the thwacks of the bludgeons, the groans of the sufferers, and the
profanity of the warden and his henchmen. Turcanu’s group helped the guards
every now and then, when some unfortunate managed to separate himself from the
group of those beaten, and tried futilely to find a hiding place. The guards
dealt their blows with all the viciousness they could muster, venting their
spite on us for having defied them previously.
“Weakened by our
designedly inadequate diet, overwhelmed by the number and force of the guards as
well as by the authority they represented, little by little we ceased our futile
but still instinctive efforts to avoid the blows. By now the guards struck us as
they would so many empty sacks. The floor was full of urine and blood. Prostrate
and exhausted by beating, our bodies were strewn on the floor like corpses on a
battlefield. Finally, the guards left the room. We thought it was all finished.
But this was only the beginning! Turcanu’s group took over. We were subjected
to an extremely minute bodily search. Everything that might constitute a
protection, even in imagination, was taken from us. Only our clothing was left
us. We were ordered to crawl under the large common bed. Those who could not
move, were dragged by the ‘re-educators’ under whose dominion we would be
thenceforth. Many among those who followed Turcanu deplored what was happening.
But the spectacle of what took place and the alternative of seeing themselves in
our shoes compelled them to continue in the ways of dishonor. They had not
believed that things would reach that stage. Once engaged in the dirty game,
however, they could not turn back because between them and us there now existed
a real abyss. But that was only for a time. Several months later I myself did
to others what had been done to me.
“The plan had
been elaborated down to the last detail. It was applied on an ever increasing
scale as new participants were trained. What happened in ‘Hospital Room Four’
was repeated hundreds of times in other cells, with only slight variations.
“Immediately
after the beating, we were subjected to the ‘unmasking’.”
* * * * *
What the Communist
Party perpetrated in the prisons of Romania belongs to the domain of
pathological psychology. According to the Communist mentality, it was simply a
job like any other, which had to be successfully concluded, regardless. Human
nature, moral or social considerations could not hinder the progress of an
important experiment.
In all this
tragedy, Turcanu was but an actor, playing under the direction of those who had
designed the experiment and watched it from beyond the footlights with interest
and pleasure. And his original collaborators, who hoped to benefit by an earlier
release from prison, were only instruments in his hand.
What deters persons
of criminal tendencies in normal society is, no doubt, the fear of punishment by
the legal justice that maintains social equilibrium. Such were the conditions at
Pitesti that Turcanu was assured that he would never be called to account, no
matter how many acts of bestiality he might commit, because the very authorities
who were supposed to defend prisoners from violence by their fellows, had
ordered and implemented the sinister plan that cost the lives of so many
students and caused the moral ruin of all the others.
Probably Turcanu
himself did not realize at first how far he was expected to go. He could not
have devised the operation himself. Its diabolical subtlety and ingenuity lay
far beyond his own capabilities. He was only capable of doing what he was told.
Those who masterminded and directed the operation wanted more than mere
torturing of the victims. They were determined to penetrate into the most
intimate recesses of the human soul, probing and prodding it, finding even the
smallest cleavages, discovering everything that can be struck, broken, destroyed
in man to leave him only a body made passive and void of volition.
Beasts kill out of
biological necessity to feed. But the beast-man when he uses reason to implement
his hatred, knows no limit. Only men capable of both great lucidity and frenzied
hate could have decreed Pitesti. That seems paradoxical, but in the Communist
world the paradoxical becomes normal. If Turcanu is responsible for physical
tortures (for which, as a matter of fact, he later paid), it is others who must
answer for the entire process of destruction. The list of names is long. And it
begins with those who destroy the values within man, who destroyed his
equilibrium without substituting anything in its place. The vacuum gave birth to
the disorientation. And this disorientation unleashed the madness.
1)
|
-I.e., From the second category described in the preceding chapter. (Tr.)
|
CHAPTER VI
THE COLLAPSE
The initiators of
the experiment already knew very well not only the structure of the Romanian
soul but also how the particular youths selected for experimentation had been
educated in school, at home, and especially in the organization to which they
were ideologically devoted before their arrest.
Their complete
breakdown could therefore be accomplished only by systematically destroying
everything that constituted the firm anchorage of their lives and thoughts; in
other words, by cutting them loose from their moorings. And because
Christianity, the diametrical opposite to materialism, has always offered the
most effective system for living, and because the majority of students arrested
were condemned for activity inspired by the Legion of St. Michael the Archangel,
the approach of the “re-educators” was to attack precisely those values on
which the Christian ethic is based. By destroying these, they could destroy the
very reason the youths chose to go to prison rather than compromise their
principles.
Investigations
conducted in the Ministry of the Interior and in various regional Securitates,
managed to wrest quite a few secrets from the students, not so much because of
moral weakness as by means of brutal methods of interrogation. These were such
that it was almost impossible for a student to deny an offense even if he had
committed none; he admitted the crime to avoid further torture. But even though
the Securitate did succeed in tearing secrets from tortured minds, it was unable
to affect the structure of the soul. On the contrary, having passed through
these investigations, the students came out more convinced than ever of the
righteousness of the cause for which they were suffering, and of the absurdity
of the newly imposed system. As long, then, as the soul remained unaltered,
there had been no defeat. So it was precisely the soul that remained the
principal target, its utter destruction, the aim.
* * * * *
The Romanian people
and their faith appeared in history at no determined date, but the Romanian soul
is organically commingled with Christianity, perhaps because they were born
together, as witness Romania’s historical chronicles over several centuries
and all the crosses, called troite set up at nearly all crossroads in the
countryside. Since the Romanian has traditionally put all his hopes in God when
trials confronted him, the peasants’ sons, now students, turned to God for
help in the most trying time of their lives. A prayer murmured from the depths
of one’s soul by trembling lips was often more satisfying than bread. Though
it is often said that faith is inversely proportional to the degree of
education, exactly the opposite was found in Romania’s prisons. Those whose
belief was strongest, who felt the greatest need to pray, were definitely the
best educated, irrespective of their political affiliation, including even the
most materialistic socialists, who discovered the closeness of God, in prison,
where only true faith could fill the void of their lives.
The Communists
recognized this fact and decided to strike from the beginning with all fury,
aiming to produce despair and despondency until this faith was destroyed. Thus
could they render ineffective the twin pillars of Romanian patriotism: Christian
moral precepts, and tradition.
Everything of the
past which could offer any kind of refuge was to be muddied and denigrated. This
included the heroes of history and the folklore of Christian inspiration. Then,
to be given special attention, was the destruction of love for family, in order
completely to isolate the victim in his own misery, bereft of religion, love of
country, and family. This would break the chain that links together a community
of national thought and gives meaning to a national struggle. When the
individual was thus cut off from his history, faith and family, the ultimate
step in “re-educating” him was to destroy his existence as a personality an
individual. This, to the victim, was to prove the most painful step of all and
was called his “unmasking.”
These, then, were
the main objectives of the experiment launched at Pitesti Prison by which the
“re-educators” hoped to produce in the end “the new man,”
de-personalized, a robot which they could manipulate.
The preparations
necessary for initiating the last cruel step, the “unmasking,” were probably
patterned after methods explained in a book by a Russian lawyer who, arrested
and tortured after confessing everything, wrote it for the benefit of his
interrogators. It is rumored that this happened during the first investigations
carried out by the Communist police after the capture of Russia. In the book,
the author used himself as an example, searching his own soul, and succeeded in
placing at the disposal of his torturers a psychological treatise of
overwhelming importance. Analyzing himself, he discovered the weak points in
man, the most vulnerable ones, through which an ultimate breakdown can be
achieved.
The weaknesses, or
“cracks” as he calls them in his book, are hunger, psychological terror,
endless uncertainty, and total isolation. Months of undernourishment, therefore,
which our student prisoners had already endured, laid the groundwork quite well
for what was to follow.
There you have the
prerequisites for applying the “unmasking” technique. Practically speaking,
it consisted of two distinct phases, the outer and the inner unmasking. The
first was but an intensification of Communist Securitate’s usual investigative
methods involving not only some torture but much that was grotesque and
irrational. But the second, the “inner unmasking,” which was to result in
the final breakdown, was the one that received the greatest attention from the
experts.
The first phase
carried to completion the secret police’s earlier investigations through a
torturing system whereby they sought to squeeze a man into the position of
declaring all, but absolutely all, that he had done or intended to do
prior to his arrest. He had to name and denounce all persons he had been in
contact with, all who helped him with money or food, advice or moral
encouragement; all who had sheltered him; all who knew of his activities even if
they did not participate in them; all who did not sympathize with the Communist
regime; all whom he suspected of having infiltrated the Party or having joined
it opportunistically; anybody who seemed likely later to engage in anti-Party
activity; maligners of the Party; etc. Then he had to tell whether he had any
ideological material books, documents, newspapers, circulars, etc. which he had
not declared during earlier questioning; where they were hidden; who else knew
of their existence; whether he possessed firearms; if so, where hidden.
Particular emphasis was placed on firearms, especially those stored away by
peasants as the German troops retreated in 1944; and on any individuals of the
“people’s army” who might later, through bribery or corruption, place at
the disposal of the “enemies of the people” weapons or anything else that
could be used against the Party.
The oral
declarations were first demanded from the victims, were then inscribed on soap
plaques, verified and attested by a member of the “re-education committee”
(or by Turcanu himself, if the case seemed a bit interesting), and were finally
put on paper, signed by the declarant, and sent to special officers of the
Ministry of the Interior, who proceeded, as soon as possible after screening the
information, to arrest the persons “denounced” in the declaration. Also as
part of this outer unmasking, the student, if he had been transferred from
another prison, had to detail his activities there as well as give a detailed
account of his activities after arriving at Pitesti.
During the first
months of their imprisonment, before Turcanu began his work, students had been
allowed a modicum of freedom, being supervised more or less superficially by the
guards, and had organized their free time for their own benefit. Not having
books or writing materials, not even pencil and paper (it was dangerous to be
found possessing these), students discovered anew the Roman stylus, using soap
tablets instead of wax ones. It was on these little tablets that all writing was
done. In the absence of books, courses in foreign languages were pursued, also
in advanced mathematics, chemistry and other subjects as remembered from student
days. Discussions proved to be quite fruitful, especially among those who had
studied philosophy, literature, law, and theology, many aspects of Romania’s
spiritual life as well as problems of sociology and philosophical orientation.
All this was condoned by the Communists, who considered it a matter of adjusting
to life inside a prison; but if they detected, under cover of these educational
sessions, any sort of political activity, the punishment was more severe than
for similar activity outside.
Nevertheless, there
was no lack of discussion of a purely political character among students of
different convictions. Through these talks they came to know one another better
and were able to clear up disagreements of the past. These discussions
frequently led to real rapprochement, dissipating erroneous impressions
formed during earlier confrontations when passions were less well controlled;
and a mutual esteem previously unthought of thus developed. It was this kind of
information about the students that the “unmaskers” particularly were after.
The individual
under interrogation had to confess all the discussions he had had with his
fellows, report in detail all educational meetings that had dealt with
citizenship and political events, and denounce all who had shown attitudes
hostile to the prison administration or made sarcastic remarks in connection
with interpretation of Marxism, or jokes about Stalin the “teacher.” Answers
were required to such questions as who among the students had a “fanatical”
attitude; or was better informed; or was capable of polarizing the younger
members around him; who gave medical help to those condemned to hard labor all
this in order to determine precisely the classification of individuals for
eventual use in “unmasking” those who as yet had not walked through the
fire.
When the student
had declared all, or as much as he had to in order to convince the re-education
committee that he was hiding nothing, only then began the real tragedy, the “inner
unmasking,” the attempt to annihilate the soul. Through the first unmasking he
had given over enough information and names to the Securitate to destroy
collaborators still free; now he would be forced to yield up his own personality
for immolation. The re-educators hoped to destroy the moral and psychological
strength of his inner being and transform him into amorphous material, to be
shaped by them into a “new structurization.”
To this end the
students were obliged to crush underfoot everything they held most sacred God,
family, friends, love, wife, colleagues, memories, ideology everything which
bound them to the past, anything that might give them inner support while in
prison.
When the student
had passed this test also, to the satisfaction of the re-educators, he became an
“honest and clean” vessel worthy of receiving the new doctrine of Marxist
humanism, embodied at that time in the person of “the genial leader of the
peoples,” Mr. J. V. Stalin.
In the name of this
doctrine of re-structuring, and to justify the unmaskings in his own way,
Turcanu used to say:
“You bandit, I
beat in you the Legionary criminal (or the National Party member, as the case
might be); I have nothing against you personally. By my action, I am helping you
to discard the criminal concept that brought you here, and am preparing you to
join in a new cause, more just, the cause of the working people.”
As a matter of
fact, this is the kind of treatment which, on different levels and in different
terms, is applied to all of society under Communist tutelage. Through devious
propaganda manipulation, the Communists try to make man believe that general
pauperism is not real, that the state of affairs could not be better, and that
this is the only road to happiness ...
For those who have
lived under Communism, a paradox such as this is not uncommon, and they are not
long surprised at the considerable disproportion between what is claimed and
what is actually done. For instance, all kinds of laws are enacted to satisfy
every human need, but exactly the opposite is practiced. But about this one
cannot speak in a loud voice ...
CHAPTER VII
THE CONDITIONED REFLEXES
The Communists
apply to human beings the well-known principle of conditioned reflexes that
explains much of the behavior of animals.
These reflexes,
which are the basis of Socialist medical science and psychology, are often
called “Pavlovian reflexes” after the Russian physiologist, Ivan Pavlov,[1]
who was the first to conduct systematic experiments, chiefly on dogs, to
determine the exact nature of this neurophysiological reaction. Actually,
however, the phenomenon that Pavlov investigated was well known for centuries
and extensively used in practice to train animals. The most famous of Pavlov’s
experiments was performed by giving a dog a chunk of meat at the ringing of a
bell. After this has been done several times, the dog’s reflexes are so
conditioned that the animal will salivate abundantly when it hears the bell
although he has no meat before him. For many centuries before Pavlov, however,
conditioned reflexes were used; for example, by gypsies to produce dancing
bears. A small bear cub is walked over a sheet of metal under which there is a
slow burning fire. As the sheet metal becomes warm, the soles of the little bear’s
feet begin to pain him and he lifts one foot after another, shifting his weight
alternately to cool the soles of his feet. While he is doing this, drums are
beaten. After this training has been repeated several times, the neurological
association between the sound of the drums and the movement of the feet is
established, and ever thereafter, the bear, although full grown, will begin to
“dance” whenever he hears the beating of the drums. Such, reduced to its
simplest terms, is the procedure for producing conditioned reflexes in
irrational animals.
When the Communists
apply this technique to their human subjects, they must first reduce their
victims to the condition of animals.
When one destroys
in man the moral and intellectual foundation of his being, his consciousness of
personal identity and superiority, and thus deprives him of control over his own
faculties by reason and will, man ceases to be a superior being. There is no
longer any difference between man and animal. He will submit, as do animals, to
biological impulses.
That is why, when
he encountered unexpected opposition in a cell, Turcanu affirmed: “Your
resistance is in vain. This system has been perfected and used for
twenty-five years[2] and so far it has never failed. You
will become convinced of this yourselves. I do not work haphazardly.” The
prison’s warden, the Bolshevik Lieutenant Dumitrescu, stated several times in
more than one cell, a little before the beginning of “re-education”: “Even
if you were made out of granite, you would not be able to resist all the way.
Shortly you will see that I do not lie.” At Pitesti, at least as far as the
basic method was concerned, the experimenters improvised nothing; from the very
first they applied a method that had worked innumerable times and whose results
could be predicted with certainty.
How the system was
elaborated and tested, I do not know, but its effects were certain. A mere
reference to the tortures was like Professor Pavlov’s bell or the gypsies’
drum. A word was sufficient to trigger the reflex that pain and degradation had
created, and the man was at once paralyzed and behaved as the experimenters
wished.
Beginning with the
prisoners from the “correction” category and from labor camps, the “re-educators”
trained a group sufficiently large to handle the other categories of prisoners.
This operation was facilitated by the distribution of the students among cells,
which held from five to fifteen persons, who were thus always together but
completely isolated from contact with others, since the cells were locked and
shuttered from the outside both day and night. This isolation in small units
facilitated the operation.
At first only a
few, then more and more, and finally all the students went through “re-education.”
And all became finally, no matter how long they resisted, mindless docile
creatures of which the supervisors made further use according to a well
established plan. There where no exceptions. Only those who were so lucky
as to die under torture and those who, profiting by some oversight on the part
of their tormentors, found a way to commit suicide, escaped the transformation.
Men who had for two
years, day after day, night after night, defied the tortures and the bullets of
the Communist Securitate, crumbled little by little under the Pavlovian
technique and, overwhelmed by despair, terror, incertitude, were metamorphosed
into zombies.
What radical
transformations take place in the soul of one whose right of biological
self-destruction is denied, who for years on end is kept in a state of living
death with an ingenuity truly Satanic? What can survive systematic menticide?
Heroism? Self-sacrifice? Ethical convictions? Idealism? Had the pagans during
the persecutions of Christians used Communist methods, it is probable that the
Christian calendar would number fewer saints and martyrs.
What could be more
depressing than this thought? Among the victims of the Communists, there are
no heroes there can be no heroes.
Is heroism perhaps
a simple state of psychic exaltation nourished by sentiment that depends on
events and environment? Under the conditions created at Pitesti, not only could
no one become a hero, but the very concept of heroism was obliterated.
If some day in the
future it becomes possible thoroughly to investigate the applications of
Bolshevik techniques and the profound mutations of the human psyche induced by
them, civilized mankind will arraign and damn not the ephemeral creatures who
carried out the techniques of torment, but the perennial originators of the
appalling techniques that reduce man to a level inferior to that of animals.
After the first
phase of procedure initiated in Hospital Room Four was completed and the victims
had been reduced to the desired psychopathological state of passive desperation
and animal helplessness, they were judged ripe for the next stage in the
process. They were ready now for the second phase in which the prisoners would
be brought to denounce one another spontaneously and without any instigation by
the prison authorities.
Transfers from one
cell to another were effected by prison authorities as Turcanu directed. They
gave him a free hand to shuffle prisoners around as he thought expedient in the
“unmasking” program, and he had at his disposal the entire list of condemned
men, by which he could switch prisoners back and forth in various combinations.
To hide his role, the transfers were always made by the prison guards on orders
from above.
Turcanu had
transfers made so that a group of students who had passed through the training
given in Hospital Room Four shared a cell with a group of students who had heard
nothing of the “unmasking” technique and naturally entertained could
entertain no suspicion of the newcomers, who seemed to have been placed with
them only by one of the seemingly random rearrangements of prisoners that the
prison authorities frequently decreed. For two or three weeks, the “un-masked”
students started discussions, criticized the Communist regime, and exchanged
information seeking to loosen the tongues of their unsuspecting companions who
were next in line for “re-education”, in order to elicit from each at least
several compromising statements for later use. Such statements were sought as a
means of destroying, when the time come, first, the confidence and trust that
the students then reposed in one another (for at that time no one who had not
been “re-educated” could even imagine what was in store for them) and
second, their natural aversion to Communism.
The prisoners, who
were deprived of all ordinary materials for writing, had long been accustomed
secretly to use soap tablets for memoranda and even communication between cells.
The newcomers complying of course, with the instructions of the masters took
advantage of this custom and wrote down on these tablets everything they thought
could be helpful in the coming “unmaskings.” They concealed these inscribed
tablets of soap and transmitted them to Turcanu or his assistants, either in the
morning when they were taken out of the cell to the lavatory, or when they were
called out by guards, ostensibly summoned to the main office, but really so that
they could, without arousing suspicion, report to Turcanu in the corridor
outside the cell. At other times, these soap tablets were hidden in
predetermined places in the washroom, and collected, after the night lock-up, by
agents of the Securitate. The records on soap were also given furtively to
prison guards, to the persons who distributed the food, or to others whom the
“re-educated” could on occasion approach in ways that excited no remark
among their unsuspecting cellmates.
The “re-educators”,
of course, had no need for the information thus obtained and recorded; it could
have been extracted anyway during the “unmaskings.” This procedure was
ordained for three reason: first, it confirmed each of the “re-educated” in
his conditioned habit of hypocrisy and treachery toward his intended victims and
simultaneously bound the “re-educated” together by their common guilt;
second, the surreptitious provoking and recording of compromising statements
kept the “re-educated” in a state of constant vigilance and anxiety, for
they realized that if, by some lingering sentiment of decency or sheer
oversight, they were inefficient in their assumed roles, they would be given
more “re-education” themselves; and finally, the production of such
devastatingly complete and accurate information at the psychological moment
would take the victims completely by surprise and stun them, so to speak, by a
blow from inside.
After some weeks,
when it was thought that enough compromising data had been collected, the “re-educators”
in the cell were put into action. At that time, one of the leaders of the
O.D.C.C., usually Turcanu himself, entered the cell escorted by several of his
collaborators. The appearance of this contingent both reminded the “re-educated”
in the cell of what they had undergone, thus triggering their conditioned
reflexes, and had the practical effect of bringing in a team of strong
bully-boys to avert the possibility that, as had happened in Hospital Room Four,
a desperate resistance might make necessary the direct intervention of the
prison authorities. The contingent that escorted Turcanu on such occasions was
composed of well-fed, vigorous and husky men, not to mention Turcanu himself,
who was truly a Hercules by comparison with the students who had been physically
debilitated by the starvation diet to which they had been long and continuously
subjected. Considering the fact that the bullyboys were precisely the trusties
who did the work of distributing the food to each cell, it is obvious how they
obtained ample nourishment, despite the official doctrine that all prisoners are
“bandits” who must not be allowed “to live on the back of the working
people.” The intelligentsia who, from behind the scenes, directed the whole
sinister tragedy, had arranged even such details in advance so that nothing
could happen to disturb the performance of their play.
After the
contingent of “re-educators” entered a cell, a “meeting” began with a
discourse, usually by Turcanu himself, consisting of the same stereotyped
phrases that had been uttered in Hospital Room Four: “the need for ‘re-education’”,
“bandits who oppose it”, “the necessity of breaking all resistance by no
matter what means”, etc., etc.[3] At the conclusion of the
“speech”, all the inmates of the cell, including the “re-educated” were
asked to make their “unmasking” (“self-denouncement”) immediately. The
answer of the students was always the same, and likewise Turcanu’s reaction:
he gave the signal by lifting either his cap or his hand, and then, as in
Hospital Room Four, began the beatings. But now the confusion and dismay of the
victims was even greater, for they saw among their assailants their own
cellmates, whom they had until that very moment regarded as brothers. Now these
trusted comrades were suddenly dealing them desperate blows, in the back more
often than not. How could they know the motivation for a transformation
apparently instantaneous?
The “re-educators”
exploited to the utmost that first moment of bewilderment. A man who had been a
literary student described that moment to me in these words:
“When Turcanu
ended his speech I thought he was crazy. And we all looked at one another in
astonishment. But only a few moments elapsed. He raised his cap. That very
instant, a friend, probably the best friend I had before we were arrested and a
man in whom I had blind faith, struck me full in my face with his fist,
delivering so furious a blow that I was dazed. I looked at him in utter terror.
My hands hung down, suddenly powerless. I was not capable of saying one word; I
was simply unable to ask him why. He continued to strike me with the same
desperation. I could not muster even the slightest resistance. At first I
thought this was a nightmare or that all our minds had been suddenly darkened by
a collective madness. Finally I tried to ask him something; I do not know
anymore what it was. His reply was a rain of blows with his fists accompanied by
facial expressions so hideous that they seemed to hurt me even more than the
pummeling. It was only then that I somehow collected my wits and tried to defend
myself. But from behind, another student, who had been brought into my cell at
the same time as my friend some two weeks before, attacked me. This fellow was
armed with a cudgel. I could not imagine where he had obtained it! I could not
get out of the way anymore. I started to strike in desperation, at random,
wherever I could. I tried to open a path towards the wall to protect my back,
but someone with a cudgel landed a powerful blow on my left arm. Then another
cudgel descended on my head. My body trembled. Other blows followed; they rained
upon me. In the cell a frightening brawl was taking place. Groans, the thuds of
cudgels, curses were blent into a chaotic uproar.
“After a while
the cudgels broke, and the fight became body to body. But we were far fewer and
weaker than our assailants. One by one we fell to the floor, physically unable
to rise. Later, I lapsed into unconsciousness. How long I remained in that
state, I do not know. When I came to, I was covered with blood and black and
blue all over. My body was numb, yet it ached in every fibre. I could not move.
My companions were in the same state. Turcanu had left the room, leaving us in
the hands of his collaborators, the men, (including my erstwhile bosom friend)
who had been brought into our cell two weeks before and who, as was now obvious
to us, had come already appointed as our ‘re-education committee’, a
position they now openly assumed. What had just happened had created a
bottomless abyss between us and them. Turcanu could breathe freely, for none of
his men could now let him down. But at that bitter moment I did not imagine
could not have believed that, in a few months, I myself would reach a condition
in which I tortured others in order to ‘re-educate’ them.”
When the young man
finished that narrative this was several years after the “unmaskings” an
indescribable despair could be read on his face. Then he concluded: “By an
unimaginable fatality, we became the gravediggers of our own aspirations, of our
own souls. For never again will we be able to raise our heads. Christians once
died happily for their faith. But we, also Christians, could not attain that
happiness. We became the tools of the Communism that we heartily detested, in
order mutually to destroy ourselves, in order to bury our dearest hopes in
unique madness, hopes that we had nourished with much suffering and worldly
renunciation. It was as if Satan had grabbed us from the hands of God. If I had
then an opportunity to commit suicide, I would have wanted nothilig more. But
now, in my present state, I lack even the courage to do it. I may seem to be
whole, but in reality I am only the wreck of myself, discredited in the eyes of
my friends, and despised by my enemies. And yet, in essence, we were guilty of
nothing, really.”
In those scenes,
the ratio of forces was usually two to one. Furthermore, the “re-educated”
had been equipped with bludgeons, cudgels, boards, and straps, and they were
inspired by the strange induced hatred that drove them to reduce all prisoners
to a common level, so that no one could look at another with accusing eyes. In
that furious urge they vented their own agony born of the knowledge that they
had been unable to resist, were not able to die before submitting.
Seldom did the
guards have to intervene. But sometimes, despite the disproportion of numbers
and strength, the desperation and resistance that followed the first moment of
surprise and bewilderment, made it necessary to bring in re-enforeements for the
“re-educators.” The warden, Dumitrescu, always supervised through the
peephole the progress of the “unmasking” inside, especially at the very
beginning, which was the critical juncture.
In general, the
first beating lasted between three and four hours, but in some cases it lasted
through nine consecutive hours, for desperation awakens in man forces
little known. The students were one by one eliminated from the fight. After each
man had been beaten to immobility or unconsciousness, his skull cracked or his
ribs broken, he was stripped and subjected to a minute personal search. Every
article that could conceivably be used for protection or to commit suicide was
taken and confiscated. Then the naked and inert bodies were shoved under the
bunk-bed. As each man recovered consciousness, the beatings were resumed by the
“re-education committee.”
For days, those in
the “position of unmasking” were subjected to this brutal regimen. Unable to
resist or to defend themselves, kept under stringent surveillance, to prevent
them from commiting suicide, their minds gradually succumbed to the utter
despair that the “unmasking” technique was designed to produce. And they
abandoned themselves to the tortures, passively waiting with blighted
consciousness for whatever was to happen to them.
The methods used in
“unmaskings” were basically uniform. All means of attaining the calculated
goal were, of course, sanctioned, and if there were some variations in the
administration of torture, they were merely small details that the criminal
mentalities of the various bosses were permitted to introduce into the fixed
pattern of procedure.
CHAPTER VIII
A ROUTINE DAY
In Pitesti prison,
the day began at five o’clock in the morning to allow time for the cleaning
and straightening of the cell, which had to be done by six. This chore
obligatorily fell upon the “Catholics”, as those considered more “fanatical”
or more resistant to “re-education” were called. The run-of-the-mill
prisoners were put to work washing windows or doing other menial chores. Those
who scrubbed the floors were compelled to carry “piggyback” at least one of
the “re-educated” and sometimes two or three of them, as prescribed by the
“re-education committee.” Floor scrubbing lasted until six o’clock when
the guards came around to take the head count. Often the warden himself or
officers of the Securitate came to open the cells for inspection. The inmates
were, of course, compelled to stand at attention, while the cell’s leader,
always one of the “re-educated”, gave a report. Men who had been so tortured
that they could not stand up, were put in the back row and supported under their
arms by the “re-educated” doubtless to spare the warden’s feelings!
Following the
morning inspection, the cells were said to be “open.” At this time the
students were taken out under guard to “wash” and to clean “the bucket”
a kind of wooden container used during the previous day for their necessities.
According to a prison-wide rule of the “re-education committee” the use of
this archaic toilet was restricted to urination. For other necessities, students
were permitted twice a day to use common toilets in the hall of their section of
the prison.
There are some
aspects of the life of a prisoner which are usually not mentioned, for the
details are repugnant, but I must allude to them here because they formed one of
the most carefully planned and effective elements of the program of “re-education.”
The gamut of
torment and humiliation to which the students were subjected was cunningly
increased when they went to the lavatory and toilet. The time allowed one who
was in the “state of unmasking” was too short even for the necessary
preparation. It varied from thirty seconds or less to a maximum of one minute,
the exact amount of time being left within these limits to the discretion of the
one escorting the “bandit.” Those who were unable to finish in the allotted
time, were pulled out by the collar, beaten because they “sabotaged
cleanliness”, and hustled back into their cells, where they had to wait either
until evening, or, if the incident occurred during the evening program, until
the next morning. When this happened repeatedly in consecutive trips, the victim
had to resort to other means much more humiliating. The same thing happened in
the wash room, where one was hardly given the time to wet his hands. Of course,
this program was continued with unrelenting thoroughness until the “unmasking”
was completed.
This system of
degradation was extensively applied in all the Securitate centers of Communist
Romania. As an example I give only one case: In the summer of 1952 I was under
interrogation at the Constanta Securitate. Sometime in August, Dr. Papahagi was
brought into our cell. He used to be the chief medical officer of Tulcea County.
Although he was a member of the Communist Party, he had just been arrested for
“Fascist” activity, supposedly carried out many years before when he was a
pupil in a Romanian high school in Greece! The guards of the section in which he
was confined were all from Tulcea, where he had practiced medicine for many
years, and they knew him well. But nevertheless he was literally grabbed by his
collar and kicked, undressed as he was, by an illiterate guard from Jurilofca.
They gave him less than a minute to use the toilet. The doctor came back into
the cell weeping. To that moment he had thought I was too emotional when I
talked about the inhuman treatment that was our lot in prison!
Returned to their
rooms, the students received the morning’s food rations a serving consisting
of a spoonfull (250 cc.) of cornmeal soup, called terci, or the same
quantity of tea. Students who were in “position of unmasking”, had no right
to eat as everybody else ate. They were forced to eat “hog-like”, using only
their mouths! They had to kneel down, hands behind their backs, or go down on
all fours, if such was the command of the “re-education chief.” In this
position, they had to suck up the hot liquid from the mess-pan placed before
them. The result was that the student ended with his lips burned. There was
always initial resistance to this demand to behave like a hog, but after severe
and prolonged torture everyone was finally compelled to submit.
A “bandit” was
not allowed to wash his mess-pan after consuming its contents. The washing had
to be done by licking, because the water distributed to cells could be used only
by those already “re-educated.” There was no running water in the cells.
Trusties brought it in from the halls in wooden casks or similar vessels.
Breakable containers that might give someone a means of committing suicide were
forbidden.
Immediatelv after
finishing “breakfast”, those under “unmasking” took their “positions.”
Each was obliged to sit on the edge of the bed, his legs stretched out, his
hands on his knees, his head lifted and looking always forward, without being
allowed to turn it in either direction. Each was constantly watched over by a
guard, recruited naturally from among those who already had gone through “unmaskings.”
The slightest deviation from the assigned position was summarily and severely
punished by the guard, who then reported to his superior, the chief of the “re-education
committee”, who in his turn inflicted a Supplementary chastisement.
The noon meal was
served between eleven and twelve o’clock. Bread was distributed first. When
the regular guard approached the cell, or when the familiar mealtime noise out
in the hall was heard, at a given signal, everyone adopted as natural a position
as possible “in order to keep the guard in the dark with respect to our
activities in the cell”, even though that guard had participated in an earlier
phase of “unmasking”, either on his own or under the direction of the warden
or of an officer of the Securitate. Every student walked past the bread basket
and meal barrel placed in the doorway to receive his portion. The moment the
door of the cell was closed and locked, the discipline of “unmasking” was
resumed. A “bandit” was not permitted to use his hands while eating his
bread. Often, with his hands tied behind his back and the bread thrown in front
of him, he was forced to eat it kneeling down and using only his mouth. The
tiniest crumb had to be picked off the floor by his tongue or his lips!
Sometimes the method was changed. A prisoner was permitted to use his hands in
eating his bread, but then the nine ounce hunk was broken into two or three
pieces, each of which he had to stuff whole into his mouth.
The rest of the
noon meal was served in essentially the same manner as the breakfast tea, except
that at this meal, the torment was greater. In the morning the tea or the terci
would cool a little if one stalled a bit, even if one was beaten for doing so,
but the food at the noon meals, being somewhat thicker and usually consisting
mainly of husked oats, took longer to cool. The “re-education committee”
demanded that each “bandit” consume his meal as soon as possible; one of its
members placed himself in front of the “bandit” and by beating, forced him
to lap up the steaming food at once. The mess-pan was again cleaned by licking.
Or, on other occasions, any form of cleaning was strictly forbidden, because the
“enemies of the people” need no cleanliness ... After this, the prisoners
resumed their assigned positions.
A slight
interruption occurred at five o’clock. The warden or a chief guard went from
cell to cell counting the prisoners. The positions taken were the same as those
of the morning. Those who could not stand alone were placed in the back rows and
were flanked by two “re-educated.” After the six o’clock inspection,
return to the assigned positions on the edge of the beds was continued until
nine o’clock, when the “lights out” signal was given (an anachronous term
retained from the times when prisoners could turn off lights for the night).
Under Communist rule, in the prisons of Romania all prisons lights burn in the
cells all night. When the bell rang out in the hall, each prisoner had to go to
bed, and talking after this time was punishable according to regulations. But
“lights out” at Pitesti was the beginning of a new ordeal. After thirteen
hours of continuous torment, the victims were allowed to sleep only in a
prescribed position that was, perhaps, more cruel than the others. Stretched on
his back, face up, his body out straight, with his hands above the blanket
covering his body to his chest, the student was not permitted to alter that
sleeping position in any way. At his feet, with a bludgeon in his hands, stood
watch a student guard; who in turn was tormented by lack of sleep and therefore
the more antagonized by any resistance of his charge.
To whom does it not
happen while sleeping, involuntarily, to turn on one side, or to raise his
knees? A blow on the ankle-bone given with the full force of the arm brought the
one who had moved again into the “correct” position. The watcher was obliged
to strike a strong blow because he feared not only the “unmasking committee”,
but also the one whom he was watching. I do not mean that the recipient of the
blow would request that he be struck a strong blow, but the watcher himself was
apprehensive of being punished, should he show any pity. For when once a man’s
resistance was broken, he began to talk about “everything,” and if the
watcher did not strike him hard enough, he in the course of his “unmasking”
would tell that on such and such an occasion he had been let off lightly by his
watcher, who must therefore be a former friend, and must either have made an
incomplete “unmasking” or had a recurrence of bourgeois thoughts and
prejudices. Thus it often happened that watchers were forced back into the
routine of “unmasking” for a second time, merely because someone denounced
them for not having struck him hard enough during the “sleeping discipline”!
Following the first
blow, sleep did not return, and sleeplessness took over. It was as if they were
attending a wake for the dead and began usually immediately or shortly after “lights-out.”
Hours passed
snail-paced; the victims tried to stay awake, afraid that they would turn or
make some involuntary movement if they fell asleep, because a blow received
under such circumstances has a terrific psychological effect. And when it
happened that one nevertheless fell asleep, the sleep was not a normal sleep,
but a kind of unconsciousness resulting from total exhaustion. Morning was
expected with relief and return to the rigid position of “unmasking” came as
a blessing!
How many secret
supplications were made to Heaven, how many desperate minds sought to discover
somewhere, even in the most fantastic and absurd conjectures, a ray of hope or a
prospect of death! But neither came. For the time being only physical suffering
filled their consciousness; the agony of the soul would come later. For the
sufferers, time had ceased to exist except as a scarcely comprehended
alternation between the light of day and that of the electric bulb overhead. And
yet they resisted. The capacity to endure, that wonderful weapon of the soul
that raised to sainthood so many ordinary mortals, was here also abundantly
manifested.
The students
endured and waited. It was a desperate waiting, endless, unnatural, for in their
hearts they had known for a long time that they were utterly helpless and at the
mercy of their torturers. They were convinced that in all the other prisons too,
and perhaps outside as well, the system of decomposition by torture was being
applied to everyone. They knew, too, that it was impossible to resist forever,
for each man saw a former friend, whom he had known intimately and in whom he
had previously had implicit faith, who had yielded, who had changed into a
non-human. Yet, something inside still encouraged the victims to resist, to
resist in the hidden depths of their minds.
When the patience
of the “re-education committee” wore thin or rather when the unseen experts
who directed everything from the shadows judged that the time had come, there
was uttered the terrible question that everybody expected, from which no one was
exempt.
“Bandit, have you
decided to make your unmasking?”
Those who were
already broken heard that question with a kind of painful relief and began to
talk. They were then put through the entire procedure for the total
disintegration of their souls.
But most of the
students, even though they seemed broken, were obstinate and responded drily:
“I have nothing to unmask. Everything I knew I confessed at the Securitate.”
The “re-educators”
considered that answer a defiance. It was only then that the “real beating”
began.
Many were the
students who provoked the beatings not only deliberately but eagerly out of
despair. The beatings gave them their only hope of dying. For everyone who
preferred death to acceptance of degradation hoped desperately that during such
a beating he might receive a fatal blow that would end his perpetual torment,
and release him from the unbearable burden of life. But the directors of the
experiment knew all of this, and so did the tormentors inside the cells, for
many of them, when in the same situation, had longed and hoped for a
deathdealing blow. They were under orders categorically forbidding such mercy.
No blows were permitted on the temples, the region of the heart, the base of the
head, or any other spot where a blow could be fatal. The physical death of
students had to be prevented in order to kill the soul. The whole purpose, of
course, of the unhuman directors was to extirpate the soul and replace it with
conditioned reflexes. Only thus could they create the new man needed in
the society of tomorrow of which they dream. In the jargon of the Marxist theory
of dialectical materialism, such creation is called “dis-alienation.”[1]
It is attained by a crucifixion of the soul ending in moral, not physical death.
When the longed-for
death did not come, men craved for the blow that would make them unconscious,
their only way of escaping for even a few moments from the inferno invented by
those who promise mankind paradise on earth.
CHAPTER IX
THE CATHOLICS
From the beginning,
at the time when the files of those who were to pass into “unmaskings” were
compiled, students were divided into two groups according to their soul’s
strength or to the role played as members of the resistance organizations. The
first category consisted of the less spirited students with an indeterminate
record of activity, who thus were not good timber for the making of the “new
man,” but whose weakness was yet not sufficient reason to exempt them from
unmaskings. They also were passed through the entire gamut of disintegration but
usually with less insistence and not very extensive tortures. These were the
ones who fell earlier than others when the question, “You bandit, have you
decided to make your unmasking?” was put to them. Their number was not very
large in relation to the total number arrested. They were named by the unmaskers
gugustiuci, an ironic term meaning “wild pigeons,” in other words,
creatures not entirely responsible for their present plight.
The second
category, which gave the initiators many a headache although it suited their
purposes better, included the more spirited, fanatical students, those who
resisted a long time, those who had to be passed through a second cycle of
tortures before being broken. These were called “Catholics.”
One of the tests
for the fanatical students was forced gymnastics, especially the semi-squat or
“frog.” To touch the heels with the buttocks was not permitted, and the
hands had to be held laterally the whole time, stretched out, or raised high
above the head. During this semi-squat posture, the student had to raise and
lower himself in time to a rhythm set by the re-educator by hitting on wood with
a stick hours on end, uninterruptedly.
Normally and
without any coercion, a man in good physical condition can do up to fifty
flexions of this kind, after which his legs begin to stiffen. The student A.D.
from the Faculty of Letters in Bucharest, arrested in 1948 and sentenced to ten
years, did in a single night, above the portable toilet, over one thousand. When
he stepped down he still had the strength to continue; it was the fatigue of the
rhythm-beater which stopped the performance. To what mysterious force can be
attributed this physical resistance on the part of a man exhausted by
malnutrition, sleepless nights, and the obligatory positions imposed on him in
the days preceding this test? For this case is but one from among the hundreds
of victims who managed to pass the one thousand-mark of such flexions without
breaking down. Only strength of will, a manifestation of spirit, could thus
temporarily overcome the body’s fatigue and successfully control it.
The student M.M.,
also from the Faculty of Letters in Bucharest, was subjected to the following
procedure. After everything else had been tried on him, including beating till
his body became almost insensitive to further blows, he was forced one day to
lie down on the floor in the middle of the room. Other students, chosen
according to their degree of “banditry” (i.e., resistance), were forced to
lie down on him, one after another, until in all there were seventeen all those,
in other words, who were in the process of unmasking in that cell at that time.
On top of all then climbed the individual who was committee chief in the room.
Under the pressure of all this weight the student could no longer control
himself; the muscles of his abdomen gave way and everything that had been
forbidden him to do over the toilet he did there in the cell.
What followed
enters directly into the domain of madness. Under the pretext that he had broken
rules and dirtied the room, and that no washing of clothes is permitted outside
a scheduled time, the poor student was ordered to clean his underwear by mouth.
His refusal to submit to this command infuriated the committee chief so much
that he grabbed a chunk of wood and crushed the student’s fingers beneath it,
then trampled the student underfoot till he became unconscious. He then had
water brought to restore consciousness water which had been refused earlier for
cleanliness. The student’s head was then knocked against floor and wall and he
was dragged around the room by his feet until blood flowed out of his mouth
freely. Finally he could no longer resist.
In the face of such
pain there can be no hero.
The student A.O. of
the Faculty of Theology, one of the most “fanatical” mystics in the cells of
Pitesti, was forced to move his bowels into his mess-pan, then to receive his
meal without being permitted to wash it. What he had to suffer until his
resistance and abhorrence broke in him, is diflicult to describe. But in the end
he had to yield and to eat everything in the dish.
Prisoners were
obliged to stand on their feet without so much as moving a muscle. They were
forced to wipe the floor over and over for whole days at a time, carrying two,
or sometimes three other prisoners “piggyback” as they pushed the cleaning
rag.
Heavily tortured
were those students who, unable to endure any longer but also unwilling to
yield, tried to commit suicide. Such attempts, however, were made almost
impossible by preventive measures taken by the re-educators and the frequent
inspections by O.D.C.C. committees and by the administration. Besides, there was
practically no object with which to commit suicide. Still, some cases of its
having been tried are on record. Those who failed in the attempt were tortured
as were also those suspected of contemplating suicide.
The student R.M. at
the Polytechnical School of Bucharest had kept his spectacles in the cell as a
result of his own honest mistake and because of the committee’s lack of
attention. One day, as he was being beaten, they broke his glasses. R. was
forced to pick up the pieces, under blows, and to reconstitute both lenses.
Although he searched a long time, he could not find the last small piece.
Accusing him of having hid it in order later to commit suicide, the student,
Diaca, of the Faculty of Medicine of Iasi who was charged with his surveillance,
beat him in such a manner that R. urinated blood. Nobody was troubled by this
and no doctor was summoned to look after him.
The student C.S. of
the Faculty of Law of Cluj, endowed with an amazing capacity of resistance,
finally came to realize that he could not hold out much longer and decided to
commit suicide. But how? He could find nothing at hand. In desperation he ate a
pound of soap kept under the bed for writing declarations! As he later revealed
to me, even though the soap was made from petrol residue, he suffered not even
the slightest intestinal upset!
A student of the
Faculty of Theology of Timisoara, N.V., after failing to die from slashing his
wrists, thrust his head into the food barrel, hoping to die burnt from the hot
meal. But this, too, failed, and at enormous cost to him. He was beaten until
his lungs were dislodged, and when he shared the same cell with me five years
later, he was still suffering from that painful infirmity. All because he failed
to kill himself.
Many were those who
tried to cut their veins with a scrap of sheet iron found somewhere, or with
wood chips, or pieces of glass, or tried to crush their skulls against walls,
etc. There were also some who tried to sever their arteries with their own
teeth. That is why every effort was made to prevent such “sabotaging” of the
“campaign of unmasking.”
The student
Gheorghe Serban, from the little town of Murfatlar, was arrested in Bucharest in
1948, condemned with a large number of others and sent to Pitesti where he was
subjected to the usual unmaskings. One day, however, as he was taken out into
the hall, he succeeded in ending his torment by jumping from the prison’s
third floor down the stairwell. When those from whom he had escaped reached the
ground floor in panic, Serban had passed into the other world, uncompromised.
The measure taken by the administration to prevent such a thing happening again
was to stretch wire nets between floors. At the same time surveillance inside
the cells was intensified, and fresh inspections, this time made by prison
guards under the supervision of the prison’s director, Dumitrescu, emptied the
cells of everything that could possibly serve as a means of suicide.
Endeavors to call
the administration’s attention directly to their situation were made several
times by those enduring the tortures, but the administration remained deaf to
all complaints. Not only did it not respond as hoped, but on the contrary took
harsher measures against those that petitioned. They were put through what was
called a “supplementary unmasking.” Some examples of this follow.
The student A.R.,
who had performed a thousand flexions crouched over the toilet, following
several weeks of tortures, and though knowing what was in store for him, one
evening at closing time broke out from the second row where he was being
supported by re-educators, and stepped out in front of Director Dumitrescu, who
had just arrived to take the “counting.” A.R. reported everything going on
in the cells and requested Dumitrescu to intervene with his authority as
director and order the tortures ended and the torturers punished. He also said
that he personally did not intend to make any kind of unmasking, that he knew
the reasons for his imprisonment which he did not regret and consequently he
should be left in peace to serve his sentence out, to decide for himself what he
thought detrimental to society.
The director
listened attentively, simulating complete surprise. He answered that he did not
even suspect such things, such atrocities, were taking place. He could say this
with effrontery because although there were some among the “unmasked”
present who had been beaten by the director himself in Room Four, they could not
speak for they were no longer their former selves. It was too late to do
anything about it that evening but Dumitrescu promised to attend to this matter
next day which he did: he sent Turcanu into the cell to take revenge on A. R.
for his indiscretion.
Another student,
U.S., taking advantage one day of the door’s being left unlocked by a careless
guard, escaped from under the bludgeon and darted out into the hall intending to
get to the main office or even the director’s office. But to his surprise, he
collided just outside the door with the director himself! Dumitrescu had been
looking through the peephole to check on what was going on inside the cell. The
student requested him in strong terms to intervene in the cell and establish
order, and demanded that he be taken before the political officer who was the
real director of the prison. Taken aback, the director could not avoid saying
something, so, to get rid of the angry student faster, promised to ask the
officer to see him. The student had to get back in the cell, where he received
appropriate punishment. The next day, called out early, he was taken not to the
political officer but to Turcanu, who during the interrogation toyed with a
sharp razor in his hands.
“You told the
director that if he would not excuse you from the iinmaskings and take you to
see the political officer, you’d do anything in your power to commit suicide.
Do you have the courage for such an act? Look, I want to help you. Here is an
ordinary razor. Take it and commit suicide. But here in front of me, now.” And
he stretched out his left hand, offering the razor.
“A ray of hope
engulfed me,” the student told me later in another Romanian Communist prison.
“If I had gotten hold of that razor for even a second, I could have cut his
throat. I could have found that much strength if I succeeded in catching him off
guard, then I would have killed myself. But nothing I hoped for happened. The
moment I reached out to take the razor, Turcanu pulled back his left hand and
with his right struck me under the chin such a blow that I fell flattened to the
cement floor. He was powerful as a bull. Then he jumped on me with both feet.
How long this lasted I do not know, as I passed out during this part of the ‘interview.’
When they took me out of the bathroom for all this took place there three of my
ribs were broken. The scar formed afterwards will remain with me to my grave;
the broken ribs will permanently keep the imprint of Turcanu’s feet.”
And to convince me
of this he had me touch the broken ribs under the thin yellow skin.
Not only were these
things all reported to the director, but the chief guards of the prison, Ciobanu
and Mandruta, received innumerable verbal reports of such atrocities. Mandruta
always swore and cursed and slammed the door as he left saying this was none of
his business, while Ciobanu merely shrugged his shoulders and said nothing.
Later, in Gherla prison, I shared a cell with Ciobanu’s father-in-law, but in
telling him of these atrocities, he could not believe that his son-in-law had
ever been a witness to them as he had never breathed a word at home about such
things. During the two-year experiment at Pitesti, perhaps he had had to go
through a “school of threatenings” to get the job at all, in the interior of
the prison, and was afraid to tell of anything going on. But the guards, at any
rate, were only the facade to conceal the real authors of this villainy, the politruks
of the Communist Party.
* * * * *
Resistance in
prisons depended naturally on the factor of moral order. As long as he could
retain self-confidence, the student defied his re-educators, though passively. I
know several hundred of the students who passed through unmaskings at Pitesti,
having spent years living with them in various prisons. I studied them under all
aspects both before and after the unmaskings, and I hold the firm conviction
that at least fifty of them would have stepped calmly before a firing squad,
thus sealing their creed with the supreme sacrifice, before the
Securitate arrest and investigation. Who is not familiar with the capacity for
sacrifice of the Romanian youth in the war against Communism, willing to die,
even after the Communist occupation, in resisting it? The Legionaries Puiu
Constantin, Florescu, Spiru Obreja, Serban Secu, for example, who were executed
on order of the Military Tribunal of Bucharest in 1950-51, knowing they were to
be killed, refused to sign a petition of pardon presented by a special envoy
from the Ministry of the Interior.
Eighteen others
arrested in the Fagaras Mountains had the same fate in the summer of 1958.
During these eight years, all over the country, people were shot by the
hundreds, with or without being sentenced, and died bravely. I knew before my
own arrest many students who were members of resistance groups and fled to the
hills, where they were pursued but fought the Securitate forces till they fell;
few allowed themselves to be taken prisoner. But those who got to Pitesti,
collapsed morally. What accounts for this change in behavior? Perhaps those who
were still free to dispose of their own lives, preferred to die at the hands of
the enemy; while those who were captured, finding themselves no longer free even
to kill themselves, therefore collapsed.
But the intensity
of the drama and the terror that dominated this period will never be known.
“What we lived
through there,” said one student, whom I had known long before any arrests,
and who had passed through unmaskings as one of the most fanatical, “surpasses
what the human mind can imagine. Language is inadequate to completely convey
what everyone of us would have to say, even if we could say it.”
Hungry, tortured,
humiliated for weeks and months on end; sleepless, terrified, terrorized, struck
by him who but an hour earlier had been his friend and brother in chains; forced
in his turn, through the threatening of Satan, to become a torturer of others;
without the slightest hope of escape; isolated from the world by a curtain of
steel; brought to the edge of the grave but denied the privilege of dying of
such was comprised the calendar of a student subjected to this experiment of
de-personalization. In short, he was subjected to the “ethics” of the
Communist Party.
Under such
treatment, I believe no man could successfully resist. Let me give two examples
pointing up the difference in reaction of two students under two investigations,
one after arrest by the Securitate, the other later at Pitesti, during
unmaskings.
When being
investigated, the student had, as did any other detainee, several elements in
his favor: he knew he would be arrested, he knew the methods of the
investigators, and he knew the Communist to be a foreign element, a stooge of
the Bolsheviks, whom he must confront. In other words, this meant a
confrontation between two forces, the one Romanian, the other the foreign
element of occupation. Because the Securitate arrested large numbers of persons
at one time, and space was limited, they could not always give individualized
attention to each prisoner nor did this concern them; they knew that the Pitesti
Experiment would take care of the details. Their main concern was to get a
confession, true or false, as quickly as possible, and send him before the
military judge for sentencing.
The student
Alupoaei, a former detainee of the Antoneseu regime, was arrested in the summer
of 1948 and accused of subversive activities against Communism. He was
investigated at the Iasi Securitate by officers Fischer and Pompilian, but
despite all the torture to which he was subjected, they got no compromising
declaration out of him. Their report to the Ministry of the Interior after
several months of intensive investigation still was the same they could not
detect subversive activities by any youth organization in the Suceava region.
But at Pitesti, after the regime of unmasking, Alupoaei told everything he knew,
betrayed everything!
Another student, Gh.
Cucole from Constanta, was also arrested in the summer of 1948. He was
interrogated by a long-time Communist, Campeanu, who had fought in the
International Brigade in Spain and was now a colonel in the Ministry of the
Interior. (He fell into disgrace later and was treated as he had treated
others.) Cucole’s torturer was a Lieutenant Botea, a Bulgarian[1]
waiter considered one of the most brutal and cruel men in the entire Communist
police force. (Botea was later arrested himself.) Cucole was kept in chains for
months with only half a pound of bread and a cup of water for his daily food.
Depositions by colleagues or friends who had been active with him were placed
before him, but he denied them all. While he was incarcerated, his sufferings
day after day were noted by a fellow prisoner, Major X, who told me about him at
Aiud in 1951, speaking of him as of a hero. Cucole never did give the Securitate
the confession they wanted, so he was finally condemned to prison on the basis
of depositions from others. He was sent to Pitesti, and there he talked,
revealing not only what he had done but also what he planned to do, whom he
considered an enemy of the regime, and whom he suspected of subversive activity.
As a result of his declarations, more than 60 Macedonians were arrested in the
Constanta region and in Bucharest. D., a student from Iasi, who was in the same
cell, told me later that during Cucole’s unmasking he had to be wrapped three
days and nights in wet sheets to keep him alive after the day-long tortures by
Titus Leonida and Turcanu. I myself met him after the unmaskings, and I did not
recognize him. Not only was he not the man he had been but something in his very
mind was shaken.
I do not think
there was a single student who declared everything under the Securitate
investigation. Everyone kept some secret, greater or smaller; but at Pitesti
prison, no one could resist. The number of those arrested as a result of
testimony given or extorted at Pitesti during the unmaskings was at least 3000!
Was anything left
unrevealed at Pitesti? Very little, and that only because it was known only to
the individual under investigation. For if there existed the slightest suspicion
that someone else knew the secret, the one being tortured hastened to tell it
lest the other beat him to it and he be passed through unmaskings for the second
or third time. Since students were usually active in groups, it was difficult to
keep anything back when one knew that if the same system was being used in other
prisons, a dossier would be compiled from declarations made by fellow students
incarcerated in Aiud, or Gherla, or somewhere else. And no one coming to Pitesti
from other prisons was ever able to warn the students or tell them what was
happening in the other prisons, as new arrivals were isolated immediately;
first, so that they could not transmit news from the outside world to those
undergoing unmasking, and second, so that the new arrivals could not receive any
kind of warning of what was in store for them before their turn came. Those who
dared to conceal some detail, however trivial, were found out a month, or a year
later, and had to pass a second or even a third time under the bludgeons of the
torturers. And each time the unmasking was more Draconian because the individual
had continued being a “bandit.” Nothing that two or more knew could be kept
secret, for each would tell it, having no way of knowing whether the other had
already told it and had become in his turn an unmasker. An infernal cycle from
which there was no escape!
There is, for
example, the case of student T. from Bucharest’s Faculty of Medicine. After he
passed through unmaskings and had convinced the O.D.C.C. that he had told
everything he knew, somebody from another room revealed facts he had withheld.
He was put through
a second unmasking and tortured almost to disfigurement. He finally admitted the
facts he had concealed before, and added another detail. For this he was taken
through a third unmasking, but this time only as a viewer of the torturing of
others, being placed in “position.” As he had been seated alone on the edge
of the bunk bed, with no special attention paid to him, he took it upon himself
to request the “watch” to call Turcanu in, for he had something to tell him.
Turcanu came in but refused to listen. Then desperately T. implored him:
“This is the time
to listen to me. I can no longer stand it; I must speak to you right now. If you
lose this opportunity, you will not get anything out of me even if you skin me
alive with a razor.”
Turcanu naturally
took advantage of this psychological moment and listened. T. told him
everything, absolutely all that up to then he had managed to hide, and which was
infinitely more revealing than what he had told in the two earlier unmaskings.
Several years later he said, “I cannot understand what happened in my soul
that I should have volunteered to talk that time, especially when I was sure the
O.D.C.C. had come to the conclusion that I had already revealed everything.”
A second case was
that of Teodoru, a medical student at Cluj. He was passed through unmasking,
tortured, and considered “irrecoverable” even though he willingly did and
said all that was expected of him. But when the unmaskings were over, and the
terror of “re-education” had lost much of its virulence, Teodoru switched to
the other extreme, becoming one of the most dangerous denouncers, with not the
slightest excuse for this change of attitude, this strange new viciousness.
And even stranger
things happened, which might explain the numerous Moscow trials that resulted in
the liquidation of all those considered Stalin’s personal enemies. Crimes were
invented, not by investigators but by those being tortured by the investigators.
A prisoner, hoping to be spared further torture by convincing his unmasker that
he had revealed everything, the whole truth, would resort to lying, and invent
things that could never have taken place, not even in his imagination.
The Polytechnical
student O.O., arrested for failing to denounce anyone during the first phase of
his unmasking, invented and made up from bits and pieces an entire subversive
organization into which he grouped, besides his own classmates, almost all the
instructors, the tutors, lecturers, even a few professors, making himself,
naturally, the leader. Many, fearing further torture at first, but later out of
a new-found desire to “restructure and re-educate themselves in the new spirit”
(in other words, sheer madness), tried to prove their “sincerity” by giving
the names of their parents or relatives as members of an organization of their
own.
All verbal
declarations were recorded on soap tablets and forwarded directly to the O.D.C.C.
Special Investigations Office, where they were transcribed and all declarations
from the beginning were screened, compared, and fine-combed to find any minute
discrepancies in reports from two or more individuals relative to the same fact.
If the screening turned up discrepancies of any importance to the Securitate,
each prisoner involved was called in to the office, made to put down his
declaration on paper and sign it, after which it was sent to the Ministry of the
Interior through the political officer.
As you can see, the
Ministry had no official contact or concern with what went on at Pitesti; in
fact, the information thus extorted was only incidental to the real purpose. For
no matter how useful the students’ revelations might become, there must be no
let-up in the torment. The state of torture must continue for the simple reason
that continuous physical (and resulting moral) terror is indispensable to the
flawless functioning of conditioned reflexes reflexes that will go on
functioning automatically long after the subject of the experiment has passed
through the fire and become himself a torturer of others.
CHAPTER X
THE STAGES
“I, the
undersigned bandit (Name and biographical data inserted here) unmask!”
Thus began the “declaration”
that was to take the student who consented to make it (and who could refuse?)
down the road of degradation to an enforced, inhuman transformation of character
inconceivable to a normal human being. Until this declaration was made, the
student had somehow kept some part of his personality intact his soul proper was
not irremediably affected, or so the unmaskers thought. He would not yet readily
betray those whom he, though under torture, had managed to protect during the
Securitate’s investigations.
The real tragedy,
however, began immediately following the “outer” unmasking, and the “prison
activity.” It was necessary in the project to repress any tendency to return
to an anti-Marxist equilibrium, which was based on the following principles of
life: faith in God, tradition and family; trust in the political personalities
who led the anti-Communist resistance materially and morally; friendship; love
in its usual worldly sense and love of mankind in general; and, finally, one’s
own ego, with its own intimate life and its anxieties. Such, in fact, were the
pillars sustaining the Romanian people, which was born Christian, you might say.
There is no recorded historical date of a transition from an earlier faith to
Christianity, as in the case of most European peoples. When the fusion of
conquering Romans and vanquished Dacians was consummated, the resulting nation
was both Christian and Romanian at the same time. From the moment of entering
history to the present day, with very few periods of peace in a long chain of
painful tribulations, the Romanian people defended equally their own
independence as a nation and their Christian faith a Latin island lost in a
Slavic sea.
Attacked throughout
the centuries by all nations which it has had the misfortune to have as
neighbors, Romania alone has never nourished any desire for conquest. Her
struggles have been for defense, for inner living, for getting closer to God.
For the Romanian, altar and plowed land blend together. When no ray of hope, of
help, came from anywhere, the Romanian has knelt in front of the despoiled altar
to invoke God’s help. Innumerable monasteries, retreats, and crosses set up
throughout the countryside, at almost every crossroad, are proofs of the place
God occupies in the life of the Romanian people. This faith constituted, and
constitutes even today, one of the strongest supports of the resistance to
Communism. Romanians have today gathered in the shadows of the altar, even
though they know it to be the greatest of risks, whose consequences cannot be
guessed at by one who has not actually lived today’s drama of our people.
If the Communists
have not bothered the Church officially, it is because they feared the
consequences. Uprisings in the name of one’s faith, especially if supported by
a nation in the throes of despair, are much more dangerous than those of a
strictly social-economic nature. So out in the country, the Church was perforce
allowed to function within certain limits, but such toleration inside the prison
walls was out of the question. The churches of the old Aiud prison, for
instance, were transformed into coal-bins (the Eastern Orthodox), oats-bins for
horses (the Catholic) and a wood-shed (Protestant). The priests not only had no
place to officiate, but they were even forbidden to hold services in the cells.
In Pitesti prison
the terror exceeded all limits, as this was the place where the prime guinea
pigs, the students, were brought. The cruelest torments fell upon the heads of
the “mystic” groups made up of the more intensely religious students, who
had been first imprisoned by Antonescu following the so-called “rebellion”
of Jan. 21-24, 1941. Their numbers were later augmented with numerous freshly
arrested students, particularly from the Faculties of Theology and Philosophy in
Bucharest, Cluj and Timisoara Universities. This persecution of Christian
students, in intensity, length of time and more particularly in method, perhaps
surpassed that of the early Christian martyrs who died in the arenas on crosses
or at the stake, in pits with wild beasts, or as human torches, giving up the
ghost in a matter of minutes. In Pitesti, the martyrdom lasted for months, hour
after hour.
What heathen
emperors had demanded of the martyrs renunciation of faith, denial of God and of
Jesus was forcibly induced in prisoners. A simple denial, a formal promise not
to believe or pray or fight for this “false” faith, was not enough. It had
to be accompanied by a whole set of proofs, including first of all the
ridiculing of the Savior’s name by use of the most insulting epithets. Some
accordingly alleged that Christ spent the first thirty years of His life in
India learning to be a fakir; others said He was a quack, a cheat and speculator
in the faith and superstition of the people, who were kept uneducated by the
priests. Some denied His historical existence. Others presented Him is a utopian
socialist revolutionary, initially animated by good intentions but in the end
coveting the throne of Judea; they said His condemnation resulted from a power
struggle between Him and leaders of the Hebrew people, who were subservient to
and thus accomplices of the Romans! His morals were placed under the microscope,
and Gospel references to Mary Magdalene interpreted to mean the relationship was
one of worldly love. The Virgin Mary, His Mother, was labeled a woman of loose
morals who deserved not sanctification but a prison sentence for adultery. And
through it all, the Leninist slogan, “Christian superstition, the opiate of
the people” was the constant theme.
In order to
extinguish the last trace of respect for holy things, ritual parodies of all
Christian ceremonies were arranged, with students of theology compelled to
modify prayer texts, substituting vulgar oaths for religious phrases. Holy Week
and Easter were made occasions of particular vilification by the O.D.C.C.
The “rehabilitated”
were often obliged, if they did not proceed on their own initiative, to stage
spiritual orgies ridiculing Jesus. I shall relate only one scene of many. It
took place in the section occupied by those condemned to hard labor, at Easter
1950.
“Christ’s robe,”
as the students called it, was improvised from a few white shirts and bed
sheets. Out of the soap used for inscribing declarations a masculine genital
organ was made and the theology student chosen to play the part of Jesus was
forced to hang it around his neck. He was compelled to walk about the room,
receiving severe blows from broomsticks, to symbolize the road to Golgotha. He
was finally stopped by the window. There the rest of the students had to file
past him, making the sign of the cross and kissing the piece of soap,
exclaiming, “I pray to your omnipotence, only true master of those who
believe,” etc.
There was only one,
a youth named B., who refused to stoop to this sacrilege. He was only a
high-school student, and although tortured for hours in front of the others in
order to force him to do it, he stood firm. Finally it was the re-educators who
gave up, but no one could find out what made them stop. This conduct was
particularly strange, it being the first time the tormentors had stopped short
of achieving complete obedience to their commands. Could it be that perhaps the
tender age of the youth had aroused in their dry, and at the same time
terrorized, souls, a trace of pity? If so, the tender age did not deter them
from bludgeoning B. into unconsciousness several times.
The individual who
related this event to me was at the time sharing B’s cell, and he was himself
a participating victim. I asked him how he felt when he saw that a man younger
than himself and not having his ideological background could have the strength
to refuse till the end.
“At first, pity,”
he said, “because of the way he was tortured; then a kind of anger seeing that
he did not give in; and finally shame and contempt toward myself. At the moment
I became aware of the implications of harboring these thoughts, I experienced a
real shock of terror. If the person who had unmasked me, still in our cell,
could have learned my thoughts at that moment, he would have ripped me to
pieces.”
“How could he
find out,” I asked, “if this was only a thought?”
“All he had to do
was to place me in the unmasking position and ask me to reveal my thoughts at
the time B. was refusing. In the end, I am sure I would have told ...”
Such travesties of
this sort, some even more vile, were enacted in all cells Sunday after Sunday.
Each religious holiday was an occasion for some novel profanation.
Those who were
undergoing unmaskings were watched closely especially in the evening, because
they were then permitted to lie down in bed and might seek solace in their
faith. A far-away look, prolonged staring at the ceiling, a look of serenity any
of these was considered sufficient indication of prayer, and he who was caught
in such an attitude was brought back to reality by a powerful bludgeon on his
ankle bones. Next morning the victim so surprised received from the committee
his due.
A simple trembling
of the lips was considered the equivalent to praying aloud. The morning beating
was mandatorily followed by a declaration made in front of all, in which the
inmate in question had to admit he erred, that the “bandit” within him was
not yet vanquished, that he had committed an unspeakable crime, and that he
promised never even to think of praying again; and furthermore that if he should
catch someone else seeming to commit the same crime of praying in bed, he would
report him mercilessly and thus help rid himself of “banditism” sooner.
All students were
forced to deny and revile Christianity, whether they believed in God or not.
The Church had to
be denounced as an organization under whose mask of faith swindles were
perpetrated, plots were hatched, extra-marital rendezvous were arranged with the
priest’s cooperation, young girls were corrupted, women came to show off and
men to seek bodies. Or the Church was described as the place where the fight
against the Communist Party was organized, where, in the shadow of the holy
icons, arrangements were made for the assassination of the leaders of the
working people, etc. As there were no priests among the students imprisoned at
Pitesti, the O.D.C.C.’s anger was directed against the sons of priests.
Through their mouths must the Church be denigrated; they themselves must
delineate their fathers in the blackest possible terms, so that the others would
have this information from “eyewitnesses.”
Jokes and anecdotes
about the clergy, that were making the rounds of Romanian villages, were now
naturally given the stamp of authenticity. The priest had to be described as a
drunkard, skirt-chaser, card player, and thief, contemptuous of the misery of
the people (and especially the peasants), an inveterate liar who had sold out to
the class of capitalist exploiters, had been an agent of the Nazis or of the
former Securitate, and was in fact responsible for the complete breakdown of
village morality.
For all these
epithets, proofs had to be found; whoever supplied the “proofs” had to sound
convincing so that his revelations would lead to other unmaskings. Both those
who made the required statements and those who directed the unmaskings knew that
the testimony was absurd, but the more monstrous these inventions were, the more
pleased were the unmaskers. Such lies made it impossible for those who told them
to look parents or friends in the eye ever again, or step over the threshold of
a church, if they ever regained their freedom. The memory of unmaskings would be
a lingering torture after their liberation.
The second
principal element in the destruction of faith was denigration of the monastic
life. Students were forced to say that they heard things “with their own ears,”
and saw things “with their own eyes.” Any monk being discussed had to have
on his record at least several adulterous affairs in the villages near his
monastery; the nuns several abortions! Among the stories told by a student from
Moldavia, I shall mention the following monstrous lies. He said that at the
request of a high dignitary (whose name escaped him!) a small lake in the
neighborhood of a convent was drained. On the bottom were found several hundred
skeletons of newborn infants, who had, of course, been drowned so as not to
compromise the convent. All this was done with the connivance of the Mother
Superior and the leading heads of the Church. If the whole affair was hushed up,
it was because the hierarchy desired it! Nothing was done to stop this lustful
life, in fact it was encouraged, and the only one to suffer was the individual
who demanded an investigation!
As to the monks, it
was positively affirmed that they were all spies for secret American agencies,
they would hide parachutists who came to commit acts of political and military
sabotage; they used their monasteries as storage places for weapons to be used
the moment war should break out; problems of faith concerned them not at all;
persons wanted by the Securitate for anti-Communist activity were given food and
shelter by the monks; all in all, the monks should be considered highway robbers
rather than servants of the people.
In order to make
students bear witness to such things, a whole gamut of tortures was necessary.
But in this way, the first stage of the inner unmasking, that of breaking away
from God, was accomplished. Thus, the students were sufficiently prepared to go
on to the second stage, the breakaway from tradition.
The education of
students, structured on everything they had already learned in the home, was
based on the cultivation of a healthy rural tradition on the one hand, and a
historical one on the other. The roots of the past were the foundation on which
the Romanian people leaned in time of vicissitude and trial. Remembering the
past of their nation, Romanians confront the trials of today with faith and hope
for future freedom. Especially in rural environments one finds even today
traditional conservatism so deeply rooted that it is the peasants or the
peasants’ sons who give Moscovites the worst headaches.
Coming from such a
background, the students in colleges kept unaltered their rural culture and
tradition. Their advanced education merely added the scientific and historical
knowledge needed to bolster their convictions.
Communist
propaganda said that the majority of school children come from the middle and
upper classes and that the schools, like other institutions, were unequivocally
in the service of the ruling class. Previous to 1944, say the Communists, the
school was a reactionary institution whose purpose was not to prepare and
educate “the sons of the people,” but to prepare the recruits for the ruling
class to assure continuity of the regime in power. If they thought it not
feasible or desirable to denigrate some well-known representative of the
intellectual world, they described him as a rare exception to the general rule.
The following
cliches about the academic system were repeated ad infinitum: “It was
in the service of imperialism;” “It sowed discord among ethnic minorities;
falsified history;” “It altered the student’s soul by a chauvinistic
education which neglected every scientific criterion;” “It ideologically
nourished hatred of the Russian people in the past, now hatred of Communism;”
“It supported the Fascist war of 1941-44;” “It falsified the fact that the
Czar helped in gaining our independence in 1877, presenting the opposite of the
truth.” (With regard to this last, no Romanian student was unfamiliar with the
historical fact that it was the intervention of Bismarck that induced the
Russians to withdraw from our Principalities[1] in 1880,
and that, instead of being thankful for our help in the war against the Turks,
they took away from us again the three counties in Bessarabia![2]
The students also knew all too well that in 1924 Communist agents attempted an
insurrection in the Romanian province of Bessarabia the same Bessarabia that was
to be kidnapped for the third time in 1940, then again in 1944![3]
The school was also
reproached for infecting children with Christian mysticism, causing religious
fanaticism and intolerance; for cultivating superstition in order to keep the
people in the dark and thus afford reactionaries the opportunity to oppress the
people more easily; and for “deforming history” to create “nationalism.”
Beginning with the elementary school teachers, and going all the way up to
university professors, everything that contributed to the education of youth was
“corrupt, sold out, immoral, and opportunistic.” The main preoccupation of
educators was not quality of education but their own careers, in particular
their political careers, and the school was used as a jumping board from which
to spring to more interesting and remunerative positions.
Anecdotes were
presented as fact, jokes were used as irrefutable argument. If, for instance, a
story was told of a teacher “accepting a bribe” from a pupil for promoting
him, it was implied that all teachers did the same thing. Those most blamed for
“indoctrinating” students were, of course, the university professors.
Naturally, explained the Communists, it was only because of such influential
educators that there could possibly be such a large number of students who
opposed the Communist Party and showed themselves enemies of the people and of
scientific-realist-socialist progress!
The attack on
learning opened the way for attacks on the creative elements in art and
literature. If the writers did not reflect “social reality” in their works,
it was becausa their education had detached them from the real problems that had
to be dealt with in literature. If poetry was symbolic, or folkish, or
philosophical, the school was responsible for this also. If a great part of
novelists’ creations had a nationalistic character, that proved the guilt of
their teachers. Not even Eminescu,[4] whose memory the
Communists did not dare to denigrate publicly, was exempt from such criticism.
History also came
under attack, especially that covering the monarchial period. The O.D.C.C. had
high on its list for destruction all sentiment of loyalty to the monarchy. Of
course, really damaging material was not lacking the scandals of Carol II, his
ten years of embezzlement of public funds, the murder of Codreanu and other
officers of the Legion in prison, or the massacre en masse of Codreanu’s
followers throughout the country on one night in 1939.[5]
The Communists did not think it important to mention that before Carol Romania
had two highly respected and beloved kings; Carol’s character and crimes were
attributed to both. To further undermine loyalist sentiment, specious arguments
were cited from Communist history to the glorification of Stalin.
Up to this point,
the trials which the student had to undergo following his outer unmasking
(physical torture in particular), were somehow relatively impersonal, external
forces, even when they touched on faith. But now came the most painful phase of
all, and the decisive blow.
The student had to
renounce his own family, reviling them in such foul and hideous terms that it
would be next to impossible ever to return to natural feelings toward them
again.
Although the most
beautiful pages ever written have been in praise of a mother, at Pitesti the
most offensive of words were uttered to degrade her name. The prime character
which a student had to attribute to his mother during his unmasking was that of
a prostitute; and since only a moral prostitute could give birth to a moral
monster, all students before their unmaskings were, naturally, moral monsters. I
shall give here, almost in his very words, the forced statement of a student,
which he, with agony of the spirit, repeated for me more than two years after
the frightful scene in a main-floor cell of the Pitesti prison, where the “unmasking
of his family” took place.
“I am the son of
a fairly rich family in ____ ____. Of course the wealth amassed by my father is
the fruit of embezzlement while he worked as a purchasing agent for the
government. Having so much money at our disposal, we lived quite independent of
one another, more so than you would imagine. My father, for instance, met a
young woman who was married to a fellow government worker; he lived with her
almost openly, sleeping at her place almost every night. Although he left the
greater part of his earnings there, my mother did not object. On the contrary,
she took advantage of the situation to find a friend for herself no other than
my father’s close associate. This was no secret to any of us, for before they
retired alone, ofttimes they kissed in front of us and my father left them in
peace, for he needed the freedom this afforded him to spend with his girl
friend. My mother’s friend had a daughter of about my age whom I knew better
after my mother entered into intimate relations with him; she also came to see
us often. Encouraged by both my mother and her father, I courted the girl and
she did not repulse me; on the contrary, she seemed to expect my advances. The
same relationship developed between us as existed between my mother and her
father, who both encouraged us in our sexual relations; they said it was only in
this way that I could overcome my social inhibitions. Once engaged in this sort
of life, I introduced a student friend of mine to my sister, and I started
inviting him over more often. After a while, there was no need for my
invitations, for my sister brought him over herself, developing a relationship
with him similar to that of the others in our circle. As a matter of fact,
influenced by what she saw at home, she asked me to find her a friend of mine
who was more ‘virile.’ Oftentimes in our home orgies took place in which we
all participated, exchanging roles and intermixing promiscuously in the dark.”
I cannot bring myself to put down on paper the rest of the “testimony” he
had to give at the orders of Turcanu.
When I asked him to
try to explain to me why he said these things, he answered unhesitatingly, but
with pain born of grief, that the only motivation was hope that it would
mitigate his physical and moral suffering “in that hell.”
The father was
likewise subjected to ridicule and opprobrium. The son’s degree of guilt was
measured by the status, attitude, and the family from which the father came.
Peasant parents were no exception; they had to be portrayed in most despicable
terms so the son would be shown to have inherited the character and personality
of the one responsible for his physical and moral existence.
The father’s
shortcomings were determined by his occupation. If he was a simple peasant, then
he must have been the servant of the “boyar,” his informer, the denouncer of
the other peasants who opposed exploitation. If he was a merchant, then he must
have cheated on weight, selling cheap merchandise at high prices, failing to pay
the clerks and laborers, beating them when they demanded their rights, or
threatening to denounce them for Communist activity. If a teacher, he “falsified
history,” persecuted workingmen’s sons, promoted students for bribes, made
use of students as laborers in raising his cattle or in gardening, or making
them work hard in difficult chores at his home so they could not study properly
and were thus unable to compete with the sons of the wealthy. If he was a
magistrate, he had sold justice for money and condemned workers to heavy
sentences on false charges in order to suppress any social aspirations they
might have had. When he presided at political trials, he was in league with the
police and assisted in condemning unjustly at least several Communists. (The
number of active Communists in all Romania had been only 822, according to the
Party Secretary himself, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej!) Students whose parents were
army officers were given special attention. The slanders contained in Zaharia
Stancu’s novel Barefoot or Eusebiu Camilar’s The Mist, were
almost pathologically exaggerated in order to demonstrate the guilt of “the
military in oppressing the working class and provoking war against the Soviet
Union.”
Among students
undergoing unmasking, there were a few, a little older than the others, who came
from the ranks of the military. Having been purged from the army when the
Russians occupied Romania and having no other means of livelihood, the more
courageous went to college to prepare themselves for another profession. In
their unmaskings they were forced to relate fabricated events so dreadful that
they could scarcely have been envisioned by the imagination of a sick man. The
artillery captain Coriolan Coifan, now an engineering student fallen under the
bludgeon of the re-educators, told of orgies that took place on the Eastern
Front, unimaginable pillaging, numberless assassinations, fantastic rapes,
wanton arson of workers’ homes merely for the sadistic pleasure of seeing
fires, and executions of women and children who were guiltless except of having
been convinced Communists, “Stalin’s children.”
Blaming parents for
their children’s faults, they tried to establish a “family culpability”
complex to convince the student that he was but a victim of his elders, and thus
hasten his breakdown. Here is an example to show how far they went:
When the political
prisoners were sent to the Canal for work, their free relatives were permitted
to visit them and bring packages of food and clothing, for that supplied by the
administration was inadequate. A former military man named Dorneanu, who as a
youth had joined the cadres of the Legionary Movement where he received an
education that was staunchly Christian, patriotic and anti-Communist, received
his mother on her first visit to the Canal with the following greeting: “Get
out of here, you whore; it is because of the upbringing I received at home that
I am now at the Canal. I do not want to see you again. I have no mother!”
Another student who
had passed through Pitesti, Enachescu, derived a special pleasure, while at the
Canal, whither he was sent following the unmaskings, in torturing his uncle,
Pitigoi, a former National Peasant Party congressman, now himself also a
slave-laborer. This the nephew did simply to demonstrate to the camp’s
administration that he definitively had broken with his family and the
reactionary bourgeois way of thinking. The misfortune of the poor ex-congressman
was thus all the worse for having been put in the brigade whose boss happened to
be his re-educated nephew!
The degree of guilt
ascribed to a parent was also determined by the “banditism” of which his
imprisoned son was accused. The greater the contempt in which a student was held
by the re-educators, the more he had to insult his parents, accusing them of
heinous sins. The accusations had to be justified with “irrefutable” proofs,
which oftentimes were so absurd as to have caused laughter anywhere but at
Pitesti. Here is “the story about my father” as told by a high-school
student who at the time of the unmaskings was no more than fifteen years old. It
was told me by the boy himself in the prison at Gherla in July 1953.
“My father,” he
had said, “had a flour mill in X village in Muntenia; several peasants from
neighboring villages worked at the mill, but none remained very long because my
father replaced them frequently when they protested his failure to pay the wages
agreed upon. In order to avoid being sued, he never signed contracts with them.
He fed them from our leftovers, and mush from cornmeal like that used to feed
hogs, which he raised nearby. They had to sleep in a stable, without any
covering and on a thin layer of straw; worked 16-hour shifts with no rest other
than the noon meal eaten in the mill at their working places. The work was very
hard, consisting of unloading sacks, carrying them up to the hopper, and then
loading the flour into freight cars or wagons. If father thought they were not
working hard enough, he reduced the small wages they received; and if they
protested, he beat them. When a worker threatened to sue him, he beat him
unmercifully and denounced him to the gendarmes, accusing him of spreading
Communist propaganda. The worker would be arrested and taken away. My father
systematically cheated the peasants who brought in their grain to be milled. In
order to get away with this, he made certain of the complicity of an older
mill-hand by giving him his share of the ‘profits.’ Scales were so rigged
that when weighing in the grain, they showed less, and when weighing flour out,
they showed more, than the actual amount in the sacks. When an unusual amount of
flour was stolen, sand was substituted to make up for the lost weight. Peasants
knew they were being cheated, but could not oppose him, for he was on excellent
terms with the mayor and other authorities, who refused to permit operation of
any but my father’s mill in the village. Part of what my father stole went to
the mayor and part to the gendarme chief; so if anyone complained, the matter
went no further than the gendarmerie of the village. Because I was his only son
and the heir to the mill, father began introducing me to the secrets of his
occupation. He showed me how to rig the scale so it would read falsely, how to
add sand to the flour, how to cheat in the process of drying grain to account
for the moisture loss.”
After the boy
related to me the story of his unmasking, I asked him how he could have
fabricated such a story, for he said his father was guilty of none of the
accusations he had invented.
“From the moment
I realized I could no longer resist,” he answered, “and that I too would
have to tell about my father in the ‘unmasking of the family’s weaknesses,’
as the committee head in our room was proud to say, it was quite simple. You
see, during my childhood I often went to the mill. In the evenings an old
miller, whom I liked, told me stories, among them that of Prince Charming and
the Giant. I learned from these stories how the Giant always tortured those he
caught and put them to work in his mills; how he fed them and how he beat them.
Thus it was quite easy for me to substitute my father for the bad giant, and
tell the story as if it happened at our mill.
“As for the ‘political’
slant, namely, that about denouncing his workers as Communists, or his
arrangement with the gendarmes, I knew this before my arrest from the propaganda
spread in villages by the agitators against the ‘well-to-do,’ the opponents
of collectivization. The interesting part of it all is that in the same room
with me were others who knew my father. None of them, not one, questioned my
story. On the contrary, they affirmed that they knew these details, for their
parents were among those cheated by my father.
“Every one of us
knew we were all lying. But if by lying we could escape torture, then lie we
would! If someone dared say I was lying, he would not have had the freedom to
denigrate his own parents, for either I or someone else would have unmasked his
lie. Even when one fellow who knew my family became head of the committee and I
related at his request more lies, he dared not interrupt me. Because when he
made his unmasking, I was present and I heard everything he told about his
parents lies likewise. Thus we stuck together in lies and destroyed our souls
only because we wanted to save our bodies.”
Each “confession”
was “evaluated” by the re-education committee, whose members were now
inflicting on others what they themselves had suffered a few months before, and
were furthermore stimulated by a maddening fear lest they be condemned to pass
through another unmasking, for any suspicion that they had been lenient in
accepting a “confession” made too easily or without the maximum debasement
of the person making it would be considered a grave relapse from their own state
of “purification” and punished accordingly. When the committee was at last
satisfied that the victim had done all that he could to defile his parents and
himself with the vilest calumnies, to the truth of which he in his wretchedness
would frantically swear, they judged him ready for the next lesson.
The victim was now
stimulated to revile and defame with repeated and invented lies the teachers and
writers under whose influence he had matured, and especially the political
thinkers and leaders whom he had revered and followed.
Particular care was
taken to befoul the reputation and character of three men of national
prominence, two of whom were still alive, incarcerated in Communist prisons in
which they would soon die, while the third, whose name the Communists most
feared and liated, had at that time been dead for more than a decade. The three
were: George Bratianu, who had been the head of the Liberal Dissident Party and
was highly esteemed for patriotism and foresight;[6] Iuliu
Maniu, the leader of the National Peasant Party, on whom, in the time between
the Russian occupation and his imprisonment, had been centered the hopes of all
Romanians for eventual liberation from the Communists;[7]
and Corneliu Z. Codreanu, the educator of an entire generation of young men, to
whom, after he was murdered in 1938, his spirit was ever present: he still lives
in the heart and soul of all whom he inspired by his teaching and example.[8]
Each student, as
part of his unmasking, had to give “lectures” in the most opprobrious and
filthy terms about the men whom he had most venerated, accusing them of every
conceivable vice and crime. Since the students were young and had only imperfect
recollections of Romanian political history before their own experience began,
the “lectures” were often ludicrous, containing accusations that were
chronologically impossible or politically preposterous, based on a confusion of
one man with another or of one event with another that happened years before or
later.
Since Codreanu, the
founder of the Legion, had had a moral and spiritual influence that transcended
his political leadership and endured, undiminished, after his death, and since
the elite among the students had dedicated themselves to the principles and
ideals of the Legion, all the old slanders that had been contrived by the
leftist and crypto-Communist press in his lifetime were endlessly repeated and,
if possible, improved upon, and his living followers who had taken refuge in the
West were similarly traduced and “presented in their true light.”[9]
In this unmasking,
of course, everyone lied with a straight face and without the slightest trace of
embarrassment. The lying not only served the purpose of Communist propaganda by
heaping filth on the men who represented everything that was great and true in
the culture arid history of the nation, leaving in the mind a void that would be
filled by Soviet “internationalism,” but, more important for the purposes of
the experiment, it made the victim habitually and almost automatically
subordinate truth to the most monstrous and absurd falsehood. The victim, now
accustomed to sinking ever deeper into the quagmire by a kind of conditioned
reflex, and conscious that he is destroying himself, despises and hates himself
for his submission to what he cannot resist. He has thus been made ready for the
final disintegration of himself: his “autobiography.”
1)
|
-The autonomous principalities of Walachia and Moldavia were united in the
person of their ruler when Alexander Cuza became Prince of both in 1859,
but, at the insistence of the European powers, separate governments were
maintained in the two principalities for some years thereafter. Romania
became a kingdom in 1881.
|
2)
|
-When Russia declared war on Turkey in 1877, Romania, although she had
painful memories of the Russian occupation in 1853, which had been
terminated only by Austrian protests and pressure, allied herself with
Russia, permitted Russian troops to pass through her borders and base
themselves on her territory, and sent into the field her army, under the
command of Prince Charles. The Romanian troops compensated for the
overconfidence and military ineptitude of the Russian forces, and thus
made possible the Russian victory in 1878. Romania recovered some
territory from Turkey, but Russia demanded from her ally the retrocession
of Bessarabia, which had been a part of Moldavia since 1856 and had a
population that was almost entirely Romanian. The Great Powers, who were
most interested in forcing Romania to repeal provisions in her
Constitution that restricted the power of resident Jews to control the
country by financial manipulation, moral corruption, and political
infiltration, abandoned Romania, which had to yield reluctantly to Russian
demands and cede part of her territory to the erstwhile ally whom she had
saved, if not from ultimate defeat, certainly from a prolonged and
difficult war. Even then, Russia delayed withdrawal of the troops that she
had brought into the territory of her ally during the war, and her claims
were not finally settled until 1884. The conduct of Russia at this time
was such that the Prime Minister of Great Britain, although himself a Jew
residing in England, felt constrained to remark that “in politics
ingratitude is often the reward of the greatest services.”
|
3)
|
-Bessarabia was part of Moldavia since 1367. In the Sixteenth Century,
Moldavia was subjugated by the Turks, who, in 1812, ceded Bessarabia to
Russia. Southern Bessarabia was returned to Moldavia under the Treaty of
Paris in 1856 and so became part of Romania, which, as has been described
in the preceding note, was forced to cede the territory to Russia in 1878.
After the Jews destroyed the Russian Empire in 1917-18, Bessarabia first
declared itself independent as the Moldavian Republic and then reunited
itself to Romania in 1920. The Jews resident in Bessarabia and trained
Bolsheviks brought in from the Soviet attempted a revolt in 1924, but
without success. In 1940, King Carol, ignoring the protests of the
Legionary Movement, of many other patriots, and of his own army, supinely
yielded to a Soviet demand and surrendered Bessarabia. The territory was
regained by Romania in 1941 and remained a part of the nation until it was
occupied by Soviet troops in 1944; it was formally ceded to the Soviet in
1947.
|
4)
|
-Mihail (Michael) Eminescu, who was born in 1850 and died in 1889, has
been compared to Byron, Heine, and Leopardi, and is generally regarded as
the greatest of all Romanian poets. In his biography of Eminescu,
Professor Miron Cristo-Loveanu says of him, “He unites and embodies the
whole intellectual genius of his country.” An English translation of
some of his poems was published at London in 1930. The almost universal
veneration accorded Eminescu by the Romanian people made it impolitic for
the Bolsheviks to denigrate his memory openly.
|
5)
|
-See Cronologie Legionara, Munich, 1953, p. 182, which records for
the night of Sept. 21-22, 1939, the murder of 252 Legionaries throughout
the country, a few from each county plus others from three detention camps
and a military hospital. (Tr.)
|
6)
|
-He was especially known and respected for his strenuous efforts to
prevent King Carol’s capitulation to Soviet threats in 1940. He is not
to be confused with his relative, Dino (Dinu) Bratianu, head of the
Liberal Party, who promoted the treason that ended in unconditional
surrender to the Soviet in 1944; he, too, died in a Communist prison. On
the political history of Romania and the character of the men who were
prominent in it, for good or evil, see Prince Sturdza’s The Suicide
of Europe (cf. p. xxxv above).
|
7)
|
-During the first years of the Soviet occupation, the young king was kept
on the throne as a useful figurehead and there was a pretense that the
occupation was temporary. Maniu was permitted to maintain an attitude of
independence, and he was widely believed in Romania to have influence with
the government of the United States, which, they fondly imagined, favored
“democracy” and “self-determination of peoples,” as stated in the
propaganda disseminated from Washington. Maniu himself may have
entertained such illusions; he was elected to the Romanian Senate,
arrested, given a theatrical imitation of a trial, and sentenced to
imprisonment for twenty-five years. On Maniu’s character and career, see
the work by Prince Sturdza cited above.
|
8)
|
-On Codreanu, see above, p. xxxi, and the work by
Prince Sturdza, in which his career and the activity of the Legion in the
climacteric years of Romania’s history are recounted in detail. The
original text of Prince Sturdza’s book contains some fine appreciations
of Codreanu that are omitted in the heavily censored translation, but
enough remains to illustrate the greatness of the man. (Tr.)
|
9)
|
-One must remember that the young Legionaries who vilified Codreanu in
their “unmasking” venerated him as the father of their highest ideals,
so that their “lectures” were for them much more than lying defamation
of a great man and made them guilty of an ultimate blasphemy. (Tr.)
|
CHAPTER XI
THE DESTRUCTION OF
PERSONALITY
“THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY”
The tactic adopted
by the technicians who managed the unmaskings from the outside was to liquidate
the opposition from periphery to center; in other words, to begin with the
victim’s beliefs that were external to his ego and to proceed by calculated
stages to the destruction of the inner man. When the student had “proved by
deeds” that he had repudiated everything that had theretofore constituted his
world and thought, he was made to repudiate himself by defaming himself. He had
to compose an “autobiography” that proved that he had been brought to his
present predicament by a “lack of inner character,” and moral perversity and
mental sickness that had made him unreceptive to Communism.
He had to begin his
autobiography from the moment of his earliest recollections. The predominant
theme had to be a negative one, and expressed in superlatives. Vices and
deficiencies had to appear in his early years so that his faulty upbringing
would form part of a consistent pattern. Contact with the outside world began in
his elementary school, where every student must have been taught to steal, and
to despise those poorer than himself, so that he would create for himself a
superiority complex a complex that later would make him susceptible to the
reactionary doctrines of the idealist bourgeois criminals. Attending secondary
school, he had necessarily to deepen his perversity and develop his egocentrism,
love of money, and ambition to achieve social status rapidly by ambiguous means,
the first of which was to incriminate others in order to court the good will of
the professors, the possessors of “power.”
The educators, of
course, were engaged in an illicit traffic in influence, granting special favors
to students whose parents returned the favor by augmenting the social position
of teachers. The rotten environment in which the student was reared also had to
lead him necessarily into frequenting establishments which were “officially”
offlimits to all students, but which actually were open to those with the money
to pay but closed to sons of workers or the poor.
The literature one
read in school (and the students had to cite specific books) could not be
anything but a police novel, pornographic literature, the tendentious novel
written to aggravate the feeling of hatred toward workers and defenders of the
proletarian class. Lastly, movies of the gangster type had to be mentioned, or
of frivolous adventure, or films playing up banditry, the heroes of which became
idols and models of these students.
Naturally, the
result of such an environment led one into the kind of politics natural to
Romanian life between the two wars, namely (as characterized by the Communists)
one of dishonor, corruption, thievery, blackmail and political assassination.
One also developed a disdain toward inferiors, and exercised flattery toward
superiors, with the sole aim that of climbing socially. The principal purpose
was to become wealthy through exploitation of the working class.
Now, in order to
illustrate for his listeners as graphically as possible the moral decadence of
his background, the student had to attribute to himself all the possible sins of
that environment and claim he had committed them, including all imaginable
perversions. His character included without exception all the deformed aspects
of man, everything psychopathology considers abnormal. Whoever would not
recognize every sin and vice as his own only proved he was not yet permeated
with the true meaning of “unmasking,” and those in charge of his “re-education”
missed no opportunity to remind him of this with their bludgeons.
Finally, he saw the
only thing to do was admit those vices were in him and tell about them in
detail. Pederasty, incest, masturbation, every depravity a student had read
about or heard of as practiced anywhere on earth, all were described by him as
his own actions, bestiality (intercourse with animals) not being excluded. In
this way the student was forced to wallow in a quagmire of filth to its very
dregs, as if some Satanic force had assumed mastery over him, ordering him to
burden his soul with everything which had in the past roused in him the
profoundest revulsion.
This imposition of
self-degradation became a sort of psychic hysteria that at a given moment seemed
to fuse the re-educator’s command with a desire for self-destruction in the
re-educated. By injecting gradually into the victim’s subconscious information
different from what he had always accepted as real and true, by altering and
constantly deprecating existing reality and substituting for it a fictitious
image, the re-educator at last achieved the final purpose of the unmasking: to
make the lie so real to the victim that he would forget what had formerly for
him made sense. His chaotic mental state and the unreal coordinates along which
his consciousness moved throughout the months of torture turned lies into truth
and truth into lies, much as the body gradually accustoms itself to narcotic
poisons and develops a dependence on them.
As long as his
nervous system responded to only rational commands, the student could maintain a
normal line of behavior. But the moment fear altered this subordination, his
nervous system became his mind’s greatest enemy. Any kind of reaction was
possible when the entire organism was set quivering, as if touched by fire, by
the appearance of the bludgeon, an instrument which attained apocalyptic
proportions in the tormented memory of the sufferer. And if natural reticence
and dignity endeavored still to hide something in his inner self, his nervous
system betrayed him unequivocally. It was at this moment the fusion took place,
the hoped-for result of all the planning by the experimenters: the complete
reversal, for an indeterminate time, of the values in which the student had
always believed.
From then on for an
indefinite period, the student would see the world as a god with two faces; the
first, which he had thought was real was now become unreal; the second,
fantastic and ugly beyond any previous imaginings, now had become real,
obsessively and painstakingly so, even though deep down within him a stifled
warning might still question its authenticity. And the impossible and the
absurd, gradually taking on the semblance of actuality in his consciousness,
became the sole standard of value in the student’s thinking. The artificial
reality step by step displaced every trace of truth from previously verified
fact.
But who can fathom
the bottomless depths of man’s soul? Who knows but that the life of one’s
past, stubbornly resisting annihilation, may not take refuge somewhere in the
depths of the subconscious, while the lie, becoming more and more dominant as
truth is denied, invades the entire consciousness of the individual, who finally
accepts it as a biological necessity for survival? Whatever the answer to this
question, all the students who revealed their drama to me said that even when
they believed the lies, they could still feel a vague anxiety, a sort of warning
from the subconscious that disturbed the smooth functioning of the new order,
like a ghostly intimation that something was not in its proper place.[1]
It may be that the ego, man’s inner self, though subordinated by the
biological laws of self-preservation and displaced by an alien consciousness,
may encyst itself down deep, to remain dormant until outside conditions change
and the enclosing cyst is dissolved by returning normalcy.
So long as the
danger persisted, however, the artificially induced consciousness was supreme,
and any suggestion of doubt that might come from the subconscious was blocked by
fear of physical suffering. Fear, deception and pain pushed to the maximum,
become allies in psychopathic states, and make man his own enemy, making him
frantically repress and strangle his own mind and soul to keep his tormented
body alive.
When the victim had
become a “new man” and mentally healthy by Communist standards, he had to
give proof of his regeneration. It was not sufficient to invent the foulest lies
about one’s dearest friends; it was necessary to demonstrate one’s
rehabilitation by physical action, by striking every friend who could be brought
before one. As the unmasking progressed, the punishments became increasingly
harsh as a constant reminder that there was no escape. The victim had, of
course, disclosed in the first stage the names of all his friends, both those
with whom his friendship dated from his childhood and student days and those
whom he had come to know and like in prison. Every one of these individuals then
within the walls of the prison was brought in for his unmasking, and he was
required to strike each of them in the face and in turn be struck by them.
By such
re-education through infinite torment and the destruction of his own
personality, a man or rather the physical husk of him animated by an alien
consciousness was eventually graduated to become a teacher in his turn, and to
re-educate others. Then he was sent with several re-educated companions into the
cells of prisoners newly brought to Pitesti to greet with feigned comradeship
his old friends and to form, with consummate hypocrisy, “friendships” with
men whom he had not met or known well before; he would thus gain the confidence
of all and extract from each of his future victims every bit of
information that could be used when the time came for their unmasking. Only when
he and his companions had learned everything that they could in this way were
they allowed to produce hidden cudgels and fall upon the startled and
thunder-struck victims to begin their re-education and to preside over their
unmasking with a ferocity stimulated by the awareness that if he gave the
slightest sign of leniency or pity, he would be charged with having relapsed
from his new “purification” and be condemned to pass again through the whole
curriculum of re-education and unmasking.
Could anyone escape
from that ultimate degradation and dehumanization? No, no one no one at all,
except those who died during tortures, killed by an unskillful blow or by the
internal hemorrhages that not infrequently followed kicks in the stomach or
abdomen. Let me mention a few of those who escaped in this manner.
Bogdanovici, who
had been the friend and even the collaborator of Turcanu in the period of “rehabilitation
through conviction,” in the next phase died by the boot of Turcanu himself.
The diagnosis by the prison infirmary: death by acute dysentery! Actually his
“dysentery” was a rupture of the abdominal arteries, for Bogdanovici died
eliminating all his blood through his bowels.
Gafencu, a student
from Iasi, who had been imprisoned continuously from the time of Antonescu,[2]
and who was regarded as a leader of the “mystics,” perished in the same way.
A chemistry
student, Cantemir, also from Iasi, absolutely refused to speak evil of anyone in
the very first phase of his unmasking, and was murdered in his cell by his
overly enthusiastic re-educators and thus spared all that he would have had
subsequently to endure.
So far as I was
told, about fifteen victims escaped the final stages of unmasking in this way.
The re-educators were formally ordered to avoid killing, but when they did kill
one of their victims, they were merely warned not to be so careless in the
future, and were usually promoted, for the zeal that had caused death was
accepted as a proof of their successful “purification” and complete
alignment with the new morality. For some reason, the majority of the killers
came from the ranks of the “mushroom” resistance organizations that were
formed spontaneously soon after the Soviet occupation by small groups of
students who had previously held themselves aloof from political concerns and
ideological commitments. At least two of them felt remorse after murdering a
fellow prisoner, and one became violently insane.
An apparent anomaly
in the behavior of the inquisitors was their treatment of persons sick with
tuberculosis or a comparable disease. They were exempted from beatings, if they
agreed to “unmask” without them, and in order to convince them that it was
best not to refuse, they were usually brought into cells where violent
unmaskings were in progress and forced to witness the suffering of the victims.
If they then refused to co-operate in their re-education, they were subjected to
the same treatment as the others, but they were all given a chance to escape the
prolonged agony of body, and the majority preferred to take it. Of them, only
the outer unmasking was required, that is, the one that elicited information
useful to the Securitate and the unmaskers.
The demoralizing
effect of even this limited unmasking, however, intensified their illness as
much as the lack of medicine, adequate food, and wholesome air. Since persons
suffering from consumptive diseases were not likely to be useful to the
experimenters, not much emphasis was placed on their re-education. It was easier
just to let them die slowly, consumed by disease and despair.
Every
student who passed through the re-education had his own story and his own burden
of guilt. The most singular aspect of the Pitesti experiment was its uniform
success in converting the victim into a persecutor and tormentor of other
victims, and this result poses for us one of the most difficult and unusual
ethico-psychological problems. If we are to understand it, we must study the
techniques of re-education in greater detail.
CHAPTER XII
THE PSYCHOLOGICAL PREPARATION
It would be untrue
to say that the unmaskings came upon the students all of a sudden and without
warning. There were indications of what was to come, none of which foretold just
what would happen, but which psychologically laid the groundwork by weakening
resistance and creating apprehension. In this preparatory stage, the role played
by the prison administration was of the utmost importance. Well ahead of the
time that the trained shock groups were introduced into the experiment, the
suggestive method was used by guards or by director Dumitrescu himself. The
students were led to believe that something monstrous was happening, something
was hanging over their heads that none could escape because it was inevitable.
All students knew
that “something” was going on; even though the rooms in which unmaskings
were gradually taking place were isolated from the prisoners’ cells, stifled
screams, groans and shrieks could occasionally be heard. Nobody could learn
whence they came; no one could find out what was happening. Little by little,
the conviction grew within each student that eventually his turn would come.
This waiting, this nerve-wracking uncertainty, was deliberately induced on
orders of the political director.
Sergeant Georgescu,
an exemplar of unmatched brutality among the guards at Pitesti, took care, every
time he had the opportunity, to give the prisoners grounds for anxiety.
“You bandit, I
beat you, but I also feed you. But just you wait, and see what is in store for
you after while ...” And he would point in the direction from which the groans
could be heard. All this contributed to increased tensions, of course, and is
well summed up by the following account by a student who was among the first to
undergo unmaskings in the series that began on Dec. 6, 1949:
“We expected the
outbreak while under a dramatic tension. We had no fear in the usual sense for
we knew we could expect anything from the Communists even before we were brought
to Pitesti. Most of us in my cell were prepared to go through any kind of
suffering; we were so sure we would not break down! But, still, we were fearful,
with a strange uneasiness. We did not know just how they would do it; we could
not guess the day it would all start, or who the torturers would be. And then it
seemed that we wished, were even impatient, to go through the coming trial,
whatever it might be.
“The climax came,
however, when we least expected it, and what was more tragic, from those we
least suspected capable of such treachery.”
The tactic of
prolonged anxiety followed by total surprise and the shock of what could not
have been anticipated or imagined was always used, and it never failed.
There was another
psychological factor that prepared the destined victims for what was to happen.
The great majority of them were oppressed by an unexplainable sense of
resignation that seemed to create a climate for accepting any kind of torture as
a sort of deserved punishment for some imaginary sin. Not one among the students
who talked to me about this could identify the source of that feeling. One, who
had a thorough medical training, attributed it to physical weakness from
insufficient food combined with a subconscious conviction that resistance was
doomed to failure from the start. Without their realizing it, the students were
going through a kind of transition from the world they had known into one in
which life itself was of minimal importance, an expendable accessory.
The final element
was the shock of utter surprise when the victims found themselves in the midst
of their unmaskers at the critical moment when the attack was suddertly
unleashed. The unbelievable shock probably created in them a state of
quasi-hypnosis.
CHAPTER XIII
VERIFYING THE METHOD
The length of time
it took a student to become “rehabilitated” varied from case to case. There
were some, though these were the fewest, who gave in after only a few days.
Others resisted three or four weeks. But for the most of them it required two or
three, or even four months.
Once the student
had passed through the whole unmasking, he became a docile, pathologically
fearful creature, willing and even eager to carry out the most fantastic orders.
To verify the degree of his re-education, he was sent, flanked, naturally, by
someone a little more “verified,” to participate in the unmaskings of former
colleagues in other cells. What tortures he had undergone he now must apply to
others in order to demonstrate “by deeds” that he had indeed broken with the
past.
Not everyone among
the re-educated was charged at once with the re-education of others. In order to
qualify as a “pedagogue,” the student had to meet certain conditions. The
students who were eventually to direct the re-education of others were chosen at
the start of the unmaskings, and were slated to work on fellow members of their
own category[1] when the time came. But those whose past
was too strongly anti-Communist, were denied the privilege of becoming teachers
even after they had completed their pedagogic training. Turcanu would give them
the following explanation:
“I know my
merchandise; the bandit within you will never be cured. You are encysted within
yourself and only pretend to be re-educated; but in your subconscious you await
the moment when you can go back to what I took you away from. You will never be
able to rid yourselves of the sinful concepts that poisoned your soul. In spite
of what you now appear to profess, you still believe in that other, maybe
contrary to your will ...”
Although this
statement later proved to be correct in many cases, it was designed to excite
craving for the office of pedagogue; for paradoxically, it was from the most
ardently anti-Communist students that Turcanu eventually chose the “pedagogues”
who turned out to be the most cruel of all the enforcers of the unmaskings.
True, the majority of them are no longer alive, some having died in later years
as a result of injuries or maladies contracted during their own unmaskings, some
having been shot when their existence became inconvenient and they were no
longer useful. Here are some examples:
A long time after
unmaskings were dropped from the prison routine, as I was walking one day toward
the washroom with a whole group of detainees in Gherla prison, I noticed on the
body of a youth ahead of me red, hideous scars like vertical furrows, up and
down his back. I asked a student whom I had known earlier whether he knew the
cause of that strange deformation. He replied: “That is Cornel Pop, who was a
fifth-year student in medicine at Cluj. The marks on his back were left by
unmaskings. He was among those pressed the hardest, for he was one of the main
hopes of the group of which he was a member.” The speaker’s face was
convulsed with sadness mixed with fear. Even though he was a run-of-the-mill
prisoner, any reference to Pitesti made him tremble. Cornel Pop was considered
in Gherla prison as one of the most dangerous spies and denouncers used by the
director, Goiciu, especially among prisoners of Macedonian origin; for Pop had
had a particular fondness for them before his arrest, and had formed friendships
which he now exploited for the benefit of the Communists. The educators had
completely converted him. First a victim and then one of the most savage of
sadists, his usefulness was eventually exhausted, and he was shot after a mock
trial before a Communist military tribunal.
Similarly infamous
for their complete conversion and zeal as re-educators were:
Constantin Juberian,
also from Cluj; law student; shared the same fate as Pop, after same trial;
Nuti (Ion?)
Patrascanu, from Constanta; student in medicine at Bucharest; either disappeared
or still in prison;
Ion Bucoveanu, from
Bucharest; fifth-year student in construction engineering; freed;
Coriolan Coifan,
from Turnu-Severin; former artillery officer, later student in construction
engineering; famed for the vigor and accurate aim of the kicks in the stomach he
administered to his pupils;
Eugen Magirescu,
student in education at Iasi; perhaps one of the most tortured of students
during unmasking; today probably dead.
Diaca, student in
medicine at Iasi; in the habit of boasting that he was criminal by nature, but
actually very much occupied with problems of higher mathematics; often imputed
to himself the commission of crimes, maybe real, maybe invented. He did beat
many prisoners so badly that they urinated blood; freed, he later was arrested
anew and sentenced to 25 years.
Hentes, a high
school student from Targu-Mures who underwent his unmasking at Gherla; together
with Ludovic Reck, former secretary of the Communist Youth in Transylvania and
an agent of the Securitate during the Antonescu regime, he killed the former
Socialist congressman Flueras in June 1953 in a ground-floor cell of the Gherla
prison by beating him with sacks filled with sand. Flueras was about 70 years
old.
Florin Popescu,
from Pitesti, who specialized in torturing the floor sweepers, whom he forced to
kneel on walnut shells, or, lacking these, on sharp grains of sand, whenever it
seemed to him that the floors weren’t scrubbed well enough.
This transformation
into torturers seems explicable in the case of those who had no clearly defined
attitudes at the time of their arrest, and who quickly gave in during unmaskings;
but what can explain such a total change in those who at first most tenaciously
resisted? To what can be attributed their obvious malice and malignancy after
they took charge of unmasking others, especially if they had not been made
chairman of an unmasking committee or even accepted into the O.D.C.C.?
1)
|
-See above, p. 29f.
|
CHAPTER XIV
“PROFITABLE” USE OF TIME
The relationship of
“unmasked” students to the “patron” O.D.C.C. is not clear. Not everyone
considered re-educated became a member of O.D.C.C. as a matter of course; in
fact, only a very small number were chosen by Turcanu and approved by his unseen
superiors. The exact number of those considering themselves members could not be
learned. Supposedly it did not exceed 50 or 60 out of a total of more than 1,000
re-educated students. It was from these approved “joiners” that committee
leaders were selected to direct unmaskings.
As the number of
re-educated grew, using all of them in unmaskings became of course more
difficult. Everything possible was done to ensure that each participated in at
least one such operation, in order to confirm his disintegration into the new
state. There were, on the other hand, always the zealots who carried the load,
and were taken from cell to cell to begin their work anew.
The rest of the
re-educated students passed their days according to the established program.
Usually the program came from “above,” namely from the directorate of the
O.D.C.C., but many times it was left to the discretion of cell committees, the
leadership being confident that its underlings understood very well what was
permitted and what was not.
Topics for
discussion, once selected, were often assigned to a student to confirm his
degradation, but there were plenty of volunteers who offered to speak on “agreed
upon” subjects out of a desire to put to sleep any suspicions the committee
might entertain. In this manner were organized short theatrical productions in
which the old order, or organizations of which the “creators” were former
members, were maligned. Poetry, and particularly the epigram, was employed in
developing the topics selected by the committee. Out of these efforts came a
collection of verses, entitled “The Red Notebook,” to which several students
over a period of three years contributed their work. The student Sergiu
Mandinescu, a quite talented youth, had charge of editing the work, which was
finally presented to the political officer of the Gherla prison, Avadanei, who,
in addition to torturing prisoners, busied himself with being a “patron of the
arts.” The collection, as was to be expected, contained lavish praise of the
Communist Party and its early underground fighters; laudatory poems about
machinery in factories; and odes on the creative nature of prison life which “forged
new men.”
Educational
discussions were held based on materials prepared by the prison’s directorate
and by O.D.C.C. members. In these, plans of action for further unmaskings were
worked out and various reports of “in the field” leaders of unmaskings were
analyzed. During these “analysis meetings” were scrutinized also the written
declarations of those subjected to torture, especially those concerning the
outer unmasking; if found adequate, they were sent every month to the Ministry
of the Interior by special courier.
The fulfillment of
this program was supervised by members of the O.D.C.C., a watchful eye being
particularly kept on things which might prove symbolic, resulting sometimes in
quite preposterous situations. Here is an example:
One afternoon a
student began humming a popular tune of the 1940’s. From the whole song, I
here give only the refrain:
“But I cannot,
and slowly pass the years
Waiting for the buckeyes to bloom again ...”
Waiting for the buckeyes to bloom again ...”
Just a few common
words. But back in 1947 the Romanians had modified the last line, substituting
“Waiting for the Americans to arrive.” Doubtless our music lover was only
humming a tune without thought for the substituted verse, but someone who heard
him shouted, “Unmask!” This was the term used to announce you had something
to say about yourself or someone else. At once, everybody had to stop what he
was doing and listen. “The bandit X sang a song with a hidden meaning; he
cannot forget what he was; and he awaits the Americans to take revenge on the
re-educators.” The student in question, surprised, could not but admit that
the bandit within him had not yet disappeared and that he was guilty and
deserving of stringent punishment!
Any slackening in
attention to “the new nature” was taken care of by controlling the rhythm of
the unmaskings. When the effect was at a low ebb, those who were still in their
own cells were sent either to other cells where unmaskings were being started,
or into cells where the newly arrived were being held. Here they were required
to act as “confidence men” and obtain all the information they could from
the newcomers, which could be used later when the cudgels were brought out and
the re-education began.
CHAPTER XV
AMPLIFICATION OF THE EXPERIMENT
After such
preparation and under such pressure, Pavlov’s conditioned reflexes worked
perfectly.
The students to be
used as the “shock group” in cells whose inmates were to undergo unmasking
were selected by the committee because, through their previous testimony, they
were known to have close friends among the new group and could more easily
elicit information to be used a couple of weeks later to intensify the effect of
surprise at the moment of unleashing the unmasking. Following this dramatic
moment of shock, Turcanu would appear, raise his cap, deliver his discourse, and
at a signal, set off the lightning barrage of bludgeons on the thunderstruck
victims.
One cycle was
closed, a new one opened. Those who had been tortured were now torturing those
who in their turn were being trained to torture others. This rhythm increased as
the number of trainees increased, and the experiment was extended from Pitesti
to other Romanian prisons.
By the time the
amplification was decided upon, the Ministry of the Interior was already sending
political prisoners to the slave labor camps to be worked to death in digging a
navigable canal that would connect the Danube to the Black Sea. The contribution
that students could make to this extermination process looked promising. The
December 1949 cycle of mass unmaskings did not provide enough robots to satisfy
the demands of the canal administration. This was mainly because Pitesti had to
retain the old trainers to unmask the increasing numbers being sent there from
military tribunals all over the country. The tempo of the unmaskings was
therefore stepped up rapidly to satisfy the increased demands at the canal. But
also, the process itself was being speeded up, as the directors found they could
skip the two weeks of psychological preconditioning usually given the trainees
before the unmasking was initiated. Better results were obtained, they found, by
plunging the victims directly into unmasking, thus preventing information from
the outside being circulated inside their cell. So when a new group of students
arrived, it was sent directly into unmaskings the moment after it was duly
registered on the administration’s books.
The group of
students transported from Cluj, mostly from the Law School, may be cited as an
example. They were unloaded into the prison early in July 1950, among them
several students whom I met later Inocentiu Glodeanu, Silviu Suciu, Hosu, Pitea,
and others. They were taken to Hospital Room Four, not given any time to rest,
or even for the “shock group” to elicit information; they reacted violently
and fought for hours, but finally were overpowered by the much larger number of
re-educators who imposed the norm of the new “ethics,” employing the usual
methods of torture to illustrate its validity. Of the four victims I came to
know well, three had sustained permanent damage to their lungs.
Because of this
increased tempo of unmaskings, some errors were bound to be made in screening
detainees for transport to Pitesti. Thus it happened that several youths who
were not even students arrived. One had been an “occasional” student named
Opris from the slums of Bucharest, about 20 years old and by occupation a
pickpocket. He had been arrested trying to slip across the border probably
because the Romanian people had become so poor that his occupation no longer
paid! His infraction was considered political and Opris landed at Jilava, being
put in the same cell I used to have, No. 23 in the second section, in the fall
of 1949. Here, he represented himself as a congressman’s son implicated in an
anti-Communist organization, but actually he was busy supplying information to
Director Maromet. He was tried, then sent to serve his sentence at Pitesti among
the students. He went through the usual unmaskings, but what was he to tell? He
“unmasked” his real occupation in the first session, even before being
beaten. So he was compelled to demonstrate how he plied his trade, being
presented as a “victim of bourgeois education.”
Strange also was
the inclusion of lawyer D. among students, for his age precluded a mistake and
the Securitate had his complete dossier anyway. He was arrested under suspicion
of being a member of a resistance group led by Colonel Arsenescu; and he was not
brought to trial, but only sentenced to 10 years for defiance of authority!
Perhaps the Securitate sent him to Pitesti hoping to get more information from
him via the Pitesti experiment than they had been able to obtain through the
extreme rigor of normal investigative methods.
The same thing
happened to Eugen Bolfosu, the engineer, who was tried by the Military Tribunal
of Bucharest along with a group of students from the Polytechnical School. By
some coincidence, I traveled in the same prison van with him from Pitesti to
Aiud in the winter of 1951; but even though the trip took two days to cover the
couple of hundred miles because, contrary to habit, the van stopped at various
provincial prisons for “pickups”, Bolfosu uttered not more than three words
the whole time, and these only when questioned. Once arrived at Aiud, he was
hastily isolated because he had been brought from Pitesti prison. The political
officer visited him several times, but whether or not he said any more than
while being transported I do not know. He did appear three days later, but his
silence was even more pronounced (if this was possible) three months later when
I met him in the workshop.
A high school
student from Constanta was also sent to Pitesti by mistake, and his subsequent
transfer to Aiud was also strange, as high school students were usually not sent
there either. He, like the others from Pitesti, would not speak to anyone about
what happened there, even though there was considerable freedom to talk in the
workshop in Aiud.
Much later, I found
out one reason for such reticence: Turcanu had given instructions to all those
transferred from Pitesti to Aiud to get in touch with the political officer at
once and tell him anything that might be useful later on in unmaskings of the
“old ones” (politicians of the traditional political parties, and older
Legionaries) which he himself was scheduled to initiate at Aiud, where he
thought he would soon be transferred. He cautioned them that if they talked,
they would face a new ordeal of tortures when he arrived.
CHAPTER XVI
THE FIRST RESULTS
As was only
natural, the capital accumulated from the investment at Pitesti could not remain
unutilized. The first Securitate that directly used the “rehabilitated”
students in order to squeeze from the arrestees more than could be gotten by the
bludgeon, was that of Pitesti. A wing of the prison containing a number of cells
was placed at the Securitate’s disposal for use with detainees yet untried,
usually members of a group that escaped arrest on the first raid; or those whose
cases were complicated and would require more time; or those few who still,
despite all conventional tortures, had not talked enough and were sent “into
storage.” The “re-educated” students recommended by Turcanu were put in
the cells with these men in the hope that where the Securitate failed they would
succeed.
The method usually
followed was very simple. The “re-educated” individual introduced into the
cell had to show several scars from maltreatment, but was to maintain a
prescribed attitude of complete silence, of suspicion toward all the newcomers,
and of refusal to discuss anything with them for fear of “being denounced to
the Securitate.” After a while, when he felt he had by such bearing gained
their confidence, he would approach the person he had been ordered to cultivate,
carefully advising him as a younger neophyte to stay away from everyone,
for “you can’t tell whether the one you talk to might not be a secret agent
of the Securitate.” This warning won him the confidence of his prey when later
he gradually inquired into details of the man’s case, constantly offering
helpful advice as to how he should behave when interrogated. Usually success
with the newcomer was certain, especially if he was not a student. Romanians who
had not attended a university had traditionally felt great respect for and trust
in students over the years, and now, when such a man most needed a confidant, a
moral support to help him bear the brutality of his captors more easily, it was
the natural thing to lean on this helpful, respected, and better educated
student, giving him full confidence. Later, during interrogation, he discovered
his error, for the interrogator repeated everything he had told his “adviser”
in confidence, but when he was returned to the cell, his confidant was no longer
there.
This method of
eliciting secrets from newcomers was used extensively at the Ministry of the
Interior, where several re-educated students were shifted from cell to cell for
a year to act as “advisers” to persons recently arrested. Here are some
examples:
The student Caravia
was used at the Ministry of the Interior to spy on the group of parachutists led
by Alexandru Tanase in 1953. Freed in 1956 for a brief period, he was then
re-arrested.
At Iasi, then
Barlad, then Hunedoara prisons, a former industrial student named Tudose was
evidently a man who got results, for in 1956-57 he was still performing this
dirty work for the Communist regime.
At the
Brasov-Codlea Securitate, the student Craciunescu from the Faculty of Agronomy
was used in 1954. He was in charge of stalking the Legionary group that formed a
resistance skeleton in the Fagaras Mountains.
At the Securitate
of Constanta, the student Iuliu Anagnostu from the Faculty of Letters in
Bucharest was used for over two years, especially with Macedonian students
arrested throughout villages in Dobrogea. He was responsible for the arrest of a
group of over 25 Macedonians in the Mihai-Viteazul village and in Baschioi, as
well as for the arrest of several Turks from around Constanta. He would
introduce himself as a Legionary and a doctor, being neither one nor the other.
For services rendered, he was allowed to “escape” around 1954, then was sent
through villages in northern Dobrogea to perform more services for his masters
by posing as a fugitive. Even though he had been sentenced to 15 years in
prison, he was permanently liberated in 1956 when his case was reheard, while he
was “escaped.”
The great plague of
denunciations by the re-educated was to cause havoc in the large so-called “penitentiaries
of execution” to which were sent condemned political prisoners to serve out
the sentences handed down by the Securitate after the flagrantly staged shows
called “trials.”
CHAPTER XVII
PAUSE FOR ESCALATION?
One day in April
1951, after almost everyone in Pitesti prison had undergone unmaskings, the
procedure was abruptly terminated by order. The prison thus assumed the aspect
of any of the ten penitentiaries existing in the “Romanian People’s Republic”
at the time. A new period had begun. Already massive shipments of prisoners were
leaving regional penitentiaries, and the large prisons, bound for the
slave-labor camp at the canal mentioned above veritable human herds driven
toward a great slaughterhouse.
From among the
students, with the exception of the inept and those who were needed for further
educational labors, those who were under a sentence of 10 years or less were
sent to the canal, where they were promised much. At the same time, new
transports of condemned students continued to arrive at Pitesti, among whom were
many high school students.
Up to this time,
the 15 and 16-year-olds had been isolated at Gherla; now the natural patriotic
inclination of the high-schoolers was to be exploited in the foulest possible
manner. Some means had to be found, evidently, to destroy their native
patriotism with a spectacular and definitive breakdown. Since Communist justice
does not condemn on the basis of the infraction committed but according to the
presumed potential of the victim in hand, the sentences pronounced against these
children, in the majority of cases, would have dishonored the most inept or
corrupt magistrate in a civilized land.
The approach used
in this campaign against patriotic adolescent students was serpentine: they were
induced to “join” the “Legion of Michael the Archangel.” The poor
students did this in good faith, thinking they were in fact becoming members of
the organization through which Codreanu had educated the youth of Romania in
Christian ideals and knightly manhood.
From among the
Legionary students who had formerly led the cadres of the F.d.C. (“Brotherhood
of the Cross,” the Legionary Movement’s high-school group), the O.D.C.C.
selected those considered completely “re-educated” and ordered them to begin
organizing the youths into Legionary groups just as though they were outside
prison. No detail of this deception was overlooked. Everything was based on the
principles followed when Legionary groups operated underground, and meetings
were held “in the strictest secrecy.” The high-schoolers responded
completely; their adherence and loyalty was warm, sincere, and total. The
preparation lasted several months and by the summer of 1951 they were considered
ready to be taken to swear allegiance to the Archangel.
Among the first
victims of this satanic game were high school students sent to Pitesti from the
canal work force for disciplinary reasons. Here is how the student, O.C., forced
to “prepare” the high school students, told the story long afterwards:
“One day, into
the cell in which we were locked following our unmasking, several young
high-school students were introduced in order that we might prepare them
according to the order received previously through Turcanu. This order was
categorical: Establish their membership, at any cost, in the Iron Guard
(synonymous with “Legionary Movement” and “Legion of Michael the Archangel”),
so that ‘the greater the height, the deeper and more definitive the fall!’
The effect of the unmaskings to come was thus assured.
“I took this
assignment with pangs of remorse, even though the human being within us all had
been killed. Who could refuse? From the moment the high school student came in,
the cell took on the aspect it had before the unmaskings; we acted as though
nothing had happened and continued to behave as we had outside the prison in
underground activity. The education began according to the rules: take advantage
of their inclination toward Christian faith. So we taught them psalms and
prayers; we discussed theology, counseled them, taught them how to fast. What
seemed more monstrous than the destruction of our own self-respect, was our
being made to eat their food when they fasted! This, to demonstrate to the
re-education committee that we were really cured of the Christian sickness for
good. As for patriotism, we stimulated their natural inclination by teaching
them patriotic and Legionary songs, and instructing them in the laws and conduct
required of any youth wanting to join the movement.
“When their
preparation was considered adequate, they were moved to another cell, where they
felt the first hailstorm of the ‘unmasking’ bludgeons.
“The new victims
were passed through unmaskings by others than we who had ‘educated’ them.
The ‘educators’ were kept in reserve for more difficult moments, should they
arise. When, with all the tortures to which he was subjected, a high-school
student refused to talk, the head of the committee, with a diabolical
satisfaction, would bring in the one who had ‘prepared’ him, for a ‘confrontation.’
It is not hard to imagine the collapse produced in the soul of a boy less than
twenty years old when his counselor, his model of honor, courage, and integrity
but a few days earlier, turned out to be his betrayer.”
My second example
is the story told by one who had been one of the young victims. “Even now,”
he said to me, “after having passed through the unmaskings, and knowing the
dirty motive behind this inhuman staging, I cannot yet believe that N., who ‘recruited’
me into the ‘Legionary Movement,’ did everything only because it was ordered
by the re-education committee. There was something in his teaching other than
simply the following of orders an inner compulsion, perhaps subconscious, but
sprung from the soul, that changed everything in moments of truly soulful
exaltation. One day, alone in our cell at dusk, a heart-breaking sadness came
over his face and he quit talking, his eyes turning away to look through the
bars at the twilight hills out there. Many times I asked him to tell me the
reason for his sadness but he never would say; when I insisted he would look at
me for quite a while, painfully, imploringly, then would turn away and look in
another direction. Nearly always, after I questioned him, he would start talking
about the new man, the truly Christian man capable of healing wounds not only of
the body but of the Romanian soul. There was so much warmth, even passion, and
such sincerity in his words, that I am convinced that these moments constituted
for him the only means of escape from the infernal cycle into which he had been
pushed against his will. And who knows? Maybe he imagined himself really free
and that what he said was not intended to destroy a soul but out of pure love to
help it. In the toughest moments of the unmasking, even when he was face to face
with me and behaved as ordered on that dirty mission, I could not hate him.
“Later, after the
unmaskings, when danger had passed and we could talk more freely, I was the
first one to try approaching him and try to establish a friendship I fondly
wanted. As he had lost much weight due to the lung trouble he contracted, I
offered to share the little food I received, but he refused any help. He even
refused to talk to me. I read in his eyes the same heart-breaking pain I saw in
the cell at Pitesti whilst he was trying to prepare me to orient myself into a
life that would follow the insane drama then unfolding. For two years following
this silent encounter he avoided meeting me, although we worked in the same
workshop, on the same shift. I believe his anguish was probably much greater
than mine. After this, he was isolated, and I do not know if he lives or not or
whether he was cured of his infirmity inflicted during the unmaskings. I would
give a lot to be able to talk to him just one single time, if only to convince
him that in my heart he remained forever as he was in those moments while we
were together there in our cell.”
Similar accounts
were given me by several individuals. Particularly significant, I think, is the
fact that almost all high-school students who passed through this unique
experience, when given the opportunity to turn around and objectively look at
the past, clearly distinguished between the definitely demonic and the humane,
Christian and Romanian aspects of that preparatory phase; between the crushed
and terrified prisoners who, acting by reflex, cozened and betrayed them, and
the profound truth of the lessons they had, for whatever motive, given the
victims.
From among the
high-school students tortured at Pitesti or Gherla will emerge true
personalities matured by suffering, capable of facing the long darkness to which
the Romanian people are now subjected. They will be able to sustain, in the
inhuman isolation of Communist slavery, the hope of a new generation.
* * * * *
Thus was the cycle
completed. The labor of re-education was bearing its fruit. What had happened to
all those who, out of the hope of saving their country and perpetuating the
concept of free men, had sacrificed everything absolutely everything? They had
been changed into a mass of imbeciles by the fear born out of torture and
despair; by the uncontrollable conditioned reflexes that the bludgeon had
implanted; by reciprocal hatred; by quivering dread lest at any time, for any
reason or none, from any motive, plausible or otherwise, they might have to
repeat the unmasking. The personality of each individual had been made to
disappear, leaving room for the robot. To speak, to do, to react, to command it
all became simple. Conditioned reflexes appeared at the slightest excitation;
external reality was obliterated, forgotten, on command. The only thing that
remained and was painfully present in body and soul was the anguish. In order to
avoid physical and moral pain, man changed himself feverishly into an animal.
What had been moral certainties before the collapse, became odious dangers, an
unbearable nightmare from which one must escape at all costs.
That is why one
confessed imaginary crimes, in order to spread the ash of forgetfulness over the
past, over reality, to complete the dissolution of the self, that could be only
the source of inner suffering, and to substitute for the forgotten past a
fictitious one, untrue but pleasing to those who conducted the experiment of “human
metamorphosis.”
The tendency to
falsify, imposed at the beginning by the methods of re-education, becomes later
on a kind of necessity in itself. Through a mixing of intelligence with animal
reflexes, of the false with the real, of cynicism with obligatory fanaticism, a
person finds that he can exist only in a fictitious world where everything has
been inverted.
Collective madness
becomes reality. All commanded vileness and crime will be pursued in its name
willingly and eagerly pursued. This madness will be sustained, nourished
persistently, not haphazardly, but systematically, by a certain logic
paradoxical, but calculated so that it can be used any time, anywhere it may be
found useful by its masters. That is the triumph of Communist science.
CHAPTER XVIII
THE ESCALATION
Spring brought the
escalation. The capital of this investment, accumulated with such perseverance
over the months, could not be allowed to remain idle. Under the direct
supervision of the Ministry of the Interior’s representatives, students were
screened and graded like so many cattle. Those considered “re-educated” but
not capable of carrying out specific missions, were sent to the “work colony”
(actually an extermination camp) along the canal that has never been completed
to this day. With them were sent students considered definitively “new men”
and able to supervise not only the labor but also qualified to control the “output
in the area of education.” Those not sent to the canal were distributed as
follows:
a. The most
reliably re-educated were sent to Gherla prison in the north of the country.
Their selection reflected indirectly the basis on which they were first
separated into categories on arrival at Pitesti and before re-education,
according to their respective sentences. Those who had been given the longest
sentences, having received the harshest treatment, furnished the largest
contingent of the “trusted re-educated” going to Gherla. Others in the
shipment were those sentenced to less than ten years. These were not considered
sufficiently reliable in themselves but were included so as to be kept under
surveillance and eventually put under unmaskings once more as it turned out,
soon after their arrival at Gherla.
b. Students with
diseases of the lung were sent to Targu-Ocna prison in the Bacau region, which
was reserved for them. It was called a sanatorium but the difference between it
and other prisons was in name only. All prisoners with infected or injured lungs
were sent there from all the prisons in Romania, but the number sent was
controlled, as the authorities’ objective was to exterminate, with as little
commotion as possible, but completely, as many as they could. In 1951, sick
inmates numbered only 1,000; the majority of inmates at this prison were brought
there from the re-educated student group to carry out the unmaskings thoroughly
and with dispatch, and actually outnumbered their sick victims.
c. Students
considered trustworthy but who had not received sentences from a court of law
were sent to the Ocnele-Mari prison in northern Oltenia, where many Romanians,
who had been arrested in 1948 but had never been tried or even accused, were
confined just for having been guilty of holding positions in the so-called
bourgeois governments prior to Communist occupation.
The Aiud prison,
notorious for its own extermination treatment, was the only one to which no
re-educated students were sent, just why is not certain. One reason may have
been because it had been, since 1947, the prison to which any condemned person
who was at all prominent was sent, and consequently some attention of the West
was already focused upon it; sending re-educators to it might have revealed to
the West the Communists’ unique methods of “re-education.” On the other
hand, the reason may have been simply that there could not be spared enough
re-educators to work over the 3,500 prisoners housed there it would have taken
almost the entire output of reliable and expert re-educated men to do it. But it
was rumored among prisoners that Aiud was just being left to the last.
There was, of
course, some pretense that this distribution of the students was made on their
own initiative and that the Communist Party had no voice in it at all.
In the spring of
1951, long before the closing of Pitesti prison, a secret meeting was held in
which only members of the O.D.C.C. participated. It was chaired by Turcanu; no
official representatives of the Ministry of the Interior appeared. The “work”
performed up to this moment was evaluated. It was established that the “re-education
of the students was an accomplished fact and that the results were encouraging;”
that through the unmaskings “a great service had been rendered the Party and
the working class” because through them had been discovered all the “bandits
who were not denounced in the previous investigations,” and that all
resistance “within the Pitesti prison” was broken.
These statements of
Turcanu were followed by “propositions,” actually a memorandum drawn up in
which the approval of the Ministry of the Interior was requested for expansion
of the experiment to all the prisons in Romania, for the re-education of all
prisoners!
To what degree the
“memorandum” came from the “initiative” of the students is plain, I
believe, from this account of the affair by the student S.B.:
“I had just been
brought from the room in which I was undergoing the tortures of the outer
unmasking, into the cell that served as the O.D.C.C. office. I was to complete
and put down on paper some declarations I made the day before and inscribed on
my soap plaque. Turcanu and three or four other men were in this room evaluating
declarations made by those preceding me. I couldn’t make out what they were
discussing as they were speaking in such low tones. But suddenly a
misunderstanding seemed to develop, possibly over some statement in a
declaration, and the discussion became louder and more heated. One of the men,
quite tall, whom I did not know, opposed Turcanu openly, whereupon Turcanu
jumped up as one possessed by a boundless fury and attacked him unmercifully
with blow upon blow. Not only was this man subsequently removed from the
unmasking committee, but he was downgraded to the “bandit” category and
subjected again to unmasking. And the beating, the demotion, renewed torture all
this not because he had failed to declare something, but simply because he had
contradicted Turcanu! But then, perhaps he was simply a scapegoat, as it would
seem that every now and then a loose-tongued collaborator, however willing, has
to be sacrificed to stimulate blind obedience.”
If a simple
controversy like this, over a remark by a third party, could bring Turcanu to
such drastic action, then who would have the temerity to refuse to sign and
applaud a memorandum prepared by him? And one important enough that it was to be
sent to the Ministry of the Interior!
The contents of
this memorandum compared to those of any resolution “adopted” in a “Communist
confab” were as alike as two drops of water. First came eulogies of the Party,
then a report of results, followed by the classic Communist “constructive
propositions” and finally the “pledges” to carry out to a successful
conclusion the various labors “for victory of the working class,” etc., etc.
Rounding off the document like a seal of approval was the series of well-known
epithets against imperialists, Fascists, wealthy landowners and all those who
plot behind the scenes for the overthrow of the order established with the help
of the Soviet Union, et cetera ad nauseam.
After reading it
aloud, Turcanu had the 40-odd O.D.C.C. members present sign it, then forwarded
it, according to the participants, directly to the Ministry of the Interior via
the prison’s political officer. This “initiative” was so much the more
monstrous because the motto: “Their destruction through themselves” was so
evident throughout. But since precautionary measures taken by the Communist
Party had failed to cover up the phenomenon entirely, the open participation of
political officers in producing such documents was necessary, to give the
impression of normalcy and official sanction.
Now appeared on the
scene, for the first time officially, a superior officer sent direct to Pitesti
by the Ministry of the Interior, one Zeller, a colonel from the General
Directorate of Penitentiaries. Even though he visited prisons dressed in a
military uniform, Zeller was actually only a colonel in the Securitate, and
worked directly under the orders of another such, Colonel Dullberger (later
Dulgheru) and also General Nicolski, the General Director of the Investigations
Service in the Ministry.
One of the many
missions entrusted to Colonel Zeller was the supplying of labor hands (i.e.
prisoners) to the canal camps. At this time he was empowered to select students
“who were fit to leave.” As a matter of fact, the majority of students were
of the opinion that he should know because they were sure it was Zeller himself
who directed the unmaskings, or at least was among those directly responsible
for them. Here are some details to support this conviction:
The qualification
for being “fit” for canal work was to have undergone unmasking, though
officially this was called being “physically fit.” Preceding the medical
examination which, by the way, was perfectly inhuman, lacking the most
elementary human decency Zeller would turn to Turcanu who was seated next to
him, and ask, “Does he deserve to go to work?” And on the answer given by
Turcanu depended Zeller’s decision.
The goings-on in
the cells at Pitesti were reported directly to Zeller in a full unmasking
session by bloodied students. Likewise, at Gherla, a desperate prisoner, perhaps
imagining that a vestige of human feeling yet remained in the heart of a
Communist officer, stepped out of line and bekan to relate with tears in his
eyes what he and others in cell 99 on the fourth floor were suffering in the
autumn of 1951. Zeller, though he feigned surprise, took no steps whatever.
He personally saw
to it that no student left for the canal before having “made his unmasking.”
Ironically, in 1952, when the Pauker-Tescovici faction was liquidated and the
Experiment suspended for the time being, Zeller put a bullet through his own
head in an orthodox cemetery, at that! Sometimes destiny is just: Zeller
committed suicide among the dead whose faith he had labored so hard to destroy.
That the regional
Securitate of Pitesti knew everything that happened in the prison, is pretty
well proven by the testimony of O.C., a student from the Polytechnical School in
Bucharest:
“I was arrested
in Bucharest several weeks after most of my colleagues had already passed
through the Rahova Road [Bucharest’s Securitate. Ed.] and the Ministry
of the Interior investigations. Because the dossiers for the whole group were
almost completed, the interrogating officer did not insist too much on details
from me. But after declarations were made by those who preceded me in unmaskings
at Pitesti, the Ministry requested a Supplementary investigation of me. Since it
was considered unnecessary to transport me to Bucharest for the investigation,
an officer of the Pitesti Securitate was charged with completing it, and this
took several days. It so happened that I had known this officer in my high
school days and we were both naturally greatly surprised to confront each other
in these circumstances, but since there was another officer with him, he
pretended not to know me. But the next day, when the investigation became more
or less routine, the officer was unaccompanied by the second one and,
miraculously, his tongue loosened.
“At one point, he
changed the tenor of the discussion entirely, and asked me somewhat
parenthetically about what was going on in the prison. I had not yet made my
unmasking and had no suspicion of the horrifying reality of tragedy after
tragedy being enacted there, possibly in the very cell next to my own. I had
heard shouts and thuds that penetrated the walls somewhat, but did not realize
what caused them. Without realizing it, I was being put through the ‘waiting
period’ or psychological preparation of my nervous system screams and thuds
heard later would already have been registered in my nervous system as ordinary
happenings. So I told the officer honestly all I knew about the prison up to
that time. He stood a moment, thinking. Then he asked me:
“‘What do you
know about unmaskings?’
“‘What are
those?’ I asked in my turn, surprised.
“‘Listen to me
well,’ answered the lieutenant. ‘In your prison some unusual things that
have not ever happened before are now taking place. I cannot give you details,
but I can advise you as a friend not to resist anything demanded of you, for it
is useless and very dangerous. Make your unmasking, in other words, relate
everything you know which you may have neglected to declare in the Securitate’s
investigation. But to make it still easier for you, I suggest you ask to report
to the prison’s political officer he is in a position to advise you better.
Tell him you want to unmask yourself but that you do not know how to go about
it, and he will help you.’
“I wanted to get
more information on this, and asked him to explain further, but it was no use
... When I returned to the cell I requested the chief of my section to allow me
to report to the political officer.
“Now, although I
am naturally timid and was still suspicious of the deceptions practiced by the
Ministry of the Interior, particularly at the office of the Malmaison [Military
Prison in Bucharest] secret police, I somehow never suspected my former
schoolmate, the lieutenant, of possible duplicity, and in fact complied with the
advice he gave me almost at once without a second thought. My hasty decision I
now regret, frankly speaking, only to the extent to which the evil I did to
those who came my way after my unmasking was not justified by my own suffering.
But the example of those who suffered so much before I did what I had to do is
quite eloquent: with or without suffering, I would have ended in the same place.
“As I was saying,
I asked to be taken out of my cell to the political officer in order to make my
unmasking, though I had no idea what this meant. To my surprise, they came the
very next day to take me to Turcanu!! He was awaiting me in the shower room and
expressed surprise at my request, for I was the only one, he said, who had asked
permission to make his unmasking without being tortured, without even being
asked to make it. He was surly in manner, but seemed to have some good will
toward me, explaining in some detail what was expected of one in unmasking (we
were speaking of the outer unmasking only) and especially insisting on my being
absolutely sincere, pointing out the consequences of any attempt to deceive.
“As during the
Malmaison investigation, I was faced with making some declarations that broke my
morale; what I added to them at Pitesti did not carry much weight. I thought
that this interview was all there was to unmasking. But upon being taken to
another cell and placed in the position of ‘assisting,’ I was terrified by
what I there witnessed. But any resistance was impossible; even if possible it
would have been worse than futile. Then followed the catastrophe, my inner
unmasking and its consequences ...”
With the exception
of those with tuberculosis, O.C. was the only student I knew who made his
unmasking without first passing under the bludgeon. His was in fact a case
entirely separate from all others, for much later at Gherla he was to play one
of the dirtiest possible roles, long after other students had recovered from
their “purification.”
CHAPTER XIX
THE EXTENSION INTO
OTHER PRISONS
(THE FIRST PHASE)
Under the direct
supervision of Colonel Zeller, the students from Pitesti were divided into
several categories on the basis of the severity of their sentences, their
physical condition, and especially their relative trustworthiness.
Those considered
unfit for work, the irrecoverable tuberculosis cases, were sent by van to
Targu-Ocna prison, ironically called a “sanatorium,” where, of course, there
were invalids transferred from other prisons. Immediately on arrival all
prisoners were subjected to unmaskings, under the direction of Nuti Patrascanu,
a medical student from Bucharest. In this case the approach used was different
from that of Pitesti. There were no beatings, except when other methods failed.
But these methods were much harder on the sick and the infirm. Those chosen to
undergo unmaskings were confronted with the following ultimatum: “If you want
to get medicine, you have to undergo your unmasking, you bandit!” Anyone
refusing to cooperate was faced with confinement in a dark cell, devoid of fresh
air, or a reduction to half rations, or both.
“Look, bandit,
your health is imprisoned here. If you choose to undergo unmasking, you shall
receive the medicine you need, get well, and go home before the end of your
sentence. You could see your mother, family, live freely, and continue your
education. You must choose between life and death. Only you can decide ...”
Even though the value of the medicine was questionable, to the sick it held out
a promise of miraculous powers exaggerated in their minds by the fact that they
could not get it, and the knowledge later that such medicine was denied them
accelerated the progress of their destruction.
This state of
affairs caused a dramatic reaction. Virgil Ionescu, a law student from
Bucharest, who had partially undergone unmasking in Pitesti, tried to commit
suicide by slashing his wrists with a razor blade, in order to end his
suffering. He was discovered and bandaged, but only after losing a large amount
of blood. This case was reported to the administration, but unmaskings continued
nevertheless. The other students went on a hunger strike and warned the director
that they would not quit until the prosecutor was brought to the prison, told
about what went on, and asked to put an end to the unmaskings; but they were
ignored.
One Sunday morning,
a soccer game was being played on the sports field near the prison, with a
goodly number of civilians watching, among whom were many Securitate officers
part of the force guarding the hydroelectric works being built at nearby Bicaz.
Only a narrow strip of land, on which ran a railway line, separated the prison
from the soccer field, and when the students noticed the gathering at the
stadium, they assembled in the cells facing the game and from the windows began
to shout, “We want the prosecutor! We want the prosecutor! They are killing
us! Help!” The prison personnel were not able to shut them up right away and
spectators at the game were intrigued by the shouts for help which they could
clearly hear.
This incident
became the talk of the town for a while, and the Securitate officers, following
several indiscretions of prison personnel, came in and questioned the director.
Others, especially civilians, informed the prosecutor of the Bacau tribunal. And
the commandant of the Securitate, probably on his own initiative without
instructions from the Party, ordered an investigation into the matter. It turned
out to be only a formal inquiry, and the prisoners were then promised that no
one would touch them and the guilty parties would be appropriately dealt with.
But though the beatings and the blackmail stopped, and unmaskings for all
practical purposes terminated, those who had tortured the students went
absolutely scatheless, continuing to make life miserable for the prisoners and
at the same time to hold the best positions in the prison.
In the Ocnele-Mari
prison the unmaskings did not become any milder. In the large prison population
there, in addition to the “political detainees,” there were a great many “criminals,”
who were included with the political prisoners because their crimes, for the
most part minor ones, were considered to have political overtones. (These crimes
included possession of firearms, attempting to flee the country, cursing
prominent Communist personalities, etc.) The greatest proportion of them, though
elderly, were able to hold tools in their hands, so the Directorate of
Penitentiaries opened a large furniture workshop in which all those capable were
obliged to work. This arrangement precluded the rigorous isolation possible at
Pitesti and prisoners could meet more freely and exchange either information or
rumors from the interior of the prison, particularly while in the workshop.
The arrival of
students changed all this. All the work in the corridors was taken care of by
students; the kitchen, watchmen’s duty, distribution of meals, the shower
room, laundry room, etc. became the responsibility of the students, a fact which
created envy and later hatred on the part of the common criminal prisoners who
up to that time had had the benefits of these jobs. Gradually the entire life of
the prison’s interior fell under the control of the students. They circulated
freely along the corridors, entered cells whenever they pleased, under pretext
of housecleaning or any other excuse, eavesdropping by cell doors and recording
anything discussed inside, especially if the cells were occupied by more
important political personalities. They mixed unnoticed among groups in the
courtyard when outings for fresh air were permitted; they were to be found
everywhere, their ears peeled, gathering information for the “dossier” of
those to be put through the unmaskings.
The first victims
were chosen and isolated in the small cells of the prison’s north wing. Among
whom were: Atanase Papanace, a prisoner for three years but still not tried or
sentenced; the lawyer Mateias from Fagaras; the worker Gheorghe Caranica, a
prisoner since Antonescu’s time, held for over nine years and although he had
served his time, the Communists would not free him; the lawyer Nicolae Matusu,
former secretary of the Peasant Party in Greece and a refugee in Romania during
the war, etc. There were about ten in this first group of victims.
The re-educators,
as they later admitted, did not expect resistance from these people, considering
their age. But they were indeed surprised. Not only did those men resist, but
the other inmates heard about the situation very quickly, and reacted. Prominent
personalities, such as Professor Mihai Manoilescu, former cabinet minister;
Solomon, Gheorghe Pop, Petre Tutea, Vojen, and others, immediately warned the
prison’s administrator that if the tortures were not stopped, they would all
declare a hunger strike resulting in mass suicide. Because there was contact
with the outside world through visitors or through incoming common prisoners,
the directorate of unmaskings was worried lest information about the atrocities
get out. As a result, he ordered that re-education through violence cease.
A somewhat unique
case is that of the camps for extermination by slave labor, established at the
Danube-Black Sea Canal.[1] Here, the principal means for
extermination was the brutally hard work. In its name the greatest abuses were
committed, as if for a mythical ruling deity, and the greatest crimes
perpetrated. The behavior of the re-educated students sent here by Colonel
Zeller for “verifying the sincerity of their conversion,” is here recorded.
The Peninsula
Labor Colony was the pompous name for one of these camps which nurtured
crimes against human beings, crimes committed by the use of methods as bestial
as those in the extermination camps of Communist Russia. The Colony was
opened in the fall of 1950. In an open field on which the thistles grew and
where in the past grazed the sheep of the Valea-Neagra village, on the edge of
the Siut-Ghiol lake, the first barracks were built by common criminals and “pioneers,”
after first surrounding themselves with three rows of barbed wire.
Under the
supervision of armed-to-the-teeth troops, there arrived from various prisons
throughout the country massive transports of those who, for the next three
years, were to fight hunger, cold, wet ground, and especially the viciousness of
the Communists who stood over them while they dug a simple hole in the ground
several miles long, for no other purpose than that of burying in it several
thousands of exhausted bodies ...
From Pitesti were
sent about 300 students, all of whom had passed through re-education and were
under sentence of less than ten years. When the first contingent of students
arrived the colony numbered over 3,500 political prisoners. The students were
quartered in barracks No. 13 and No. 14, each barrack having a capacity of
150-170 prisoners. The students were put by themselves as a precaution, so they
would not make contacts which could “deteriorate” their condition,
especially in the evenings after work, because once inside the barracks,
administrative control was next to impossible. A quartering of students in
scattered groups throughout the various other barracks in the camp would have
weakened not only the foundation of their new convictions but also their shock
potential, on which the Communists were counting greatly at the beginning.
The living
conditions and routine at this canal camp were totally different from those at
Pitesti prison. In place of the hermetically closed cell, supervised by the
administration through a peephole in the door, here you had barracks simply
partitioned into four sections, each holding forty beds each.
Prisoners left in
the morning from an open area outside called the “plateau.” All work
brigades assembled there and one could talk more or less freely with other
inmates quite a contrast to the strictness and permanent isolation maintained at
the Pitesti prison. Although the administration’s orders forbade mixing of the
brigades while preparing for roll call, in practice the measure remained
ineffective, for several thousand prisoners stepping out of barracks in the
half-dark of early morning could not be efficiently controlled. Also the spirit
of solidarity, which prevailed at that time at the canal among the prisoners,
demanded a measure of foresight in the administration to prevent an immediate
contamination, an inverse shock, as the students knew nothing, absolutely
nothing of what was going on in other prisons.
In addition to the
two special barracks reserved for students, there were three reserved for
Legionaries who were considered dangerous to the colony’s discipline and who
were subjected to a very rigorous control and surveillance. These barracks were
designated as A, B, and C, and were closely watched because the solidarity of
the Legionary group was only too well known. Another barrack, designated O, held
all those prisoners who were being punished for acts inside the “camp.” They
were almost all headstrong, insubordinate, and were in permanent conflict with
the officers there and the political officials sent by the Ministry of the
Interior.
In the two student
barracks, a climate of terror like that at Pitesti was maintained to the
greatest extent possible from the very first evening. Some time was allowed for
observing the students’ first reactions. The shock was supported quite well,
at least so the experimenters thought, as the students did not falter in their
habit of blind obedience.
The first mission
entrusted to the students coming from Pitesti was that of overseeing work on the
construction site. Students were named brigade leaders, in other words, made
directly responsible for the output of those in their charge. They were ordered,
first, to increase the amount of work to be accomplished, and second, to see to
it that “bandits” were killed slowly by cumulative physical exhaustion
without anyone’s being able directly to prove premeditated extermination.
Many of the
students fulfilled their “mission” with zeal. From among the names of those
who will not be easily forgotten, I give here several that are representative:
Bogdanescu, chief of all students at the canal and first brigadier; Laitin; the
Grama brothers (one of whom later hanged himself); Enachescu; Cojocaru; Climescu;
Stoicanescu; Lupascu; Morarescu; etc. In addition to their contribution to the
construction of the canal, the students had to continue the work of unmasking
other prisoners. For this they resorted to a new method which, besides producing
the desired results, was supposed also to test the feasibility of applying the
system under different conditions. This method, broadly, was as follows:
After the evening
roll call, when in the camp’s interior any kind of movement was strictly
forbidden and the guards walked their beats armed, the individual in question
was discreetly asked to step out of his barracks and invited to follow the
person waiting for him, who was none other than a student from barrack No. 13.
Usually the student covered him with a blanket so he could not see where he was
being taken. All of this took place under the eye of the guards who pretended to
see nothing. The only ones permitted to walk between barracks after lights-off
were the students charged with bringing in victims.
Once the prisoner
arrived at the students’ barracks he was subjected to the known torture
methods. But here in the camp one could not ignore the fact that the victims
yelled. At Pitesti the prison’s isolation made it an ideal place, but at the
canal camp the proximity of the other barracks created a great inconvenience.
But this difficulty was resolved by the use of an old method quite dear to the
first police of the Communist regime in Russia. To cover the shouts of the
victims, a group of students was constantly engaged in making noise! They would
sing in loud voices (no large earth-moving machinery could be brought into the
camp to provide a racket) not exactly songs but what amounted to frenetic shouts
of joy, changing melodies, and explosive yells, in order to cover up the
agonized yells of the tortured victims inside the barracks.
Many were the
victims of unmaskings at the Peninsula and some of them paid with their lives
for the mistake of accepting a student’s invitation. One among the victims in
particular, whose case shook the entire “colony,” was Dr. Simionescu.
Dr. Simionescu was
a distinguished figure both in the old Romanian political circles and in the
medical societies. Professionally very well prepared, he was one of the best
surgeons in Romania before the war. He was a man of deeds; he occupied no
definite position in the hierarchy of officialdom.
Arrested in 1949,
he was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment for having “plotted against
the legal social order”!!! Although he had actually been in the past an active
member of the Cuzist Party,[2] he was arrested for having
kept in touch with a group of political personalities in the National Peasant
Party. He was sent to Aiud to serve his sentence where, in the spring of 1951, I
shared the same cell with him for a while. At the beginning of March he was with
a large group of us prisoners brought by van to the canal, where he was to
continue serving his sentence at labor, even though his age was too advanced for
it.
I, who am endowed
with a quite robust physique, was astonished that the elderly doctor never
complained, not even when we were obliged to unload wet dirt from freight cars
in bitter cold or freezing rain. After a short stop at the Poarta Alba camp
along the canal, we were sent on to the Peninsula camp on May 5, 1951. The
presence of Dr. Simioneseu in the camp was immediately noticed, for he was the
only “cabinet member” to have arrived up to then. (The Communist puppet
directors of the Romanian prisons, in their simplemindedness, referred to all
former high government officials as “cabinet members,” and they extended the
designation to the doctor, even though he had been only a highly respected
professional man.) The re-educators turned him over immediately to Bogdanescu.
They could not forget that the doctor was a member of the generation that had
constituted a permanent stumbling block to Communism in Romania.
One evening he was
invited into the students’ barracks, and it was at this time that his Calvary
began. I could not learn exactly which tortures were inflicted on him that
night; the doctor himself related nothing. But the traces left could not be
hidden, for the next morning, before the brigades went to work, the doctor went
to the infirmary with three broken ribs, and his whole body was black and blue,
with here and there globs of coagulated blood. At the infirmary, in addition to
the regular personnel, the camp’s director, Lieutenant Georgescu, was present;
for no medical diagnosis was accepted as correct unless it had been approved by
one of the political officers.
The physician asked
Dr. Simionescu about the cause of the lesions only as a matter of form for he,
as well as everybody else in the camp, knew very well by whom and how they were
inflicted. Simionescu replied briefly, without much detail, that he had been
taken to barrack No. 13, where he was tortured by the students for reasons
unknown to him. Then Lieutenant Georgescu, who had thus far watched the
examination in silence, intervened. He, whose duty it was to maintain “legality
inside the camp”, shouted:
“Bandit, you are
the victim of your own convictions! Those whom you, as a cabinet minister, were
charged to educate, have beaten you! It is a pity you escaped so lightly! Get to
work now and don’t let me catch you here again, for if I do, I’ll break your
legs as well!!” Naturally, the camp’s physician dared not recommend any kind
of treatment.
From that instant,
Dr. Simionescu was practically condemned to death. He was tortured in the
students’ barracks night after night; he was subjected day after day to toil
beyond his strength in the special brigade supervised by students. His body was
enfeebled by so many beatings at night; and when at work he could not perform
the labors his tormentors demanded, the students beat him into unconsciousness
right under the eyes of the Securitate’s guards. He was old enough to be the
father of any of the students who tortured him.
Another and more
subtle form of torture was also applied to Dr. Simionescu. He was forced to
deceive his own family. At the canal, unlike the other prisons, prisoners were
allowed to communicate with their families under certain conditions. There was a
permanent shortage of foodstuffs, and in keeping with the Communist principle
that “the enemies of the people must not feed on the backs of the people,”
the food distributed by the camp’s administration was so insufficient that the
inmates were subjected to a slow, methodical starvation that could be relieved
only by the packets of food that prisoners were allowed to receive from the
families outside. This provided a simple and easy means of keeping the
slave-laborers under perfect control, for, of course, the precious privilege of
receiving such indispensable nourishment was granted only to prisoners who
fulfilled their labor norms and obeyed every caprice of the administrators and
guards. The arrangement had the further advantage that it placed a great burden
on the impoverished families of the prisoners, who had to support their loved
ones with goods taken from their own meager rations. The added hardships and
sacrifices thus imposed on the families were, of course, not unpleasing to the
Communists.
Dr. Simionescu took
advantage of this privilege or “benefit” as it was called. So his torturers
forced him to write home the appeals they dictated. He was even visited by his
wife after a time. Throughout this visit a representative of the political
officer was present. The doctor had to lie, saying that everything was fine,
that no one should worry about him and he was doubtless glad to keep up the
spirits of his wife, who did not even imagine that she was seeing him for the
last time!
From the parlor the
doctor was taken directly to the students’ barracks. There he was forced to
crawl under the “brigadier’s” table, while above him Bogdanescu, together
with the re-education committee, feasted on what his wife, through hardship and
privation, had managed to bring him from home.
“You have sucked
long enough the sweat of the working people, bandit! When you were banqueting,
the workers were shot because they fought for a piece of bread. Is it not so,
Mr. Minister? From now on it is your turn to suffer in order to pay for the sins
of yesteryear.” The derision was, as usual, followed by a beating, which was
all the half-starved man received for the food brought him by his wife who had,
by the way, been reduced to the utmost penury by the confiscation of all their
property.
His anguish lasted
quite a long time, until in despair he decided to cut the thread of his life. In
keeping with his principles, however, he wanted to die, not by his own hand, but
at the hands of his torturers. So in broad daylight, at work, although exhausted
by beatings and lack of sleep, and brokem by labor and unspeakable humiliations,
he dared advance toward the line of uniformed guards and try to cross over to
the other side. But where? In broad daylight and in the middle of a zone full of
watchful eyes? Any of the Securitate soldiers could grab him by the sleeve and
bring him back. He could hardly walk. Thus, he did not run. The gesture was
premeditated and it was consummated as he had foreseen. For the mission of those
guards was not to preserve lives, but to liquidate as many as possible,
especially when they were given a “legal” opportunity. When Dr. Simionescu
reached the danger zone, a short burst of shots was heard: a Securitate man had
emptied his automatic pistol into the doctor, who had collapsed only a few yards
from him. Several men went to pick up the victim and bring him to the working
area. He was still alive, and could have been saved. But this was not to be. He
was finished off before the watching students, who, in their turn, were
astonished by what they were witnessing for the first time. The doctor’s body
was carried into the center of the encampment so all the “bandits” could see
and take notice. Then it was hauled to the Navodari cemetery for burial among
his former companions-in-agony killed by bullets, hunger, or torture without a
service for the dead, without a cross, without a candle, just exactly in
accordance with Communist custom.
The soldier who
shot Dr. Simionescu was rewarded with a bonus, a promotion, and a furlough!
Dr. Simionescu’s
death could not be kept secret, as was that of so many who were killed in
prisons. Many outsiders knew what went on in the canal labor camps. Contacts
between prisoners and persons from the “greater prison” (as the canal
laborers called the Communist-occupied country outside) was inevitable, because
quite frequently outside technicians and engineers either sought the technical
assistance and advice of their confreres in the camp or used the brawn of
inmates without “professional qualifications,” which included lawyers,
priests, doctors, and other well-educated men. Many outside even had in the camp
a brother, a father, a colleague or friend; or if they had none of these, they
saw in the prisoners their own brothers, i.e., people like themselves. That is
why the help of those who were still relatively free was unquestioningly given,
materially and morally, with all the risks that this involved. And not a few men
ended up behind barbed wire, side by side with those they had helped.
One such person,
either directly or by letter, informed the doctor’s family. Someone came and
claimed the body. Someone else, it seems, requested an audience at the Ministry
of the Interior to get an explanation of why he had been shot to death. The
authorities could not pass this off with a casual explanation, and shortly
thereafter, a colonel in the Securitate, Cosmici, accompanied by his colleague
Colonel Craciunas, arrived at the canal to begin an investigation. Here, as is
normal Communist practice, you have superiors investigating their own
subalterns, who had faithfully carried out orders issued by the very Ministry of
which the investigators were a part and which had ordered the whole experiment
in the first place!
Several persons
were called into the office and interrogated quite summarily, more often than
not on matters quite unrelated to the matter in hand. Then the colonels departed
for Bucharest to report their findings.
At the beginning of
September, or perhaps the very end of August, a group of about ten students from
the canal camp were selected to be sent somewhere. It was learned later that
they went to the Ministry of the Interior for questioning in connection with
Simionescu’s death, but the students, who had been told to bring all their
baggage with them, jumped to the conclusion that they were to be freed before
the end of their sentences for behavior conforming to Communist expectations,
especially since they recalled the semi-official promise given them at Pitesti.
At the gate they were put in chains! This was a special mark of attention
enjoyed only by those sentenced to more than fifteen years, or prisoners who
were apprehended after escape, but the students took the chains as being just
another cover-up, concealing an intention to liberate them, and so left the camp
somewhat joyfully.
But the sight of
chains on those departing students signaled a change which could have been
foreseen by the prisoners better initiated into the mysteries of Communist
logic. When a change is in the making, even one of minor importance, there are
clear preliminary indications, the most obvious one being that the officials in
charge are removed. In Communist theory it is axiomatic that as an ideology,
Communism is infallible, and errors, when committed, are due to opportunism or
the incompetence of the individuals called on to apply the “Party Line.”
Such being the case, the one who pays the piper is naturally not the one who
issued the orders, but the one who carried them out and life-long dedication to
the Party will avail him nothing. If Molotov could not master all the working
rules of Marxism in fifty years,[3] what can one expect of
less talented and less experienced individuals? Invariably, when any project or
policy that is initially applauded as a triumph of Communist genius and
planning, is changed, the blame for the change is laid on the shoulders of the
individual who had the misfortune to carry out the orders. The scapegoat idea is
so deeply embedded in Communist practice that it is considered a law. And this
pattern was, of course, observed at the Peninsula.
The first obvious
indication of coming change was the removal of Georgescu, the administrative
head though perhaps the man least responsible in reality, who was sent to a post
of lesser importance, but not otherwise punished. He was replaced by another
prison director, Captain Lazar, a militia officer notorious for the terror he
imposed at the Fagaras prison, where former army officers accused of
collaboration with Antoneseu or of having joined anti-Communist brigades were
imprisoned, together with practically all of the old regime’s police force.
Each of the prison directors had a favorite means of punishment and Lazar chose
the beating pole.
Other changes
followed at the Peninsula, as if by magic. Students were taken out of barracks
No. 13 and No. 14 and scattered throughout the other barracks. The special work
brigades which had inaugurated a terror theretofore unknown were disbanded, and
the re-educated students were removed from positions of trust which they had
held. But the change was even more far-reaching than this. Lazar himself became
a different man. In contrast to his brutality at Fagaras, he now appeared to be
a civilized man with whom one could talk!
He rejected
carloads of carrots and pickles destined for the prisoners’ diet on the
pretext that one cannot accomplish work with undernourished men. Sanitary
conditions became tolerable; working hours were reduced; production quotas were
reduced to more reasonable levels. Except for those who were always disposed to
interpret the course of international politics by the degree of “the soup’s
viscosity”, no one considered this change as indicating a permanent new era,
for what Lazar did was on orders from Bucharest. But this change was truly
amazing and unique, for no other director, either before or after him, ever
showed a similar attitude. And as an irony of fate, his own daughter fell in
love with a prisoner and did everything in her power to influence her father to
behave humanely.
The disbanding of
the brigades headed by re-educated students and the replacement of director
Georgeseu produced an evolution of the Pitesti experiment along novel lines. It
is quite possible that the initiators of the experiment might have decided to
test the “re-educated” under conditions different from those under which
they had undergone their unmasking at Pitesti. The memory of those conditions
was kept fresh in the minds of the re-educated students by a sub-group
completely loyal to the political officers at the canal. Each group seemed to
alternate in dominance, through conditioned reflexes established at Pitesti. But
what happened among the students thereafter deserves particular attention
because it discloses totally unforeseen aspects of the human soul at least of
the souls of those who for more than two years had been transformed into
something other than human beings.
Escaping from the
terror of their former milieu, from that closed-in hell in which they
reciprocally tormented each other; seeing that the administration no longer
supported those in charge of maintaining the atmosphere created at Pitesti; and
finding that on the contrary they were looked upon with a significant “lack of
understanding,” the students gradually began to change their own attitude
toward both their colleagues and the other prisoners. Little by little, where
before even the thought was impossible, some began a process of
self-examination, of critical analysis, or, as it was said back home, a digging
out of the problems covered by the ashes of terror. Timidly at first, then with
greater daring and in increasingly greater numbers, the students gradually began
to see things through their own eyes and to draw logical conclusions without
quailing in fear of being suspected of thinking other than as ordered.
This process was
prolonged and quite painful. It seemed like a returning from Hell, on the way
out of a hideous, deformed world a return from other shores, or an awakening
from a long nightmare that left visible marks on body and soul. They were like
blind men beginning to see; they feared the light, were suspicious of it,
considered it unreal, impossible. But as a dam is slowly eroded by the water
escaping from a fissure, so their doubt was gradually worn away and slowly
replaced by a love of life, of honesty, of dignity, the beast of yesterday
reverting to manhood.
The wide diversity
of character among the victims accounted for the wide range of time taken by
their recovery. Some who had suffered less and were naturally more pliant
regained their old selves almost immediately. But for others the comeback was
most difficult much time had to pass, month upon month, their wounds being too
deep to heal rapidly. The deeper contoured structures, which had yielded with
great difficulty and shown the greatest resistance during the unmaskings, also
retained the most stubbornly the alien shape that had been imposed on them.
Moreover, the students suddenly expelled from barracks No. 13 and No. 14 and
scattered among the other prisoners found themselves in radically changed
circumstances. They also had to reckon with some of the political officers and
the stool pigeons who served the Communists without being forced and even
without being asked, all of whom saw in the students’ possible comeback a
danger to their personal “careers,” (even though a decrease in the number of
informers would normally have enhanced each one’s value). In any case, a whole
host of different attitudes bristled and clashed under the horribly unnatural
conditions of a slave labor camp.
But in many of the
students, little by little, the wounds of the past whose scars would perhaps
remain forever, began to heal, bringing a certain self-control, but not
forgetfulness that would never come.
But the Communists
will not give up. They will only change the application of “re-education”
and perhaps improve the methods.[4]
1)
|
-A total of 11 camps, according to Ion Carja’s Intoarcerea din Infern
... pp. 12-14. Editor.
|
2)
|
-See above, p. xxx. It is noteworthy that while the
party to which the doctor belonged was emphatically patriotic and
nationalistic, he was convicted of association with members of the most
“democratic” of the political parties, one whose leaders had on
several occasions sought “negotiations” with the Soviet. (Tr.)
|
3)
|
-Scryabin, better known under his Russian alias of Molotov, was one of the
leading agents of the Jewish revolution in Russia, having begun his
criminal career as a Communist conspirator in 1906, and held positions
near the top of the Soviet government ever since the overthrow of Czar
Nicholas II. He was a member of the triumvirate that succeeded Djugashvili
(alias Stalin), but was, with his confederates, replaced by Khruschev in
1959 and exiled to Outer Mongolia. Thus at the time that he missed his
footing, he had more than fifty years’ experience in the Bolshevik
terrorist organization, forty of them near the top of the managerial
hierarchy. It is to this that the author here refers. (Tr.)
|
4)
|
-It is not unlikely that the sudden change at the slave-labor camp was
made to determine the degree of permanence of the re-education in
individuals of different characters. (Tr.)
|
CHAPTER XX
THE DEMON PERSISTS
At the time the
experiment at the canal came to an end, unmaskings at Gherla prison, on the
banks of the Somes River in northern Romania, reached an intensity that perhaps
surpassed even the most difficult moments at Pitesti.
In contrast with
what was tried in the prisons already mentioned, the system at Gherla was
designed to push the technique to its utmost possibilities, extending it to
categories of prisoners other than the students.
For this purpose, a
sizable group of re-educated students was sent by the Ministry to Gherla as a
sort of avant-garde charged with laying the groundwork by gathering information
about the atmosphere and outlook among the prisoners there. When others capable
of work at Pitesti were sent to the canal, Turcanu was sent to Gherla,
accompanied by his immediate entourage who were most devoted to him and also the
most adept at use of the bludgeon. They prepared the way for the larger
contingents that were sent later.
Special measures
were taken by the political administration of the prison in advance of Turcanu’s
arrival. The entire fourth floor was evacuated for use in unmaskings, and placed
at Turcanu’s disposal. All the students from Pitesti were to be incarcerated
in the cells on this floor, the top one of the main prison building.
Gherla prison was
second in importance only to Aiud. Originally a reformatory for minor
delinquents, it was adapted to other uses as the conflict between the Romanian
populace and their Communist masters developed. It was then equipped with
special workshops in which the condemned, without regard to length of sentence
or state of health, were subjected to working conditions much worse than at the
canal.
The hundreds of
students transferred to Gherla were all left on the fourth floor in their cells
for quite some time, completely isolated from the rest of the inmates. Then
their screening began anew, under the direct supervision of the Securitate
Lieutenant Avadanei, the new political appointee in charge of re-education. The
students were then re-grouped and sent into workshops, with specific missions to
accomplish.
Contact between the
new prisoners and the old was established then without any difficulty. None of
the older prisoners could even guess that those newly arrived were living in a
different world and governed by laws other than human ones. Their reception was
as natural as could be, with much warmth, even with joy and relief, for the
placing of a student corps in their midst was a pleasant surprise and considered
by the workers as probably a mistake on the part of the Communists![1]
Soon, however, a
very few of the new arrivals tried to warn their destined victims, for despite
their inculcated terror, a small grain of humanity, encysted in their souls,
could not continue dormant under the warmth of their reception by the older
prisoners at Gherla. Among the hundreds of students there were several who
mustered courage to caution one or more of the older men to beware of them.
Great as was the risk they took, equally great was the inability of those being
warned to comprehend what they were being told. It seemed to them incredible
surely these warnings must be prompted by the Communists, who for a long time
had been conducting a campaign of defamation against the students as a class. If
a student spoke evil of his colleagues, how could the individual being warned
verify the statements except by asking another student, whom he had known on the
outside as a dedicated anti-Communist? And the contingents of students sent to
Gherla pretended to be still staunchly anti-Communist in order to gain the
confidence of the older prisoners and learn from them everything that might be
useful to the administration.
The mad attempt by
a few of the students to warn of what was to come was made in vain. None of the
workers would believe the monstrosities with which the students were charged.
For one thing, there was not much real opportunity for extended conversation to
elucidate the warnings, and there was always the risk of being overheard and
reported a danger that maintained the conditioned reflex of fear in the
students. Although a few had the courage to talk to workers in the prison shops,
it did not enter their minds to discuss among themselves the possibility of a
general change of the state of mind induced by their re-education at Pitesti.
They dared not trust one another! So there was no concerted effort made to warn
the workers only a few scattered gestures by isolated individuals here and
there. But this did not prevent Turcanu from learning about what was going on.
Among the students
who arrived in the first lot was one named Rodas, originally from Ploesti. When
he first went to work, he met former friends in the underground, men in whom he
had complete faith. Taking advantage of a moment of freedom from surveillance,
he related to one of them the entire drama of Pitesti in simple words, trying to
make it clear to him as quickly as possible, as he knew he did not have much
time. His friend listened attentively, but could hardly believe what he heard.
So he tried to verify the story by asking another student whom he trusted.
Actually, he hoped to get a repudiation of a story that seemed perfectly
incredible. And, as he had expected, the student put his mind at ease, saying,
“Rodas is an informer for the Securitate, and what he said is part of an
infamous plan set up by the Communists to compromise the students!” The worker
went to bed reassured; a heavy burden was lifted from his heart; and the next
day he told his friends to beware of Rodas. The informer immediately reported to
Turcanu, for so far as he was concerned, from his heart, too, was lifted a
burden, for he, as it turned out, was Rodas’s surveillant a pure coincidence!
The next day,
Turcanu entered a cell on the fourth floor and ordered all the students to face
the wall. Then he called out, ordering somebody in the corridor to come in. When
the students were ordered to turn around, they saw standing beside Turcanu a
person with a sack over his head so they could not recognize him. And when in
the silent cell Turcanu jerked the sack off, they still could not recognize the
man, for before them stood a figure with a grotesquely disfigured head, his
entire face one swollen bluish wound. Large globs of blood covered his features,
stringing downward over his clothes. The man was visibly shaking on his feet,
hardly able to stand upright. His whole body trembled as though siezed with
chills. A corpselike pallor spread over the faces of all the students as they
fearfully gazed, trying in vain to identify the victim and imagine a reason for
such disfiguration.
“Rodas squealed,”
said Turcanu, and then everyone understood. “I have ears everywhere,”
continued the monster. “A word to the wise ... to all who eventually may be
tempted to talk. This is the first case; the next one will not be brought before
you to see, for he will not live ... Just so you all may know.” This scene was
repeated in almost all the cells on the floor. After such a spectacle, could
anyone contemplate warning the workers again?
I observed several
times during my years in prison that witnessing the suffering and torture of
another often has a stronger psychological effect than one’s own suffering.
Prolonged physical torture eventually produces a sort of analgesia, which if it
does not deaden the pain of blows, at least diminishes its intensity. But
invariably, when you see someone else being tortured, the image produced in your
mind becomes fantastically exaggerated and has a truly polarizing effect on the
consciousness. This phenomenon was so useful to the Communists that they gave it
a name, “witnessing-the-spectacle,” and used it systematically in
investigations in general, and particularly in unmaskings at Pitesti. The
individual who “witnessed the spectacle” was seized by such fear that his
very intestines froze within him.
The effect, then,
that Rodas’s appearance had on the students at Gherla can be guessed.
Thereafter all the students were ostentatious in manifesting a provocative
anti-Communist attitude in order to obtain information for dossiers on their
future victims. In the evening they would dutifully prepare their reports for
the committee, where cross-checks were made.
The appearance of
the students who were taken to the workshops was most deplorable. The terror,
hunger, and the regimen of isolation to which they had been subjected for months
on the fourth floor had turned them into living phantoms. Many workers, out of
love or charity, shared their own poor rations with them hoping to help. The
student accepted food, for hunger is invincible; but once his hunger was
appeased, terror took its place. And he would report in the evening that he had
accepted Legionary help from the so-and-so bandit!!
Little by little,
day after day, the dossiers were being built up, with emphasis on information
leading to identifying workers who had the most influence in the prison.
Unmaskings were resumed, Room 99 on the fourth floor being retained for this
purpose. It faced northeast, away from the town, its windows looking down on the
inner courtyard of the prison, and was considered most suitable as no one from
outside could hear the screams and blows. It had two doors but was not
contiguous to any other cell. Not far away, however, still in the inner wing and
on the same floor, were three smaller cells, 96, 97 and 98, which were kept for
use in case of unusual resistance, as was another small cell, 101, in the front
wing. In these small cells veritable orgies of torture took place.
The activities on
the fourth floor at Gherla could not be completely concealed from the other
inmates of the prison, especially those whose cells were on the floors
immediately below. They noticed first of all that while on the other floors
members of the staff and prisoners passed frequently along the railed balconies
outside the cells looking on the inner court, there was no movement on the
balcony of the fourth floor. Some of the prisoners wondered about this and
guessed that something unusual must be happening up there. Then one day they
witnessed a remarkable scene. Suddenly, at one end of the fourth-floor balcony,
the door of a corner cell (Room 99) was flung open and out darted a figure, his
face covered with blood, who dashed along the balcony and down the stairway
pell-mell, yelling at the top of his voice that he was being murdered by his
cellmates. In hot pursuit came the O.D.C.C. boys out of Room 99, who caught him
as he headed for the administration office, and dragged him, screaming and
struggling, back up the stairs. Then all disappeared into Room 99.
The bleeding victim
was a young student, Bubi Roman from Timisoara Polytechnical School, who had
been one of the most dedicated of anti-Communists.To quiet the talk among the
workers in the shops, the O.D.C.C. put into circulation the story that Roman
suffered from paranoia, and that his mental condition had deteriorated until his
delusions of persecution had become violent insanity. To make this fiction more
plausible, for several days thereafter they ostentatiously conducted Roman daily
to the infirmary, where Dr. Barbosu gave him hypodermic injections that were
falsely described as powerful sedatives.
After this
incident, the surveillance over the fourth floor was intensified. The door of
Room 99 was never under any circumstances left unlocked; no one being subjected
to unmaskings was left unguarded for even a moment; and supplemental beatings
were administered for even the slightest gesture that could be interpreted as an
attempt “to sabotage the unmaskings.”
The director of
Gherla prison at this time was a Securitate captain named Gheorghiu, whose
unique characteristic was cynicism. And he had a temper that would flare up, for
instance, if a newly arrived prisoner admitted he was condemned for only five or
ten years; but he was very happy when a prisoner admitted a 25-year sentence!
“This,” he used to say, “is Gherla University. When you graduate (but I do
not believe you ever will) you will be true men. Until then, I am your master.”
The political
officer was Lieutenant Avadanei, a Moldavian from the Botosani region, and, some
say, a former elementary school teacher. Extremely evil, he felt some kind of
fiendish satisfaction in trampling upon the bodies of prisoners until they
fainted. At Gherla there was plenty of proof that bestiality, when unleashed,
and nurtured by fear, becomes a sort of necessity, an insatiable appetite that
can never be satisfied, and grows in direct proportion to its exercise.
At Gherla, one beat
another only for the pleasure of it, no longer to destroy a belief or supplant
it with another, or extort secrets, or disfigure the soul. One beat senselessly.
Workers and students, young and old, educated and the illiterate, were all
tortured the same, even when they had nothing more to say, could not confess any
more than they already had, could not be any further degraded.
During the war,
Captain Magirescu was sent to the Russian front whence he returned without one
of his legs. Arrested and condemned in 1948 at Iasi for anti-Communist activity,
he was sent to Gherla, where he worked in the workshop. Then he was put in room
99 for unmasking. In the end, they beat him over the scar of his half-leg with
broomsticks until his mouth opened as did his wound.
Others at Gherla in
room 99 while undergoing unmasking were forced to move their bowels into the
mess-pans in which they normally received their soup. They were then forced,
during continued beating, to eat their own feces from the dish.
The peasant Ball
from the Hunedoara region was kept for several nights hanging by his armpits,
having a stone-loaded knapsack on his back, his feet hanging two inches above
the floor so he could not rest his weight. And because it seemed to his
tormentors that his burden was too light, they also would climb on his back. And
his was not the only case!
Prisoners were
forced to “polish” the “samot” (a kind of rubbery material
covering the floors) even though this was an impossibility; they scrubbed at
this ridiculous task hours on end with a dry cloth, while at the same time
carrying piggyback two, three or more committee members. When exhausted, their
throats choked with the dry dust, they collapsed, they were not allowed to lie
there and rest, but were given more beatings.
Another interesting
custom was that of requiring inmates to crawl under a wooden bed from one end to
the other, using only their elbows to propel them through, the body held
perfectly straight, without any help from the knees. As they came to each end
they were met by committee members with clubs to indicate when to turn around.
For hours, morning or afternoon, this sport was enjoyed by the re-educators
whenever they felt the urge. Only prisoners lucky enough to faint in the process
were left in peace.
At other times,
they were ordered to crawl part way under the bed, then suddenly stand up
straight through the bed-boards, throwing everything into disarray, messing up
the handful of clothing remaining to them after years of detention, and then
ordered by the use of clubs, to remake the beds in half a minute with the
headrest just as high as before.
It was at Gherla
also that prisoners were forced to “run the gauntlet” between two rows of
re-educators armed with broomsticks not just once, but back and forth again and
again, slowly. At this prison the use of lavatories was at times absolutely
forbidden, with consequences that can be imagined.
But sadistic
torture was not the only kind indulged in at Gherla: there was also humorous
torture, accompanied by jokes! One victim, considered the greater bandit, was
obliged to stand on the shoulders of a lesser bandit, and from there launch
himself into the air, simulating an airplane at landing. This was repeated until
he landed perfectly flat, or broke his ribs.
1)
|
-The reader must remember the peculiar situation in Romania where
university students, being a select and intellectually superior group with
a reputation for integrity, patriotism and love of God, were highly
respected. See pages xxiv ff. above. (Tr.)
|
CHAPTER XXI
DESPERATE ENDEAVORS
At Gherla, as at
Pitesti, there were prisoners who watched for any opportunity, the slightest
relaxation of surveillance, to commit suicide. Others tried to tell the director
of the prison what was being done on the fourth floor, even though they could
not really expect anything in the way of corrective measures from those who had
ordered the whole experiment, or from those who conducted it and reaped the
harvest from it. These desperate endeavors bordered on insanity. But then,
everything that happened at Gherla was a sort of madness, a collective insanity
seizing administrators and prisoners alike, who competed to destroy everything
that could be called human in a world where, long ago, man had been reduced to a
hated animal to be exterminated by hunger and terror.
The first prisoner
who tried to approach the administration was a Macedonian worker named E.O.,
from Banat, who had been condemned to ten years at hard labor. One day, while
full unmaskings were in progress, his cell was visited by an inspector from the
Ministry of the Interior, General Nicolschi himself, who was in charge of the
General Office of Investigations for the whole country. The routine followed
during his visit was like that at Pitesti: the prisoners stood at attention,
having been warned by the re-educators not to speak, but only listen to the
General. Suddenly, when nobody expected it, E.O. broke ranks and requested
permission to speak. The inspector was so surprised, he let him talk.
As rapidly as he
could, for he knew the opportunity would not last long, he related to the
inspector all that he and his cellmates were suffering; asked that measures be
taken to stop the torturings and to punish those responsible for them. Director
Gheorghiu, who witnessed this scene, feigned so perfectly to be impressed and
visibly surprised that the victims themselves could have believed that he knew
nothing about such things happening. He told General Nicolschi that he knew
nothing of torturings, that no one had ever reported anything of the sort to
him, that he would investigate personally to learn how much of what E.O. said
was true, and that he would take the necessary steps to correct the situation,
if it actually existed. The Inspector General was prompt to promise that he
would look into the matter himself, and that he would personally see to it that
the guilty parties were punished. Both Nicolschi and Gheorghiu ignored the
obvious evidence before their very eyes, the condition of the prisoners at that
very moment their battered faces and the black and blue contusions on their
emaciated bodies, visible, of course, on E.O. as he made his report.
Of course no
investigation was ever made, nor any remedial steps taken. Instead, Turcanu
instituted reprisals, consisting this time of pulling off toenails with pliers,
necessarily supplied by the administration for that purpose. This happened in
the tiny cell in which E.O. was isolated after making his report. When I met him
in 1954, he could eat only bread and potatoes, for by the time he left that
cell, his liver had been destroyed.
Despite later
denials, the entire experiment was supervised and coordinated by the Communist
Ministry of the Interior by General Nicolschi or his superiors. Two students,
Popescu and Andreescu, who had undergone unmasking while at Pitesti, were
summoned to a supplementary inquisition in Bucharest. They spent several months
there in special cells the Ministry of the Interior maintained on Victoriei
Street; then, perhaps because of an oversight on the part of some officer in
charge of transportation, they were taken to Jilava, where they remained for
some time and were thrown in with the other prisoners. There the warm, friendly
atmosphere among the prisoners and their trust of one another helped allay the
fear in their hearts. Eventually Popeseu and Andreescu told some of them of
earlier events at Pitesti, naturally without too much detail. Strangely enough,
however, the moment thev arrived at Gherla, the O.D.C.C. committee already knew
everything they had told the inmates at Jilava. Through its informers the prison
administration at Jilava had learned of it, transmitted the report to the
Ministry, which in turn warned Turcanu. The suspicion of their being “opportunists”
a term used at Pitesti for those who appeared to have been won over but remained
“bandits” at heart was sufficient grounds for their being forced to submit
again to the entire gamut of torture, in the company of others who were passing
through unmasking for the first time.
Some prisoners
tried to escape from the unmaskings by choosing the supreme solution, suicide.
The peasant P., from the Constanta region, who had been arrested and condemned
to 15 years imprisonment, was brought to Gherla in the summer of 1951, and
shortly thereafter taken to room 99. Because he offered resistance, he was
isolated in one of the smaller cells and subjected to an individual unmasking
under constant surveillance. But one day, left alone for a few minutes, he was
able to get a piece of glass from a window pane and awkwardly cut the veins of
his neck. He was soon found flat on the floor in a pool of blood; the
re-educators in a panic sent to the administration for help. Director Gheorghiu
and the political ofricer came running, with the prison physician in tow, who
stopped the bleeding. When he could be questioned, P. told them that he tried to
commit suicide because he could no longer endure the tortures inflicted on him
by fellow prisoners for no reason. The director assured him that thenceforth
nothing would happen to him, and that those who tortured him would be severely
punished, but that he would havp, to promise never to attempt suicide again. P.
promised; the director left the cell. Then immediately entered Turcanu and
others, who never left him alone until he capitulated, completely cowed and
broken.
Another peasant,
this one from Moldavia’s Campu-Lung, sought to end his life differently. For
writing the declarations during his unmasking, he was given the usual soap
tablet and a needle. He broke the needle and swallowed the pieces, thinking to
end his agonies; but the needle must have lodged in some marginal tissue, as he
suffered not a single ill effect. When the written declaration was required of
him, and of course the needle as well, he had only the soap tablet to turn in!
He said he had lost the needle. He was then tortured and forced to search for
it. In the end he had to confess that he had swallowed it. Now, in addition to
ordinary tortures, he was obliged to move his bowels into the mess-pan for three
or four days and check to see whether or not the pieces of the needle had been
eliminated. Of course he did not find them. The immediate consequence of this
was the destruction of his liver by severe beatings, necessitating in time
complicated surgery which left him, for the remainder of his life, able to eat
only toasted bread and baked potatoes. When I met him in 1953, still in the
workshop, he was distributing the bread out in the hall as part of his job; the
administration, as a great favor, granted him the privilege of baking for
himself a handful of potato in the prison kitchen. It would be a miracle if he
is still alive.
* * * * *
At Gherla the
technique of surprise by sudden betrayal was modified, doubtless in the light of
experience acquired at Pitesti. Here, for example, is a scene described by a
high-school student who was among the last to pass through room 99. He was one
of a group of youths arrested and sentenced just before the closing of the “Center
for Re-education at Pitesti,” and one of the few who, though serving time at
Pitesti, miraculously were not subjected to re-education there; as a matter of
fact, that was the reason why he was not shipped to the labor camp at the canal.
I quote him:
“Having arrived
at Gherla, we were quartered in a large cell on the fourth floor, where there
were several older students who circulated among us and soon succeeded in
gaining our confidence, even coming to know us intimately. Under the
circumstances, we felt we could ask their help on various personal problems
which we could not solve by ourselves. Thus each of us found himself a
confidant, an advisor, a friend. None of us noticed that their principal concern
was focused on just two points: our anti-Communist activity, and our attitude
toward the prison administration, especially its political officers.
“Around the
beginning of September, we were moved into room 99. Here we met other students
who received us with the same warmth as those in the first cell.
“Our days were
organized according to a schedule which, within the limits of the prison’s
regulations, was rigorously respected. The day began with prayer said on our
knees. Then followed the National-Christian[1] education
period, which lasted quite a while. The afternoon was reserved for more informal
occupations. There were several groups studying different foreign languages, and
you joined the one you wished; lectures were given on various subjects by those
who had studied them, to enlarge our general knowledge. The evenings offered the
most pleasant moments. Usually someone with literary talent would give us a talk
on the work of a Romanian or foreign writer. We would all be seated around him
and a warm family atmosphere made us forget the inferno that surrounded us.
Patriotic poetry was not neglected, nor even the songs, although the prison
rules strictly forbade singing, especially patriotic singing. The day ended with
prayer again said on our knees.
“Who could
believe that those who led the prayers, appearing almost transfigured with
religious fervor, could be perjurers? Could it be that in those moments, taking
advantage of the opportunity, they too were truly praying? More than two weeks
passed in this manner. Such an atmosphere of perfect harmony prevailed that not
a few times I felt a satisfaction in having been arrested, for through my arrest
I was privileged to know such men and enjoy such moments! Friendships flowered
like buds in the spring! No one could ever suspect how near were the blizzards.
“The room chief
was a student from Iasi, Alexandru Popa, not too bright compared with some
others, but very active. Turcanu too was in the room. But he was very reserved
and went around almost unnoticed. Now and then he, Popa and two or three others
would go into a corner and talk in subdued voices. Because they were all from
Iasi, and friends besides, no one suspected anything amiss in these private
confabs.
“And then all of
a sudden, the sky fell in. One evening, at the end of the work day and after the
latch was closed on the outside of the cell, we were getting ready for the usual
program when Turcanu gave the order that everyone except us (the late arrivals)
should form into two rows, leaving a narrow corridor between. Each one had in
his hands either a bludgeon, a broomstick, or a belt. Turning to us he ordered
us to run the gauntlet between the two rows. We thought this was a game intended
to give us all a little fun. But in a few seconds the room reverberated with our
shrieks and with the oaths of those beating us. I was by chance at the end of
the line. I stopped bewildered, and forgetting that I also must follow where my
friends had passed, I got over to the end of one of the beaters’ rows beside
one of the older ones, and began a frightful yelling, not realizing what I was
doing, literally crazed by the spectacle unfolding before my very eyes. I was
gesticulating, hands up in the air, like an insane person caught in a crisis.
The individual standing by me suddenly recognized me as being one of those
supposed to pass under the bludgeons and, grabbing me by the neck, shoved me
into the gauntlet. This is how I entered the unmasking. How I came out of it,
you had the opportunity of seeing for yourself when you met me. Much time has
passed since then and somehow I have succeeded in seeing things more lucidly.”
I asked the boy,
“How did the beaten group react as a whole, for they must have reacted
somehow?”
“I could not say
that anybody tried to defend himself,” he replied, “for everything happened
so fast. Anyway, resistance was useless. If there was any spontaneous reaction,
it did not last long. It is true that several of those who were beating us ended
up with cracked skulls, but this was probably accidental in the confused melee;
but perhaps it happened intentionally, for among the wielders of weapons there
may have been some who struck a “colleague” to revenge some beating received
during his own unmasking. Anyhow, when it was all finished, there we were, the
wheat with the tares, in a pile of broken and bloody bodies, heaped on the
floor. Among these was my body. My soul left me that evening, and it has not yet
returned into me entirely, not even now. As at Pitesti, maybe even worse than
there, the inner collapse preceded the physical one. For in contrast to Pitesti,
this time the students who had taught us and prayed with us took part in the
proceedings from the first session. Their presence among the beaters
contributed, I believe, to the paralyzing of any possible spirit of resistance.
“Following this,
we passed into the usual phase of unmasking, which lasted more than a month and
was not much different from the procedure used at Pitesti. Then, there followed
a series of two more. I was an ‘in position’ witness to the first series
because I was still considered not fully re-educated. During the second series,
some of my colleagues were promoted to the ranks of the re-educated. By now I
was witnessing impassively their disintegration, trying only to see in them that
which I could not see in me how a soul is shredded.
“From time to
time one of our group would disappear for several days. I had no idea where he
was taken. When he returned, he was completely broken. It was only later that I
found out that the ones so chosen were put into the small cells down the hall
and were there subjected to a continuous individual unmasking.”
The “witnessing-of-the-spectacle”
was used as at Pitesti, except on a larger scale. The slightest sign of doubt or
of disobedience was immediately punished by bringing the culprit into room 99 to
watch an unmasking. The feelings experienced by such witnesses were described to
me vividly by one of the scores of students with whom I spoke:
“Watching others
being tortured,” he said, “I had the impression that I had been bound and
placed on a powder keg, and that a madman constantly circled around the keg with
a lighted candle. I expected the flame to touch the powder at any moment, and
that the keg with me on it would be blown up. That could have happened at any
time; in other words, if a re-educator suddenly took the notion that I had been
given too light a punishment for my suspected guilt, he could have transferred
me from ‘spectator’ to ‘sufferer’ on the spot the equivalent of setting
off the powder with the candle flame.”
In just a few
months, more than 200 prisoners passed through unmaskings at Gherla and the
Communists thus increased the ranks of their faithful by 200. This is why the
“progressive” education introduced by the Communists used the bludgeon
instead of the bullet; why the killing of prisoners was forbidden: They did not
seek to destroy individual men but the very human species itself, by inducing
conditioned reflexes which turned men into creatures as obedient as robots and
as ferocious as wounded tigers rabid with hatred of humanity. A dead tiger could
not be used to destroy others.
More than 200 had
passed through the unmaskings, and with the constant acceleration of the
increasing numbers, it could have been predicted that within six months every
inmate of the prison would have been thoroughly re-educated, if nothing untoward
happened.
But something did
happen, unexpectedly.
1)
|
-I.e., the principles and doctrine of the Legion. (Tr.)
|
CHAPTER XXII
THE UNLEASHED DOGS
Without previous
warning, on the evening of November 14, 1951, more than two years after the
Pitesti experiment was begun, orders came to stop all unmaskings; not suddenly
and abruptly but gradually, as a new phase was to be introduced. In other words,
the phase of “violence” (i.e., beatings) was to be superseded by a new phase
modeled to some extent on the method used at the canal, but with better
surveillance. The unmaskings did not, as a matter of fact, end until February or
March of the next year, when Colonel Zeller of the Securitate appeared. He came
on an official mission, that of increasing production in the prison workshops,
which meant sending as many prisoners as possible into them. To this end, most
of the re-educators as well as the re-educated ended up having to go to work,
and the whole prison population was shifted around. The reassignments to shop or
group produced an entirely new mixing of students with other prisoners. This
changed the atmosphere everywhere; it became indescribably poisoned.
The students were
no longer in positions of command, yet their whole re-formed character was
conditioned to control others through unmaskings. So, since the O.D.C.C.’s
right to beat prisoners had been revoked, they took it upon themselves to
inaugurate their own form of discipline at Gherla and, for the next two years
they maintained, with the help of a naturally cruel administration, a state of
terror unique in the annals of prison history.
Whether in workshop
or cell, at the workbench or in the queue waiting for soup, in the lavatory or
the shower, at any time, the re-educator would listen, all ears, to hear “what
was being discussed,” and would inform the administration promptly and
pointedly so as to keep the reprisals as close to the spirit of unmaskings as
possible.
Punishment for
imaginary crimes was multiplied mercilessly. Incarceration, severe beatings,
solitary confinement with minimal clothing, halving of food rations at the end
of twelve hours of slave labor, the more severe regimen of being fed only once
every three days these constantly supplied a special section with more and more
tuberculosis cases, and the cemetery with hundreds of bodies.
After the right of
the re-educated to torment was revoked, the torturing was by Communists
directly, and they used their best qualified individuals to do it, namely the
prison’s political officers and especially their chief, Lieutenant Avadanei.
As was normal
Communist procedure, Director Gheorghiu was transferred to some other place and
in his stead was brought in a new director, Captain Petre Goiciu. Formerly a
tinsmith with the Romanian Railways in Galati, he was a Bulgarian notorious for
his ferocity, which exceeded that of Maromet, the director of Jilava prison. As
his assistant, and chief of production, Lieutenant Mihalcea, another degenerate
maniac, was appointed.
This trio, Avadanei,
Goiciu and Mihalcea ruled the prison for years, zealously executing orders and
competing with one another for the highest marks in sadism, until they were
rewarded with promotion in the Party hierarchy.
Around Christmas of
1951, Turcanu and ten of his collaborators were called to the prison’s main
office, where they were put in chains and sent away by van, no one could imagine
why. Everybody soon learned about their departure and thought the unmaskings at
Gherla had either come to an end or reached their final stage so that Turcanu
was no longer needed, and had perhaps been transferred to take up his
long-awaited and much anticipated activities at Aiud. Turcanu had often bragged,
“Soon I shall leave for Aiud, to accomplish the unmaskings of the leaders
there.”
He and his
collaborators believed that they were being taken to Aiud, the next step up for
them, as just reward for all their hard work. A man who traveled with them in
the same prison van later related, “During the entire trip, all the way to
Jilava, they all sang, and enjoyed themselves as if they were going home. When
we drove by Aiud, and did not stop, they thought they were being taken to the
Ministry of the Interior to be freed, remembering the promise by the Communists
to reward them in consideration of their merits. Even at Jilava, during our
first days there, Turcanu talked about novels and cowboy movies, and was
relaxed, even radiant, and satisfied.”
But one day, an
officer from the Ministry came into the cell occupied by Turcanu and others.
“Why were you
brought here, bandit?”
This was the first
time since the beginning of unmaskings that Turcanu had been asked that
insulting question.
“I was brought
here to be freed,” he answered, somewhat disgruntled.
“You bandit,”
growled the officer, “you were brought here to account for the crimes you
committed in prison.” And he left, slamming the door as he went.
The smug smile on
Turcanu’s face abruptly changed into an impotent grimace, and that was the
last seen of him by any survivors. From that moment on, for more than three
years, as long as the investigation lasted in the Ministry on Victoriei Street,
none but his inquisitors and their families saw his face.
Following his
departure from Gherla, group after group of inmates, both tortured and the
torturers, were taken to the Ministry of the Interior. As the re-educated
continued to leave on these trips, the Gherla prisoners were sure that Turcanu
must be engaged in the unmaskings at Aiud and was getting more collaborators
from Gherla to step up the work. But after a while, some of those who had left
began to return, and the strict orders by the Ministry not to utter a single
word about the reason for their trip to Bucharest, was not respected by all of
them. Little by little, almost everybody except those who fanatically believed
in the practice of re-education by violence began to realize that an
investigation was going on. But no one really believed that punishment of
Turcanu was conceivable; they did not understand Marxist dialectics, and so
reasoned on the basis of their poor “reactionary” logic. So almost everyone
remained sceptical, believing this was only a new trap. Besides, no sensational
purging had taken place in the higher echelons of the Party, and nothing had
changed at Gherla either, where terror still ruled and everything was proceeding
according to the most perfect Communist pattern. Furthermore, as time went by,
the terror intensified, punishments becoming more severe for infractions that no
inmate had ever heard of. Lieutenant Avadanei was more and more brutal and the
spirit of O.D.C.C. continued to dominate undiminished over the entire body of
prisoners.
But on the dark
depths of terror at Gherla, like a glimmering light, a reaction was beginning.
CHAPTER XXIII
THE SECOND PHASE
The reaction began
with prisoners who escaped unmasking because the process had been abandoned.
Some, who had been fortunate enough to escape that hell, knew nothing of the
unmasking technique and could not understand what really had happened. They knew
nothing of the terrifying moulding of a “new man” or of the depth of the
inflicted wounds, which many of us believed could never heal. Others, who had
come into direct contact with students and personally experienced the nature of
the monsterman that had been created over a period of five years, nevertheless
asked themselves in astonishment when given time to think, “Can these things
really be true?”
What constitutes a
still greater paradox, however, is that a large number of victims, even among
the students, could not see that they had been used as guinea pigs in an
experiment. They regarded what had happened as nothing more than a passionate
unleashing of the hate normally generated by the Party’s ideology, or as a
sort of drunkenness that broke the dams of reason when the Romanian Communists
found themselves the beneficiaries of an undreamed-of victory.
The body of
prisoners who had not been re-educated fell into several classes according to
the way in which they viewed and judged the phenomenon.
The majority did
not comprehend at all what it was all about; they perceived only the physical
aspects, the beatings or overt wrongs done directly to them, and they judged the
whole phenomenon in those terms, which after all were of only secondary
importance. Most of these prisoners came from uncultivated backgrounds and were
by nature disposed to interpret everything only through what they could see with
their own eyes. Their reasoning was quite simple: “Yes, I know they suffered;
I myself was tortured during my investigation, and perhaps I wronged others. But
why did the students not stop their nefarious activity immediately, when they
were dispersed to workshops or work colonies? Why did they continue to serve the
administration and harm other prisoners? Was it just to feather their own nests?”
Discussion with these persons was quite difficult. Their attitude was a simple
one, without subterfuge and not openly hostile. To the query, “What did you do
to help the students come back to normal?” they would answer, “They were
better educated than we and therefore better able to understand what was
happening to them. How could I risk my skin when I knew that if I got close to
one of them in good faith, he would immediately denounce me as an enemy of the
administration, and then where would I be? I’d have to suffer the
consequences!” And they would cite the example of workers who initially wanted
to help but were betrayed.
A second class,
small in number, was made up of those who, prior to their arrest, had generously
collaborated with the Communists, hoping thus to be forgiven their membership in
various political parties. In any discussion, these men deliberately created
confusion between their own voluntary acts of collaboration and acts resulting
from conditioned reflexes. Their reasoning was even more elementary than that of
the simpler folk. “Man’s soul is weak,” they explained, “and subjected
to fear and pressure, to hunger and the uncertainty of the morrow; it gives in;
it cannot stand fast in a position of resistance when faced with and pressed by
the forces in power.”
There was yet a
third class composed of individuals who all their lives had done nothing but
seek positions of vantage. They posed as victims, with a thinly disguised intent
of making themselves heroes of resistance, then, equipped with a record of
imprisonment, they intended to make political hay out of it, in some cases, as agents
provocateurs. This class avoided contact of any kind whatsoever with the
world of the re-educated.
But a few of those
incarcerated at Gherla their numbers increased as time passed tried to
understand the phenomenon and the real motives for the experiment. They
understood what you could call counter-re-education, adopting an attitude of
uncompromising hostility toward everything that smacked in the least of the
spirit of re-education. This brought them into conflict, not with the
administration, as would normally have been the case, but with the re-educated
students so strongly affected by the experiment that they seemed to have
identified themselves with it. Any questioning of the new truths they professed
with such fanaticism constituted a new torture almost unendurable perhaps as
painful morally as their unmaskings.
Endeavoring to
clear a path toward re-establishment of contact with all the re-educated who had
been consumed in the inferno at Gherla was a work that often was punished by
incarceration which, in a Romanian prison, meant confinement in a cubicle whose
dimensions are such that the prisoner is forced to remain in a slightly stooped,
standing position; he can neither sit nor lie down nor stretch up.
Thus much time had
to pass before the atmosphere changed sufficiently to make living together in
cells bearable, and reciprocal mistrust was dispelled. And in the meantime, the
suffering caused by the re-educated was great.
CHAPTER XXIV
INHUMAN PENALTIES
The scene takes
place in the Gherla prison yard, several months before Turcanu and his
collaborators were transported to the Ministry of the Interior.
An inmate walks in
an inner courtyard surrounded by the four walls of the buildings, an area of
several hundred square yards. His hands clasped behind his back, his head bowed,
he was deep in his own thoughts when some noise made him lift his head and look
up. That instant, Martinus appeared in front of him.
“Bandit,” said
Martinus, “you look skyward, believing that the Americans will come from
there?”
The inmate lowered
his head without a word.
“Bandit, why do
you lower your head? You look at the ground because you despise me, is that it?”
A prison guard who stood nearby watched and smiled.
The inmate was
ready to answer, since he did not know this fellow Martinus, did not know at the
time what was going on on the fourth floor, and besides he did not like being
addressed in this manner. But one of his cellmates who did know was able
to restrain him with a look. In a cautious whisper he said, “Don’t answer.
This is the most powerful man here, below the director. He can do anvthing to
you.”
The inmate stared
after the departing Martinus, who did not wait for an answer but wrote down the
victims name to be scheduled for unmaskings. He had guessed by the inmate’s
silence and look that he was another “enemy of the working class”!
In the same
courtyard, at the hour when the night-shift goes to work, two pallid-faced
inmates were talking. A student slowly edges closer to eavesdrop on the pair.
There is some racket in the yard, due to the unrest of several hundred prisoners
who have been waiting for more than an hour for the roll call before going into
the workshop. The two continued their conversation, unaware of the eavesdropper.
The next day one of the two was ordered to report to the political officer. When
he arrived, he was given a round of slaps in the face. Surprised, he asked why.
“Bandit,” he
was told, “you dare ask why! Do you not want to come to your senses? What were
you discussing about Hitler last night as you stood in line waiting to go to
work?”
After more slaps
and kicks, more yelling and swearing, the desperate inmate frantically tried to
recall everything they had talked about, and finally remembered that his friend
had asked him why he looked so ill. He had answered that he had an “icter
recidivist,” which is Romanian for “return of an attack of jaundice.”
The eavesdropper heard instead Hitler redivivus (Latin for “Hitler
revived”) and had reported to the political officer that the two had been
discussing politics, which was forbidden, and hoping for the return of Hitler!
Any information
reported by the re-educated was accepted as absolutely the truth and the
denounced inmate had not the slightest possibility of defending himself
successfully. It is not that the political directorate of the prison believed
that the re-educated ones never lied, but whether their reports were true or
not, they provided an excuse for punishment, which is all the officers were
after anyway. They considered each inmate a personal enemy who deserved nothing
but extermination, by any convenient means, but preferably through routine
procedures.
So long as the
entire shop and technical office leadership was entrusted to the students, the
oppression by the administration was not exercised directly, but through student
intermediaries. They were the ones directly responsible for whatever went on in
the workshops, the quality and quantity of products, for discipline and for
output. Whoever did not show enough zeal was considered an opportunist,
indifferent to being a leader, and consequently sent “to work down below,”
which is the Communist term for being downgraded from a function, but here
really meant to be sent down to work under infernal conditions.
Large numbers of
the re-educated could not be employed as administrators because, contrary to the
prevailing bureaucratic practice, the positions were few. Those students who did
not excel in re-education practices were sent to work side by side with the rest
of the prisoners. And in order to get promoted to a desk job, which some of
their colleagues held, they almost killed themselves working, exceeding the
norms by truly phenomenal percentages. Other workers began to exceed their
quotas, not so much to get into the good graces of the political officer as to
be left in peace by the re-educated.
Thus began a
hellish competition. The “norm-setters” had a very special mission: to
observe the quota production as closely as possible and report within
twenty-four hours any increase. Next day, the increased production became the
norm, and the cycle began anew. It was not too long before the initial quota was
exceeded by 250%, which then became the new minimum quota! To show you how
difficult work became under these conditions, I shall give one example out of
thousands that occurred in Gherla prison.
In the winter of
1952, an order of tubs for washing clothes was received from the military. The
riveting of the sheet metal lining the tub on the inside was initially timed at
92 minutes. A prisoner was expected to put out eight units in his twelve hours
of work. Three months later the re-educated reduced the time to 30 minutes, a
speed-up of 300%. When I was put on shop work, my quota was 28 tubs in 12 hours.
During the summer of 1953, this was increased to 38 in 12 hours. A worker who
riveted 10 tubs in one shift during the winter was considered as exceeding the
quota; by summer, if he did 35, he was punished for not meeting his quota, and
put on half-food rations.
* * * * *
The student
informers and the sadistic administrators cooperated efficiently in keeping
always full the incarceration cells, the black room, and the isolation holes the
three ordinary means of punishment. I shall describe them for you.
Incarceration
cells. These were tall, narrow, box-like structures about 6 feet high and 16
inches square. A prisoner was forced to stand in one for from eight to fifteen
days, except when he was taken out for work each day. If, as frequently
happened, the numbers of prisoners exceeded the number of box-stalls available,
two prisoners at a time were squeezed into each vertical coffin and locked in.
To force their bodies in, the guard had to use his fists, kicks, and much
swearing before getting the door finally pushed tight enough against their
bodies to be locked.
By the end of the
first two days, the prisoners’ legs turned into stumps, with no feeling in
them, and the body, due to lack of mobility, restricted circulation, and the
kidneys’ inability to function normally, took on a queer shape. But this form
of punishment ran its normal course, as I have said, in from eight to fifteen
days, with prisoners extracted for the 12-hour work period each day. In graver
cases, however, the director decided the victim should spend all his time, day
and night, in the box except for two trips to the lavatory.
The worst feature,
perhaps, was that these boxes were set directly on concrete flooring so that in
sub-zero weather the wretches locked within were turned into frozen mummies.
Hardly any one was
able to pass twelve hours at a stretch in one of these boxes without passing
out. This was caused partly by a lack of air. The only source of air provided
was a small opening of a few square inches in one side, but if there were two
men in the box, the back of one covered up the hole, making breathing more and
more difficult. Fortunately, as more boxes were built by the prisoners
themselves, the boards were loosely fitted with a space of one to three
millimeters left between them through negligence, or through ... foresight,
allowing a little air to reach the victims.
When all boxes were
full to capacity (and never in the three years of the O.D.C.C. terror were they
unoccupied, not even for a few hours), the prisoners were crammed into a black
room.
The Black Room.
Every prison in Romania had one or more. The rooms were called “black”
because they had no windows, air or light, with only one door into the corridor
of the prison. About nine feet square, they were designed to hold two prisoners,
but director Goiciu would put as many as thirty or even more unfortunates into
this small space. Prisoners were stripped to underwear and if necessary crushed
one over the other in this permanently vitiated atmosphere, with but a single
uncovered bucket, no bed, no blanket, no water, nothing to lie on but the cement
floor or the bodies of those no longer capable of standing up. Nobody could
sleep. If in winter this crowding was somehow bearable because the bodies warmed
each other, in the summer it became an indescribable inferno.
No water was
allowed in this black room, on orders of the director, and the stench in the
place became unbearable. In order to get to the bucket an almost impossible
effort was necessary and consequently many renounced it. And terrible scenes
took place in this writhing mass of suffering men. In order not to urinate on
the floor, out of a sense of decency, the prisoners actually fought to get
places near the bucket, even though there the stench was unbearable. Summers
brought on an endemic attack of boils, winters caused pneumonia that became
galloping tuberculosis. The spirit of irony among the prisoners was yet alive
however. They christened the two places of torture “mon caprice” (the
incarceration box) and “mon jardin” (the black room).
Isolation. A
third form of punishment, more grim and more dangerous than the others, was the
regimen of isolation. An entire floor of the old prison was reserved for those
whose guilt was considered too great for a sentence of only ten days in an
incarceration box, or three weeks in the black room. Isolation carried a
sentence of three months or longer, and though the prisoners were apparently
separated from the floor reserved for those dying of tuberculosis, the brooms
for housekeeping, the barrels of water, and the clothing to be laundered, were
all thrown together so that germs could be spread freely over both floors. The
isolation prisoners were permitted a walk of 15 minutes every day; the rest of
the time the yard was used for the sick “who had more need of fresh air.”
This deliberate mixing of the sick and the healthy was nothing other than
premeditated homicide. But who could make even a gesture of protest?
Nevertheless,
knowing the great risk to their health, the prisoners committed premeditated
acts of gross disobedience in order to be sent to isolation; at least they could
sleep or lie down all day there. But things changed. A re-educated inmate was
responsible for ending this prisoners’ paradise. While in isolation, he
reported to the director that prisoners coming there did so on their own
initiative, in order to get out of working in the shop. Immediately, food
rations were cut in half, and to the most recalcitrant, cut to one quarter;
beatings for no reason were initiated, on invented charges; and because the
political officers were accountable to nobody there, they turned the torturing
of prisoners into a daily ritual of entertainment.
The contribution of
the re-educated was to supply a constant stream of occupants for the
incarceration box, the black room and the isolation floor. Of their victims so
punished, more than 75% contracted tuberculosis, and ended in the cemetery. The
director permitted the prison doctor to transfer a prisoner to the T.B. section
only after blood appeared in his sputum. But by then his fate was sealed.
I shall give you
one example.
A youth of about
twenty years named Onac, a peasant from the Bihor region, had been condemned
because he “wanted to overthrow the regime,” but, having the strength and
the pride, it seemed, of the very mountains where he was reared, all the
harassment of the administration, all the provocations of the re-educated could
not budge him. His determined posture made him hated by the stoolpigeons and he
told them off at every opportunity; while they in turn kept their eyes on him,
looking for the first opportunity to denounce him to the director.
One day, as they
walked toward the shop, this opportunity came. Onac, to again show his contempt
for one of the informants near him, turned to one of his friends saying, as he
pointed up to the corridor bell, “This bandit ought to be hanged by the bell’s
tongue, for he is one of the worst.” Since Onac was imitating the manner and
language of the re-educated, the informant could see that they were talking
about him and reported Onac’s remark in this twisted fashion:
“The director is
going to be hanged on the bell’s tongue when the Americans arrive!!”
Without any further
investigation, Onac was given 15 days in the box. It was winter. Dressed only in
shirt and underpants, he was there only a few days before contracting pulmonary
congestion and the doctor, also a prisoner, prescribed the available drugs and
wanted him sent to the infirmary. But instead, the director threw him into the
black room, where his congestion turned into pneumonia, then into galloping
tuberculosis. In less than two months after his incarceration, mountain-strong
Onac met his death. When it was known he would die, he was moved into a cell
serving as a morgue in the yard of the tubercular prisoners. Here he was visited
by the student who caused his plight. The remorseful student, face to face with
the dying man, and kneeling, tears in his eyes, asked for forgiveness. But the
dying young giant now wasted, only stared at him, without a word.
He died the next
morning, a sad and foggy morning, the kind of which there are many in prisons.
His corpse was left on the cement floor of the morgue where he died, for two
more days. In the evening then, after prisoners were locked in their cells,
amidst a heavy silence in the courtyard, a guard and two common law prisoners
carried him to his grave not in the nearby cemetery, but on the bank of the
River Somes, in a spot where only prisoners were thrown. He was denied a
Christian burial. The hole had been dug that morning but by evening was full of
water because the river level had risen, soaking the banks up to the grass
roots. When they threw him in, the water splashed out on the bearers like a last
protest against injustice by what was left of this gallant boy.
Onac’s case was
not unusual or remarkable. Every prisoner who survives will have an Onac of his
own to tell about. More than one perhaps thousands; the differences are only of
nuance. The cause of their deaths, however, will be always the same: they were
the victims of other victims.
* * * * *
It was summer of
1953. Together with us in a cell at Gherla was, among other prisoners, a student
from the Polytechnic Institute. The noon meal was just served, with everybody
holding his mess-pan (there were no tables in the prison), when another student,
who was the last to come in, said jokingly, “With the last transport
yesterday, Turcanu was brought back.” His words fell into the silence like a
bombshell; the three students who shared this cell lowered their mess-pans,
seized by panic, the one from Polytechnic being so frightened he dropped his to
the floor and just stood there bewildered. His face became all of a sudden
waxlike and he was incapable of uttering a single word; it seemed his entire
being was seized with a weakness that paralyzed even his thought. All three boys
looked at each other, waiting it seemed for something to happen to show them it
wasn’t true. Actually, it was not true at all, and the jokester said so. But
this did not help matters much. For three days and more, in spite of the endemic
hunger they suffered as prisoners, the three students could eat nothing. At
every slightest slamming of a door they shuddered and looked up in terror,
expecting Turcanu to enter and resume the unmaskings.
Later on, one of
them told me that they were so terrified because they were just beginning to
emerge from the madness of Pitesti and realized that the O.D.C.C. would never
forgive an abandonment of the “principle of re-education.” Several months
after this occurrence, one of the students with whom I had discussed problems in
general as well as what had happened to them, warned me that if unmaskings were
resumed we had better hide nothing we told each other; that as far as he was
concerned, he would do just that. “For you,” he said, “as a matter of
fact, it will of course be much easier, because you know nothing of the reality
of the experiment proper, while I will be considered a traitor.”
CHAPTER XXV
THE POWER OF COMPASSION
The prisoners at
Gherla who wanted to understand the psychological phenomenon represented by the
re-educated, and to help the victims, if possible, had to proceed warily. They
had to circumvent the opposition of their fellows, some of whom, fearful of
risks that might involve them, tried to prevent any effort or contact, while
others, who had experienced nothing like unmaskings, thought the re-educated
must be all irredeemably evil by nature or else mere weaklings. One had also to
avoid attracting the notice of the administration, particularly the political
officers who kept a very close eye on the students’ activities, and finally,
the re-educated in themselves represented an awesome danger. Extreme caution was
called for; in fact, each man worked on his own so that, if he were denounced,
others would not be exposed and the true extent of the action would not be
suspected.
One of the greatest
difficulties was finding re-educated individuals who would not immediately
report any remark to the political officers.
The element on
which the Communists normally relied in dealing with political prisoners was a
breaking down of the prisoners’ faith, loyalty and trust in their country. For
this reason, they kept the political prisoners generally isolated from news of
events within as well as outside Romania, because any favorable news, especially
of events outside the Iron Curtain, had a remarkable effect in keeping hope
alive in a large proportion of the prisoners. The institution of unmaskings,
however, stopped all leakage of information from outside, and the political
officers saw to it that all news, filtered through their stooges to the
prisoners, was always favorable to the socialist front. Such fabricated news,
designed to poison the minds of those hearing nothing else, was repeated
insistently month after month, until its details became axiomatic. All were
convinced that Soviet Russia was preparing for the great world revolution that
would soon conclusively establish Communist rule over the entire globe. If there
was any doubt of this, the officers used as their best argument a recounting of
events which purported to be proof of the defeatist policy of the West.[1]
As to the situation
within Romania, the students knew that collectivisation was already accomplished
and generally accepted by the populace, either through fear, opportunism or
belief that it was an improvement. The general feeling was that at least a part
of the “injustices of the past” were being alleviated by the Communists, and
that in any case everything was tending toward stabilization of a new order too
powerful to be resisted.
The prisoners,
furthermore, could not learn the true state of affairs in other prisons, and
they mostly assumed that unmaskings went on in all as they did at Gherla, and
perhaps even outside the prisons too. When unmaskings were discontinued, they
thought this was only a temporary measure and the practice would be resumed
later on, so that everybody would have to undergo the experiment and have his
character so modified as to be unrecognizable. This conviction was so deeply
rooted in their minds that much later, when almost no one lived any longer under
the imperium of conditioned reflexes, a group that was being transported back
from some lead mines to Gherla and saw the window shutters of the prison closed,
immediately concluded that unmaskings had naturally been resumed and they were
to be punished for some “betrayal.” The somewhat tragicomic part of it was
that those who were most frightened were not the students, but the ones who had
earlier accused the re-educated students of cowardice. The students themselves
expressed no fear, only a mute resignation, and acceptance of implacable
fatality, should the unmaskings be resumed which they were not, as it turned
out.
Of all Romanian
prisons, the most difficult situation from some points of view was at Gherla.
The prison at Aiud did not have enough re-educated students from the canal to
control the entire prison population, and at the canal there was a sizeable
group who had a chance to revert toward their normal state because they had come
in contact with a group of former army officers, mainly Legionaries, who had
been sent direct to the canal from prisoncamps in Russia, and had thus escaped
unmaskings themselves. Also, the situation there had been definitely stabilized
following the changes brought about after the death of Doctor Simionescu. Only
about ten students still maintained the position of the re-educated, but were
kept completely isolated from the other prisoners and could thus do no harm.
So, since at Aiud
prison there were not enough of the re-educated to be in control, and the
transferred prisoners did not find Turcanu there after all, or even a program of
unmaskings, some students began to experience a moral recovery. This was partly
made possible by the presence at Aiud of political prisoners who had been
prominent personalities and influential members of their respective parties, and
who did not fear the consequences of exercising a strong moral influence over
the incoming students. They assumed that this would be taken for granted inside
prison walls as it had been outside, and they were right. The staunchest
elements of the Legionary Movement and of the National Peasant Party were
represented at Aiud.
The situation,
however, at the three lead mines, Baia Sprie, Cavnic, and Valea Nistrului, was
somewhat different. The pressure exercised by the re-educators was not great,
for no administrator ever went down into the mines; it was not safe. And an “accident”
could happen anytime, and who would know in the depths of the mines how a huge
boulder happened to fall on a stool pigeon? There were no safety devices or
precautions in the mines and accidents could and did happen very easily and
frequently. So affairs down there were left largely up to the prisoners in those
extermination pits. The re-educated thus presented no problem to the miners.
But, as I have
said, at Gherla it was different. Here, the political directorate took the
legacy of re-education seriously, partly because the technical office, composed
of engineering students, contained several re-educated members of notorious
reputation. Octavian Tomuta, a senior at the Polytechnical School at Bucharest,
as devoted to the administration as he was capable, was head of the planning
office and responsible for the overall production, a sort of technical director.
Every section was headed by a chief who had been re-educated, though officially
these posts were entrusted to some non-commissioned officers of the militia.
Eugen Munteanu was in charge of “labor and wages,” which gave him the
opportunity to penalize in his own way: withholding from the “bandit”
prisoners the pittance to which they were entitled for a month’s labor. Duta,
Bucoveanu, Costachescu, Danila, were eight more ears for the administration. To
this group could be added former Communists now condemned because, during
Antonescu’s administration, they chose the role of informers, sending their
comrades to prison or concentration camps. All these groups learned that there
were some among the prisoners who were trying to help re-educated students
recover their former selves, and they sought by all means to hinder this
activity by sending those so engaged (when discovered through informers) into
isolation.
In the spring of
1953 a small number of re-educated students began to break away from the herd,
seeking to regain their equilibrium; but some of them turned informer again and
as a result additional prisoners ended up in isolation. The effort would have
resulted in complete failure, or at least any success would have come much
later, had not an extraordinary event taken place in the spring of the same
year, namely, the death of Stalin, and with it the modification of Russian
policy toward the occupied countries, at least on the economic level.
Through the
dissolution of various Sovroms (Soviet-Romanian exploitation
companies in which Romanians put up the capital and raw materials, and Russians
took half the profits), the Danube-Black Sea canal plans were disrupted. It had
already been rumored that the budget allocated for the entire job had been used
up when only a fourth of the work was finished, and that the various geological
surveys had been done so superficially and unreliably that many repeat probings,
and other unforeseen obstacles resulted in greatly increased costs. But the lack
of finances was not the only reason the canal was given up. The Russian
technicians were withdrawn when Sovroms were dissolved, and there were no
Romanian engineers to take their places. Almost all of them had either been
condemned to prison or murdered. And so, work at the canal was virtually
paralyzed.
It also happened
just at this time that the World Festival of so-called “Democratic Youth”
was opened and the canal compounds of forced labor stretching along the
Bucharest-Constanta Railway[2] constituted a thorny problem
for the regime. To disclose this expanse of wretched camps and dying slaves to
foreign visitors traveling to the seashore by train would reveal the true nature
of Communist “democracy,” and give the lie to Soviet propaganda.
The “Ministry of
the Canal” was therefore obliged to effect a hasty evacuation of all prisoners
from the area and into the northern part of the country, where they would be
hidden from the eyes of the curious. (Three years later, a migration in the
opposite direction was to take place during the Hungarian uprisings[3]
when political prisoners were evacuated by night into the interior, remote from
the Hungarian frontier.)
After going over
the files hastily, the administration sent, in a matter of a few days, almost
2000 prisoners to Aiud and Gherla, in sealed cattle cars. Those considered most
dangerous to the regime were initially slated for Aiud and included some
National Peasant Party members and particularly Legionary Youth members; but
they ended up, along with the 800 already scheduled to go there, in Gherla
prison. Among the 800 were 150 students who had undergone unmasking at Pitesti
but who, while at the canal, had experienced recovery. Thus the ranks of those
who were trying to snatch the re-educated from the clutches of the
administration swelled all of a sudden, and efforts with re-educated students
became open and aggressive.
The administration
reacted accordingly. Incarceration boxes and the isolation section of the prison
were filled to overflowing. Director Goiciu and Sebesteny, the new political
officer, imposed penalties on prisoners so fast that facilities to take care of
them were quite inadequate. Complicating the problem was that, as a result of a
new directive from the Ministry of the Interior, all prisoners who had come from
the canal were taken to work in the shop. Controlling them became impossible.
Informers for the administration were openly threatened by youths from the
canal, and even by their former colleagues in unmasking, and they began to get
scared. A wave of disobedience that would have been inconceivable a month
earlier led to failure in fulfilling work quotas. To the newcomers, Gherla’s
working conditions seemed infernal by comparison with those at the canal, even
though they knew several thousand of their fellow prisoners had died exhausted
there.
The severe measures
taken and the penalties imposed by the administration subdued somewhat the
enthusiasm of the newcomers, but the inevitable occurred. The wall of treachery
with which the re-educated had surrounded themselves was shaken to its
foundations. From now on, students engaged one another in open discussions,
often argumentative, and little by little the ranks of those awakening to a new
life swelled. Apathy and stubborn resistance changed gradually to a warm
receptivity. The soul’s depth, long hidden and inaccessible, now began to
awaken and break the chains of terror.
And, at this
strangely opportune moment, towards the end of August 1953, over 200 Legionary
“campers” were brought from the Ocnele-Mari prison and added their
contribution to the struggle for the students’ recovery. The “campers”
were prisoners who had been arrested but not tried and sentenced, and prisoners
whose terms had expired years before, many of them having been thrown into
prison during Antonescu’s administration. They were shifted out of Ocnele-Mari
at this time because that prison was now to be used for officers of the Ministry
of the Interior being arrested and sentenced following various purges of the
ranks of the Communist Party. Many of these “campers” helped in
rehabilitation with enthusiasm as they found many old friends among the students
at Gherla.
Toward the end of
1953, the question of re-education was discussed freely in the cells, not only
between nonre-educated and re-educated, but among the prisoners in general, with
a view to clarifying the phenomenon per se and establishing a general position
with respect to it.
The reaction of the
administration, very vigorous at first, slowly became weaker; it could no longer
stem the current of opposition, and the intrigues and uncertainties that
followed the liquidation of the first group of the Communist Central Committee
made the administrators worried and anxious for their own future. The
hesitations of 1953 and even more those of 1954 were fatal. The experiment began
to die. Penalties were imposed more often than not as a kind of reflex action
from hate and futility rather than in any hope of regaining control, of
maintaining the impossible. And in losing their source of information through
defection of their informers, the administration lost control over the soul and
the thought of the prisoners.
It is true that
they tried harsher and harsher penalties for the students, but the results were
just opposite to what they expected. The re-educated accepted their punishments
as a sort of necessity for the re-establishment of a disrupted equilibrium, and
also a kind of penance. The severe regimen and reappearance of chains in the
special cells, became thus a certain stimulant, a verification of budding life
just beginning. Communist oppression and brutality was again triggering a
natural reaction.
1)
|
-It must be remembered that Bacu wrote in 1957, when there were still some
careful observers who believed that there was a “free world” whose
governments really tried to “contain Communism” or, at least, wished
to see the spread of the inhuman tyranny inhibited. (Tr.)
|
2)
|
-I.e., that portion between Cerna-Voda on the east bank of the Danube, and
Constanta. (Tr.)
|
3)
|
-See Ch. XXX.
|
CHAPTER XXVI
REUNIONS
Though many
friendships had been formed among anti-Communist fighters in local organizations
or in political groups, many were broken in the course of this tragedy
especially those formed between students and non-students. In contrast with
normal times, when every political party was organized into groups along social
or professional lines, the “illegal” anti-Communist groups drew from all
classes. Social differences were submerged in the common fight for liberty. That
is why a kind of amalgam resulted, in which all individual differences were
melted away, leaving the only thing that mattered: the love of country and
freedom. But through the forced submission of students and workers to the
unmasking experiment, this bond was broken; so that now, when circumstances
again made it possible for men to meet again, a way had to be found for
re-establishing communication between them, even within the same cell.
Relaxed tensions
following abandonment of the policy of re-education naturally did not bring the
students back to participation in normal prison life. They were a species apart,
and conscious of the profound differences that separated them from their fellow
inmates. Thus there could be no contact between former friends, no approach of
one to the other, no means of communication. The terrible mutation of
re-education separated them as effectively as an impenetrable wall.
Breaching the wall
could be attempted only by those who had been able to maintain their souls
intact and had, furthermore, a compassion which they wished to share with those
so desperately in need of it.
In order to make an
initial approach even possible, one had to study and understand thoroughly the
psychopathic phenomenon as a whole, and then try to make some aperture through
which to reach the consciousness of the submerged personality without deepening
his alienation. That was extremely difficult, and one had to proceed with great
caution. I shall outline the way several close friends and I tried to do this.
At first, when the
atmosphere was heavy with suspicion, we would approach the re-educated persons
working with us and pretend to agree with them, just to get a conversation
started. When the climate seemed ameliorated, we tried to re-establish their
self-confidence, but make no reference whatever to unmaskings, not even through
a remote hint. Gradually, slowly, the concepts and values that had been
destroyed by the re-educators were revived by a kind of inverse process as
individuals were shown an affectionate sympathy and understanding of their
suffering, and were convinced of our desire to do the right thing. Many times
such conversations had to be continued for a long time before we could ascertain
just what guilt was searing the soul of an individual, but as soon as we were
convinced that our interlocutor was prepared to bear it, we initiated a
discussion which included him as a guilty party. We then could proceed to probe
the true problem, that of determining who was really responsible,
personally responsible, not only for the crimes committed but for the initiation
of the fearsome experiment in the first place.
The majority of the
students had had a faith so strong that it survived deep within them in spite of
every attempt to destroy it, and when circumstances made it possible, it
re-appeared as if from hibernation and proved to be the determining factor in
recovery. We are concerned here only with students who were victims before
becoming torturers or simple informers for the political officers. The other
persons, who were sent into the prisons as tools of the Ministry of the Interior
or the Communist Party itself, or who became willing stooges of the regime, must
be left to the justice that inflexibly punishes crime.
The resurrection of
the values which had been superseded by re-education was not in itself too
difficult a task, as frequently a simple stimulation sufficed to impel the
person back to his former equilibrium. But one real obstacle, very hard to
surmount, was the haunting fear, locked into every fiber of the unmasked victim,
that any day the re-education terror might be resumed. Life inside the prison
did nothing to dispel that fear. To be convincing, an argument that the terror
was ended had to be based on evidence from the outside, even from the course of
political events outside the country.
To encourage a
feeling that events might be changing things for us in prison, we used all kinds
of information gleaned from newly-arrived prisoners, or through the good will of
prison guards innocent of “class-struggle” theories. Under the
circumstances, prisoners put their own interpretation on the various bits of
information and fitted them to their own wishful thinking. Whether their
interpretations did or did not correspond to reality did not worry us in the
least. The essential thing was that they allayed the fears not only of the
re-educated, but also our own, for we could never really dismiss from our own
minds the possibility of an instauration of the Pitesti experiment, having
observed the oscillation in prison of the various forms of terror from maximum
to minimum and back, with no apparent relationship to political events in the
country. So we cannot be blamed for thinking anything was possible.
In addition to
alleviating that fear of the re-educated, we had somehow to destroy also their
conviction that Communist Russia was invincible Russia where, as indeed in any
country under Communist domination, one has no means of ascertaining what facts,
if any, lie behind official claims and declarations. But the re-educated had
lost all power of discernment. Their only truth was that which was decreed by
the Communist Party’s official paper, and the students had no other source by
which to judge it. So, attempts to refute with reasoning and argument the lies
that had paralyzed their ability to think were worse than useless. (This can
also be seen in the Western world, where various co-existentialists, or “useful
idiots,” are products of the same intoxication.) We found that a well-placed
joke or witticism accomplished more good than an hour of argument.
A soul that has
been submerged for years has more need for a warm word, we found, than for
logical explanation; like a plant kept in the dark, it needs the sun more than
nourishment.
CHAPTER XXVII
ENDLESS ISOLATION
Prison life was
filled with work in the shops, with discussions between students or with other
re-educated prisoners, with constant hunger, and with fear of the
administration. Some prisoners counted the days, others did not. But here again
we were taken by surprise, and the monotony of prison life was broken by a
typically illogical proceeding by the Communist management.
On the fifth of
December, the day preceding St. Nicholas’ Day, 1953, I was working in the
tinsmith shop located in the yard of the main building. When we were let out for
lunch, those who worked in the technical bureau went out with us and I had
managed to gain the confidence of one of them, a former pupil in a trade school
and rightly considered one of the most dangerous informers among the re-educated
prisoners. Stopping for a moment near me and looking around to be sure he was
not observed by any fellow informer, he whispered, “A great screening of the
prisoners is in the making and all those considered ‘bandits’ will be
confined to their cells for the whole day. Only those considered inoffensive or
devoted will go out to work.”
“Where did you
get this information?” I asked.
“From Lieutenant
Mihalcea.”
“What do you know
about me, did you see the list?”
He did not answer,
but only bent his head.
The next morning,
St. Nicholas’ Day itself, just a little before opening the doors to let us out
for work, Eugen Munteanu, the real head of the labor and wages office, entered
our cell and announced that only those hearing their names called out should
step out and go to work. Mine was not called. This measure was not a clear-cut
punishment; we were locked in the cell, but nothing further was done to us! So
those of us whose names had not been called considered it a great favor,
especially now that winter was coming. Most of those left in the cell had
arrived at Gherla from the canal labor camp or other prisons after unmaskings
had been abandoned in other words, they had not undergone the experiment. The
majority of the re-educated prisoners, however, continued to work in the shops.
The Ministry’s
orders in reality had provided that all work was to stop completely in order to
reorganize the prison internally, but since various jobs for the military still
had to be completed (we worked exclusively for the Military units of the
Ministry of the Interior), it could not be stopped. Besides, we had ten vans for
transporting prisoners under construction for the Ministry’s own use and these
had to be delivered by February, 1954. So, though many were idled, quite a few
had to be left working.
The transition of
this state of idleness was accompanied, as was to be expected, by transfers to
other cells, and by deprivation of walks, of mattresses, and, naturally, of the
meager food supplement given us when we were working. But this situation also
did not last very long. Only two months later another shift was made, this time
of a more severe nature.
It was the morning
of February 20, 1954, and still dark, when everybody, whether working or not,
was routed out and assembled in the lobby of the prison’s first floor. In
between floors netting had been suspended and on it placed hundreds of yards of
straw matting, so that no one could see to the other floors. We could not
imagine what was going to happen. A large number of surly officers and militia
sergeants, some of them new and unknown, walked among us, forbidding any kind of
talking. Accompanying them was Director Goiciu and the two political officers,
both Hungarian, carrying a pile of papers on which presumably were written the
prisoners’ names.
The atmosphere was
unusually tense. A fear which seemed to be contagious could be seen on all
faces. Even the faces of the re-educated prisoners were contorted as if
reflecting there the terror of their souls. The terror that was on the face of
the student in cell X when the joke about Turcanu’s coming back to Gherla was
told, was now to be seen on the faces of all the re-educated prisoners. I
happened to be standing by a student with whom I was on friendly terms. He was
one who had experienced a recovery from unmasking. Taking advantage of a moment
of lack of vigilance on the part of the officer who was near us, he passed into
my palm a very beautiful cigarette holder carved out of an ox horn. Then he
asked me the question I had anticipated but for which I had no answer:
“Do you think the
unmaskings are going to be resumed?”
What could I say? I
tried in two or three words to calm him, maybe rather to calm myself. The
approach of an officer prevented, however, any further speech.
More than two hours
went by with us still standing around in the lower hall that morning and with
nothing happening, except that certain non-commissioned officers from the main
prison ofnce came in, reported something to the director in a low voice, and
left again. Some time after seven a.m., a strange roll call of prisoners was
made, names being called in alphabetical order. Then, in accordance with their
“political hue” as shown by their dossiers and reflected in the length of
their sentences, the prisoners were divided into two groups, one composed of
those with sentences of ten years or less, the other of those with longer terms.
No importance was attached to type of punishment, as some in each group had been
officially condemned to hard labor, while others only to correctional
confinement.
Thus, on February
20, 1954 began the permanent isolation which even today is in force and which
constitutes one of the most terrible methods of slowly killing the soul and
wrecking the nerves.
One by one, in the
order in which they had been called, the prisoners disappeared up the stairs
that morning, to which floors we could not tell, where officers were waiting to
lock them up in their cells. From that day on I was not to see again many of my
prison comrades and good friends; and I did not see them again, even though for
several years I lived under the same roof with them. Many it will be impossible
ever to see again for they will have preceded me into the Great Beyond.
I was sent, along
with about 35 or 36 others, to a cell on the fourth floor. Almost half my
companions were re-educated prisoners! When we got to the cell, we all tried to
find a spot close to the window or to a friend, or lacking this, closer to an
acquaintance. In such moments of uncertainty, every prisoner tries to be close
to someone he can trust, under the illusion that perhaps this time it will do
him some good! Each one, when he found a place, put down beside him the handful
of clothing yet remaining after years of imprisonment.
The shock of this
maneuver had brusquely and profoundly impressed those who had passed through
unmaskings. Even a large number of those who had begun to snap out of the
lethargy into which they had sunk recoiled abruptly, adopting a “wait and see”
attitude, with the obvious intention of sliding back to the side of those who
had steadfastly maintained themselves as “convinced” re-educated.
Even on that first
day of isolation, St. Nicholas’ Day in December 1953, many of the re-educated
students, who had been willing to discuss things and had begun to shed the “re-educated”
posture, were stimulated to reconsider. Those who had taken part in unmaskings,
particularly as heads of committees, thinking that a new period of re-education
was about to begin, prepared for work! As a starter, they began by threatening
former colleagues who were now openly opposed to a resumption of re-education.
But to show you how well-conditioned reflexes still worked, even after two
years, let me cite the following:
The student A.B.,
who proved himself a decent enough fellow after unmaskings were abandoned, and
denounced no one, staying in the good graces of the administration by working
like a slave, changed on December 6th, suddenly denouncing his own uncle, who
had been permitted to visit him just a few days before!
“Why did you
denounce him, when nothing justified you whatsoever?” I asked him later, when
he told me about it.
“If unmaskings
were to begin again,” he replied, “the first accusation against me, which
would be sufficient in itself to put me again through the whole works, would be
that I had not denounced anybody. So, after December 6, being convinced that
unmaskings would soon re-commence, I began taking my own precautionary measures.”
After February, the
more severe isolation period began, when political officers punished the
slightest offences, prisoners who had been through unmaskings were sure the
system was being re-instated. In our cell, on the very first day, for instance,
the viciousness of the political officer, Sebesteny, proved itself on the back
of the cell leader he himself had chosen! Just because at the time he entered
the cell, the leader did not call “Attention!” loud enough, Sebesteny
punished him with 24 hours in leg-irons and hand-cuffs in the notorious
incarceration box. When the victim returned next day to the cell, his hands were
covered with blue stripes and both legs were bleeding from the irons.
His return
triggered a dramatic development. Some of the prisoners were ready then and
there to re-constitute a re-education committee within the cell. This did happen
in other cells where the re-educated were in the majority with no one to oppose
them and rally the non-re-educated prisoners to establish order. But our cell
was more evenly divided, and three groups were formed almost from the start. The
two extremes were represented by the Pitesti group and those openly opposed to
them; in the center were the timorous ones, who did not take sides but awaited
developments. At heart they were with us, but they were afraid of betraying
themselves to the re-educated.
The first three or
four days we spent in mutual surveillance. We were waiting to see what the
administration’s next move would be, and the re-educated were waiting for a
go-ahead signal from the political officer to recommence the unmaskings! Since
we were familiar with the sequence of the unmaskings, we decided that should
they be resumed, in no case would we let ourselves be caught off-guard, and that
we would defend ourselves even to the death, committing suicide if possible. So
we kept in a group in one corner by the window, with our backs protected by the
walls.
Our taut nerves
were close to snapping. Every time the door opened, all eyes turned that way,
but for different reasons! Expecting the command, we prepared.
When we could see
the administration was limiting itself to keeping internal order, needless to
say with an extremely severe regimen, we decided to take advantage of the
situation by taking the initiative. We started by approaching first the timorous
group, which we needed to add to ours in order to match the number of
re-educated prisoners. Since they were afraid to talk with us, we contrived to
discuss the situation so they could overhear us but did not need to respond. In
a matter of a few days most of them appeared to be more favorable toward our
group. We sarcastically called these discussions “ARLUS meetings,” which was
a direct allusion to the Communist propaganda organization camouflaged under the
title, “The Association for the Strengthening of Cultural Ties with the Soviet
Union.” These “ARLUS” discussions were not at all in a serious vein, but
made up of many jokes about Russians, putting the Communists to ridicule on the
one hand, and on the other to show that we were not afraid of the re-educators.
The result was
quite positive. We had known even before imprisonment that jokes with a
political slant hostile to Communism were quite effective, and that if anything
could keep hostility toward the Russian invaders alive it was the anecdote. The
danger that humor represented to the Party was recognized, as witness the
extensive repressive measures taken against it; there were Romanians sent to
prison for ten years only because they told a joke ridiculing Communism.
After a while the
situation changed: there were now only two groups in our cell. The timorous had
become courageous and joined our open discussion before the entire cell. Among
the re-educated whom I knew was a Hungarian, who reported to Messaros, the
political officer, everything that went on in our cell. Why steps were not taken
to stop us or investigate remains a question. Only once, when I was called out
as a result of my admitting to a guard that a chess game found in the cell was
mine, he gave me to understand that he knew everything being discussed in the
cell, and it would be better for me not to fall into his hands. Upon my denying
it, he even told me the name of my denouncer.
Among the
re-educated in our cell, the most dangerous at that time was one Gheorghe Calciu,
a former medical student nicknamed “L’Eminence grise[1]
of Director Goiciu.” He was one of the most devoted and determined products of
re-education, and to some extent he took Turcanu’s place. But in the cell, he
was not at all on the defensive, as were the others in his group, he was in fact
relaxed, almost jovial. He went so far, one afternoon, as to recite the
well-known poem by Makarenko, the “Pedagogical Poem!”[2]
Without going into
the cultural value of this verse, the very fact that he would dare to mention a
Soviet writer in the cell, even one very much appreciated by the Party, brought
laughter, at least for the time. Everyone began comparing Makarenko’s “pedagogy”
to Turcanu’s, and the unmaskings at Pitesti were then and there labeled “Pedagogic
Poem.” It wasn’t very long before Turcanu was being called, in the cell, “Evghenii
Simionov Makarenko,” and if someone wanted to know whether you had passed
through unmaskings, he asked if you had read the Pedagogic Poem. This allusion
implied, of course, that the system of re-education was also of Soviet origin.
If Calciu could no
longer even “in part” apply his re-educative methods in our cell, still he
could not be prevented from keeping under perfect control those who had been his
collaborators in the workshop. He did not stay in the cell very long; he was
taken out by the political officer and sent to the infirmary. After his
departure the atmosphere cleared completely, and the rest of the re-educated,
little by little, without being pushed, or even challenged, began to find
themselves. The month of May came, and with it an almost complete healing of
wounds with the integration of almost all who had undergone unmasking, into the
normal monotony of prison life.
The few who held
out through despair or stubbornness, were left to grind their teeth in impotent
anger and alone.
Although our cell
attained peace, the same could not be said of other cells. Where the re-educated
felt they could still apply some of their nefarious methodology, there were
quite serious disorders. In one cell, the re-educated severely beat the
cell-mates who defied their orders; in others where they were few and tried to
act as informers, they were themselves beaten and isolated by being completely
ignored, as though they were not there at all.
It is possible that
some offences of the re-educated were occasioned by the others’ lack of tact.
I talked with one who continued to denounce even after the February isolation,
and I asked him why he was doing this when no one forced him to. He replied, “It
is well that a wounded dog be left alone in peace to heal his wounds by licking
them. If no one can help him, it’s best that nobody irritate him, lest he
bite, out of pain or despair.”
There were some
real family dramas. Take, for instance, the two brothers M., who both had been
through unmaskings. The younger was sent to the canal labor camp with a light
sentence, the older to Gherla, where he became head of the labor and wages
service. After the canal was closed down, younger M. was sent also to Gherla;
but now he was completely healed of his wounds. The older brother, however,
continued to maintain himself “in position,” and considered his young
brother a “bandit and saboteur.” Consequently he punished him by cutting him
off the list for food ration cards!
Nevertheless, the
younger brother wanted to convince the older of the absurdity of continuing his
role, but this he could not do because their cells were in opposite ends of the
prison. As a desperate stratagem, he declared a hunger strike and told the
director he would not eat till he was moved into the same cell with his brother.
In reply, the director had him put in irons, in isolation, where he persisted in
his hunger strike and continued to lose weight. The administration told him
falsely that the Ministry of the Interior alone could make cell assignments, and
that the matter had been referred to it. Several days later they told him his
brother had been transferred to another prison and he would have to give up his
hunger strike. But the price he had to pay was high: he ate only once in three
days, slept on iron bars without a mattress or cover. A categorical disposition
of the case by the Ministry of the Interior interdicted the sharing of the same
cell by members of the same family, and the interdiction was zealously extended
to apply to known friends as well as relatives.
Personally I had to
deal with a case as painful as it was strange. A student of mathematics from the
Polytechnical School of Bucharest, condemned to 25 years, who still maintained
his posture of re-educated even after the isolation, was caught by a guard with
a soap tablet on which he had made some mathematical calculations. He was given
40 days in isolation in a cell adjoining ours. I tried to talk to him by means
of adapted Morse code, but he did not know these signals. I noticed that the
windows of his cell and ours were at right angles to each other, and not far
apart. As a heavy shutter protected us from the eyes of guards in the courtyard
below, and I placed a cell-mate as guard at our door’s peephole, I was able to
converse with the engineering student at the window. He was obsessed with the
idea that the Russians were all-powerful and was convinced they would rule the
world.
“You will see,”
he said, “maybe later, but certainly, that the Russians will conquer the
entire world. It cannot be otherwise.” And again: “The West is morally
decomposed; it is a swamp in which everything that is pure drowns. The Russians
will bring their punishment, for the West, when it had the power, made no use of
it when it could; now it is too late; the Russians are a sort of destiny!”
He was a man of
superior intelligence, but all my efforts to show him that everything he had
been saying was only a reflection of his subconscious terror ended in failure.
Several days later
I, too, was put in isolation for 10 days to sleep on iron bars in a heatless
cell (this was February, 1955) and for what reason? The excuse was that I was
accused of having written on the wall paragraphs in several foreign languages,
including German (a much decried language at the time, of course), and since I
was the only member of the cell who knew German, I was guilty. When I was
returned to the cell after isolation, I could not learn if the fellow in the
other cell had changed his thinking or not, because he had been transferred
somewhere else.
Penalties inflicted
by Director Goiciu on students were incomparably greater than those given
non-students. He was constantly trying to regain some of his lost ground, but in
vain. Contempt for him only increased. If an ordinary prisoner received two
weeks of isolation, a student prisoner got twice that, plus a severe regimen.
Take the case of the student Petre N., for example, who had the temerity to
stand up to the political officer when the prison van delivered him to the
Gherla depot. He was immediately sent to isolation with 20-pound leg-irons for a
month in the dead of winter in addition to the severe regimen. When he had
served out his time, the political officer asked him if he did not regret his
impudence at the depot.
“Your
regulations,” replied the cold, starved student, “do not include any
punishment strong enough to match the utter contempt I have for all of you.”
So uncertain of itself had the administration been that the official merely
gnashed his teeth and turned his back on the student, leaving him in peace.
After things
returned to normal, I tried many times to compare the way a man behaved after he
recovered from re-education with the way he had behaved before undergoing
unmasking. At first sight, I could not see a great deal of difference: the same
self-contained bearing, the same serious preoccupations, the same goodness and
benevolence. But unseen was a real abyss between what he had been and what he
had become. The unmaskings left scars on the surface, and down deep there was
still an open, bleeding wound. I could but wonder about a meeting between such
men and their victims, if they were to meet in freedom even though almost all
prisoners understood the drama and did not harbor resentment against those who
had denounced or tortured them. Man can forgive, because he must; but he can
never forget, for forgetting is not in his power. What was done cannot be
undone; and the persecutor can forget no more than the victim, whether or not he
did it against his will, against his faith.
I could not but
wonder whether these men would ever be able to return to normal living, or would
be able only to simulate having done so, remaining in the depths of their souls
forever ruined, crucified on their own helplessness.
CHAPTER XXVIII
THE TRIAL
I return to A.
Camus’s words quoted in the first chapter: “Philosophy can change murderers
into judges.”
The tragedy of the
Pitesti prisoners, too, has its fatal denouement like any other drama.
There exists an
ineluctable “truth,” naturally Communistic, that anything that serves the
Party is “just,” is appreciated and encouraged. If later, for reasons never
sufficiently clear, this “just” no longer serves some new Party line, it
immediately becomes “unjust” and is condemned, “reproved with indignation.”
I do not think examples are here necessary. The numerous “ideological leaders”
who took the road to exile or the firing squad in the Soviet Union during the
last decade alone are sufficient proofs of this policy. Throughout my years in
prison, I often shared a cell with former Party members. Among them were some
who had done great service for the Party and had spared no effort to apply “the
line.” They were made scapegoats and classified with the enemy without the
slightest hesitation. In response to their protests at such treatment, they
always and everywhere received a stereotyped answer something like this: “For
your good accomplishments the Party will raise a statue in your honor; for the
bad ones, you are paying right now,” even if what they had done was simply
carry out with strict fidelity the Party orders before they changed direction.
In the case of
unmaskings, it was only logical that those who voluntarily offered themselves to
start the experiment should have been rewarded with freedom at the end of their
term of service. Rewarded they were, but with the fire from an automatic pistol!
The whole
experiment had been born out of evil and lies. It was through wickedness and
deception that it had to end. But in order that everything might be consummated
within the framework of “Communist legality,” and bear the imprint of “justice,”
a trial was staged. In the dock sat the victims; official representatives of the
Party, the real implementors of the crime, sat on the bench.
There had been many
so-called “sensational” trials. The Communists saw to it that people became
accustomed to them and, seemingly to keep the memory fresh, would stage another
every now and then. To Westerners, this may seem an odd way of administering
justice, but of course, they are used to “bourgeois” justice and do not
comprehend the higher form of Marxian dialectics.
Even the most
cynical of assassins seeks a loophole in his indictment and even a madman does
not receive a death sentence with joy, but under Communism everything can be
easily arranged ahead of time by means of torture and lies, such as “a
publicly admitted mistake is half forgiven.” That is, until the compromising
declaration is obtained from the victim! The rest is only too well known; when
the hangman’s noose tightens around one’s neck, anybody is willing to make a
small concession if it will save his life rather the hair than the head, as the
proverb goes.
In the Communist
type of justice the trials are not to find proof of guilt as such but to provide
a pretext for a condemnation demanded by the Securitate a condemnation not of
any deed, but of a person as a potential enemy or as no longer useful.
Thus the Bucharest Tribunal that tried Turcanu and his fellows was seeking a
justification for condemning those who for three years had done nothing but
execute with zeal the orders given them by the initiators of the experiment. How
the declarations of the prisoners were obtained is not known, but we do know the
general methods employed.
The initial
intention, according to what transpired unofficially, was to stage a public
trial with newspapermen and “indignant” workers’ delegations, with
photographers and plenty of publicity. But something made the Tribunal change
its mind, possibly the pre-trial interrogations of the various witnesses who
were to testify. There was some risk of an upset, and the Party could have then
been exposed in its true light just at the critical moment when it wanted to
conclude the drama of its experiment with a “legal” finale.
Why did they feel a
trial necessary? Liquidating those who “knew too much” could have been
accomplished more simply and quietly, at night somewhere, for “trying to
escape while under escort,” a procedure that was not new and had produced
satisfactory results some years earlier when, on the night of November 30, 1938,
Codreanu and thirteen of his followers were assassinated by King Carol’s
henchmen. Did they need a justification in legal form for concluding an
unsuccessful experiment and eliminating those who might talk inopportunely?
Perhaps in time we shall know.
At any rate, the
“show trial” to teach the people a lesson never took place, but instead
hearings were held behind closed doors, attended only by prison directors,
interrogating officers, and Communist political personalities little known or
completely without any contact with the people.
One was able to
learn very little of what went on in the secret proceedings and nothing at all
of what the accused had to say. Some aspects of the trial were learned from
Party members who could not keep their mouths shut and from the forty witnesses,
who were all prisoners who had passed through unmaskings or were victims of some
sort.
By collating this
information with various slips of the tongue on the part of political officers
in the prisons, the course of the trial can partly be reconstructed. Witnesses
testified separately, none being allowed to be present at any proceedings except
the one at which he answered the questions asked him by the Tribunal’s
president. They were not told who were the members of the Tribunal, whose names
were never made public, but they could see that the judges and the prosecutor
were superior officers, perhaps from the cadres of military justice.[1]
It would seem
impossible for the Communists to find a way of exculpating themselves, but, no
matter how absurd it sounds, they found one: they alleged that the unmaskings at
Pitesti had been initiated by the leaders of the nationalist student group!!
Crimes were committed against the prisoners by these nationalists in order to
blame the Communist regime and discredit it in the eyes of the people and of
international opinion!
The military
prosecutor demanded punishment of the “nationalist” defendants for crimes
against humanity, for all the crimes were blamed on them. And to bolster the
monstrous lie and make it hold together, they implied that there was someone
from the outside who must have given directives to those inside the prison who
were “in the conspiracy.” It was then no problem at all to prove that there
must have been a responsible person who established the liaison between the
leader from abroad and those in prison. Several persons were considered for this
role, among them a lawyer from Iasi, but in the end they decided upon a student.
If my memory serves me well, he was named Simionescu; in any case, whatever his
name, he was tortured for months in the Ministry of the Interior, and kept
continually in leg-irons and handcuffs, to force him to recite the testimony
dictated by the Securitate.[2] But Simionescu refused. Had
they really insisted very much, and been determined to produce the testimony
they wanted, they could, of course, have done so; all they would have needed was
time to brainwash the unfortunate individual whom they chose and teach him his
“confession.” But a sudden and inexplicable urgency did not allow time for
proper preparation. After three years of pre-trial investigations and
interrogation of over a hundred prisoners who had passed through unmaskings, the
case was brought to trial with a haste that can be explained only by a sudden
need[3] to dispose of it as quickly as possible.
In the end,
allegations of the responsibility of persons outside the prison were discarded
or suppressed, leaving the only responsible head Turcanu!
Prisoners put in
the dock as defendants at this trial were: Eugen Turcanu (“And lo! his name
led all the rest!”); Alexandru Popa, nicknamed Tanu; Martinus; Constantin
Juberian; Cornel Pop; Levinschi; Doctor Barbosu, official physician of Gherla
prison, now become useless and therefore dangerous; and several others.
The trial was
started in October 1954, but it is not known how long it lasted. Testimony of
the 40 witnesses for the prosecution took several days. Sentences were
pronounced around the middle of December, but news of the trial did not reach
our prison till February or March 1955, coming first through Jilava or some
other prison from which a prisoner was transferred. I learned it from a person
in the prison’s infirmary, who transmitted the news by a hand put through a
crack in the window shutter. Later, several prisoners confirmed the report, as
did, indirectly, the Military Tribunal of Bucharest when it published the death
notice of-one of the condemned.
The witnesses
testified under heavy guard and were “closely counseled” by the officers
interrogating them at the Ministry. As before mentioned, they were introduced
into the hearings one at a time, so they knew nothing of the over-all
proceedings.
Nothing was
withheld during the hearings. The smallest details of the unmaskings were fully
described, from the beatings to the ordeal of the mess-pan filled with feces;
from the torturous squatting to the insulting of everything the prisoner held
dear. But accusations were brought only against those who had actually inflicted
the tortures, and who now sat in the dock as the accused. In reality, everyone
present knew that they were merely the front men for the real culprits.
Among the witnesses
were two workers from Gherla, one of whom, it will be remembered, pleaded with
the inspector to end the unmaskings, and the other, who attempted to commit
suicide by slashing his wrists in the isolation cell with broken glass from the
window pane. They told of the promises made to them by the officers to whom they
reported the state of affairs, and of the fact that their subsequent tortures
became more brutal and bloody than before. The president of the Tribunal tried
unsuccessfully to divert their answers by claiming that they were not relevant
to the questions asked, which pertained only to the defendants and the crimes
they allegedly had committed.
The testimony of
the defendants is not known. Whether they defended themselves by revealing the
identity of those who were really responsible or assumed the entire
responsibility themselves, hoping thus to win the indulgence of the Securitate,
is of little importance, for they were not there to be tried, but to be
condemned. It was reported specifically of Turcanu that he had admitted
everything and had assumed complete responsibility for the crimes imputed to
him. It did not matter whether he did or not; his fate had in fact already been
decided, and the presiding judge was the only one of those on the bench who
could be identified by any of the witnesses; a student, one who had been
previously arrested during the Antonescu administration, recognized him. The
judge’s name was Alexandru Petreseu and he was considered one of the most
sinister characters ever thrust from the law schools into Romanian society. In
his way, he was unique. A career military judge, he was Director-General of
Penitentiaries during Atonescu’s administration. The Legionaries knew him
well, for often their fate had been in his hands before his decision was
reviewed by Antonescu. Although publicly a strong supporter of Antonescu’s
dictatorship, he was also a secret collaborator with the Communists,
facilitating their penetration into the Lugoj prison to aid Burah Tescovici,
alias Teohari Georgescu.[4] Apparently about to be purged
in 1948, as were all of his colleagues, he found himself elevated to the rank of
general (he was a colonel) because he agreed to preside over the tribunal that
condemned Iuliu Maniu. In addition to scores of death sentences attributed to
him, he was credited with more than 100,000 man-years of imprisonment pronounced
in trials of Legionaries alone.
In the habit of
blindly executing all the orders of the Securitate, Petrescu naturally in their
1954 “trial” pronounced the prescribed sentence: death for all defendants.
The only sentence about which there is some doubt is that of Doctor Barbosu; it
is not known whether he was condemned to die or be imprisoned for life. However,
both sentences are practically equivalent in Communist prisons.
The sentences were
carried out. One of the victims, Martinus, was later called as a witness for a
subsequent trial, but in response to the order for his appearance in court, a
death certificate was produced, showing that he had died in 1955.
All those tried
were, naturally, identified as “Fascists,” or agents of the American
espionage apparatus. It is not clear on what basis the persons selected for
trial and execution were chosen; certainly persons equally notorious for equally
monstrous ferocity such as Titus Leonida, Diaca, Coriolan Coifan, Hentes, and
Bucoveanu, were never brought to trial, although they were the peers of Turcanu
and even the superiors of Pop in sadistic accomplishments. Exempt from trial
also was one of the worst offenders, Ludovic Reck, a Communist, condemned to
prison because he had been also an informer in Antonescu’s police force.[5]
With the help of Hentes and Juberian, he murdered Flueras by beating him with
sandbags till he spat out his lungs.
Also missing from
the trial as defendants were: Captain Goiciu, Captain Gheorghiu, Lieutenants
Dumitrescu, Avadanei, and Mihalcea, whose direct responsibility for the
unmaskings was much greater than that of the students sentenced to death, whom
they had had under their control and who had done nothing without their
supervision and collaboration.
Because of “technical
reasons”, it is said, a second “trial” was staged, with the same kind of
defendants, the main one this time being the student Gheorghe Calciu, nicknamed
Ghita by his “friends.”
He was moved from
Gherla in the spring of 1954 to the Ministry of the Interior for investigation.
At the time of his departure he was still a convinced re-educator. I do not know
how long he remained so, but exactly two years later I had a unique opportunity
to learn directly from him about his passing through the hands of the Ministry
and the reception they gave him.
In 1956, in a cell
of the main section of the Ministry on Victoriei Street, in fact right next to
the room of the officer-on-duty at the front of the building (also called the
Section Chief’s office), I found an inscription scratched on the wall,
possibly with a needle, in Morse code, which shook me considerably. The sentence
read:
“Gheorghe
Calciu, I was brought here to be murdered; I am innocent.”
Close by, also
scratched in the wall, toward the left corner nearer the door but not visible to
anyone looking in through its peephole, I read the following:
“Gheorghe Balan,
I am completely innocent.”[6]
In regard to Calciu’s
trial, some fragmentary information leaked out. I learned about it shortly
before I left Romania. The trial was held in the summer of 1957, also in
Bucharest, and also before a military tribunal. Someone who witnessed it in an
official capacity leaked a few details which prove a good deal, and place Calciu
in quite a different light from Turcanu.
The presiding judge
was the same General Petrescu. Following the reading of the accusation, Calciu
was called upon to answer, or rather to confess his “crime against humanity.”
To the amazement of all, but particularly of the investigators, the defendant
defied the entire tribunal and threw back in its face the truth without any
reservations. Calciu accused those who were in fact responsible for all the
crimes committed. His diatribe was so unexpected that the tribunal’s presiding
judge, at the request of the investigators assisting at the trial, suspended the
proceedings till a later date. This postponement had as its aim the utilization
of the known “methods of persuasion” frequently employed by the Securitate,
this time to compel Calciu to retract his accusation and “assume the entire
responsibility for the crimes committed.” The trial was resumed the very next
day, perhaps because Calciu had agreed the night before to modify his attitude.
But despite the promise he probably gave under torture, the next day he was even
more categorical. In consequence, the trial was abruptly postponed sine die.
It is likely that Ghita Calciu never was tried and sentenced, but died a “natural”
death, a frequent phenomenon in prisons.
When I left the
prison in 1956, the prisoners still heatedly discussed the tortures inflicted on
students and other prisoners. There still remained isolated in various prisons
several cases of which one can say that they have never recovered.
After the
experiment at Pitesti, the methods of torture were no longer the same. Other
means of extermination, more scientific and more rigorous, drained away the
minds of political prisoners, reducing them to the condition of animals.
In order to explain
more fully the system of lying and the paradoxical logic that made a crime into
a moral deed, an enormity into a virtue, I shall relate a conversation I had in
the winter of 1954 with a director-general in the Ministry of the Interior. (If
he was not the Director-General, he was, at least, a very important personage in
the regime. Prisoners are not told either the name or the position of the
individual interrogating them.)
After being
switched for almost two months from one investigating room to another, one night
at the beginning of March, I was taken into a room on the sixth floor and
brought face to face with this very important person who tried to convince me of
some “truths” which I had refused to recognize. Since this was not a
run-of-the-mill type of investigation, but rather a discussion pro and con on
various subjects, I took advantage of a propitious moment to ask him “whether
it is true that at Pitesti were committed some quite strange acts that caused
the maiming and even death of some of the prisoners.” Taken aback, he could
not control an expression of shock, and immediately asked me:
“What do you know
about the happenings at Pitesti?”
“Personally,” I
hedged, “I could not learn much except some allusions by several students in a
discussion a long time ago,” and I hoped he would not press the question. He
seemed satisfied with my answer and seemed disposed to enlighten me.
“As a matter of
fact,” said he, “it was quite a simple matter. A group of arrested students,
agents of American imperialism, stubborn and retrograde mystics, started to
torture their colleagues, in order thus to compromise the prison’s
administration and consequently the Party.”
“But as I
understood it,” I said, “this category of ‘retrograde’ students
represented approximately eighty per cent of all the students in prison. Whom
did they fight?”
“They fought
among themselves.”
“To what purpose?”
I asked. “I do not quite follow how this would compromise the Party.”
“They received
instructions from outside,” he explained, “from those who are abroad and
lead teams of spies and saboteurs; by torturing one another, the victims could
accuse the Party as the culprit.”
“Nevertheless,”
I persisted, “this seems almost unbelievable, with prisons having such a very
strict system of internal supervision. How was it possible for these horrors to
take place without the immediate intervention of the Ministry?”
“We knew nothing
of what happened there,” he replied. “When we finally learned about these
happenings, we took the necessary steps and punished the guilty in order to
discourage others from doing likewise.”
This was the kind
of answer I had expected, for I already knew what had happened at Turcanu’s
trial. However, I could not keep from replying somewhat brusquely:
“I have been a
prisoner for seven years and have passed through almost all the country’s
penitentiaries. Either isolated, or in common cells, never could we make the
slightest move without being seen by the guards in the halls, and I do not count
the many and various searches made unexpectedly in the middle of the night. The
rigorous surveillance to which we were subjected made impossible even the use of
a sewing needle without the consent of the guard. How could all these things
have happened without the political officers being immediately informed by the
guards? Or is it that you had not one person of trust in all these prisons,
where the acts which you have just described took place, not a single one to
inform you of what was going on?”
“The prison
administration was in the hands of some opportunists,” he said, “enemies of
the people who had infiltrated with the express desire to do harm. They
collaborated with the bandits; but they, too, have now been punished as they
deserved.”
I said nothing to
this, and did not tell him any more of what I had learned about the Pitesti
experiment. Nor did I mention that I knew that the “opportunists” he
mentioned in the prison administration not only were not penalized, but had
received promotions to higher positions; or that I knew that Turcanu, before
coming to Gherla, had forwarded his notorious memorandum to the Ministry of
which my interrogator was a member; or that, on the basis of extorted
confessions during unmaskings, scores of trials were held after the confessions
had passed through the hands of the Ministry; or of so many other details known
to them only because they had been reported to them by the re-educators or that,
of course no remedial steps were ever taken.
Several months
later I was freed.
Behind me I left
the bars of various penitentiaries, Securitates, forced labor camps, and “centers
for re-education” where tens of thousands of prisoners languish and suffer
with no kind of amnesty in sight to lighten their punishment. Above them all,
like the sword of Damocles, hovers the ever imminent danger that another
experiment similar to, or even more “scientific” than the one at Pitesti may
be staged at any time. I left behind tens of thousands of fellow Romanians
imprisoned under the care of the same directors-general, subjected day and night
to a program of gradual animalization, and the undermining of physical and moral
health through total inactivity, darkened cells, constant malnutrition,
isolation, a severe routine and chains always chains on wrists and legs!
Those who bore part
of the responsibility are now in their graves. But they are not the most guilty.
Some of the
re-education’s victims too have left for a juster world (for not even in hell
do such cruelties take place). Perhaps there they will find understanding and
maybe forgiveness.
On the other hand,
still alive, though maimed and sick, are those who for the last ten years have
been suffering in isolation, as have the re-educated who recovered their
original equilibrium, now broken and isolated from every contact with the world.
Let us hope that
some day these prisoners will have to be listened to;[7]
let us hope that the criminals who put and keep them there will one day be
brought to justice, namely:
General
Nicolschi, head of the investigation brigades in the Securitate;
Dullberger
(later Dulgheru), head of the mobile brigades and transport;
Jianu and Tescovici
(alias Georgescu), both former Ministers of the Interior;
Draghici
and Borila, Ministers of the “People’s” Securitate;
Keller, Goiciu,
Mihalcea, Avadanei, Gheorghiu, Dumitrescu, Kirion, Archide, Gal, the guard
Cucu, Niki, Mandruta, Ciobanu all implicated in responsibility for both
the torturings and the terror inaugurated by the O.D.C.C. in prisons and labor
camps.
To the bar of
justice may all these come, and let us hope that the passage of time does not
deprive them of the power of speech! (Various purges of the Party have been
known to bring about such a condition!)
Naturally, there
are people who do not want to believe that the events which took place at
Pitesti and the other prisons were a scientific experiment, and claim that the
supporting evidence is circumstantial and not conclusive. Consequently, two
theories have been advanced. One, the more widely held, is that the Communist
Party merely wanted to annihilate the Romanian Nationalist Movement, which could
only be done by destroying the young who carried the Legionary ideas and
traditions and were thus a link between past and future.
But the unmaskings
contributed nothing to the consolidation of the Communist regime itself, for
most of the anti-Communist resistance was already behind bars, and the
unmaskings in prison did not greatly help to round up the remnants of opposition
outside. The results did not justify the effort could not possibly have
justified it. And this is why:
The years of
imprisonment, with their savage privations and long duration, had already killed
or neutralized a large part of the youth of Romania. The majority of those who
passed through prisons and were released alive were in broken health or too
experienced to expose themselves again to useless suffering. The terror, the
memories of imprisonment, the deportations to Baragan, destroyed for all
practical purposes any possible reactivating an effective resistance. This is a
verified fact. And the several thousand men inside the prisons certainly
could not change what had been decided by the great Dividers of the World at the
“Conference Tables” where Europe was dismembered.
In the event the
Party should fall from power at some future time, the crimes perpetrated in the
prisons would have made its record only so much more monstrous. The physical
extermination of the students of Romania, or even of all the political
prisoners, would have resolved nothing, for the People is a living organism that
perpetuates itself by biological continuity. Its potential will be restored, if
it is allowed to exist and reproduce itself for a sufficient length of time; the
vacuum created by massacres will be filled by the People’s fertility. Killing
or incapacitating an entire section of the population does not necessarily
destroy an idea, for an idea is generated by the very biological structure of
the nation in question, not by a type of man belonging to a particular class or
generation. Then, too, there is the purely psychological factor. The persecution
of an idea, especially by aliens who have infiltrated and seized the nation that
generated it, imparts to this idea only a greater popularity.
The other theory
was one held especially by many students that of pure irrational revenge. The
student movement had been throughout four decades, until the collapse of the
Romanian State, the most consistent enemy of Communism, the only formidable
obstacle to the growth of Communist power. Our enemies, repeatedly frustrated
over the years by the student movement, naturally accumulated in their minds a
boundless and infinite hatred that easily found expression in retaliation by
ultimate brutality the moment they achieved political power. Thus the “Pitesti
Phenomenon” served only to prove further the utter and inhuman depravity of
the Bolsheviks.
But if that had
been the purpose, why was the insane fury halted short of total fulfillment of
its lusts? There was no economic, military, or (given the total secrecy)
propagandist reason why any Legionaries should have been spared the
dehumanization, and certainly no reason why any of the victims should have been
permitted to recover their minds and even to recount what they had experienced.
The only plausible or even intelligible reason for halting the application of
the unmasking technique at that time is that the purpose of its application had
somehow been accomplished.
Re-education,
therefore, cannot have been designed expressly to destroy a resistance already
become powerless, or even to inflict the utmost horrors in all whom the
anti-humans most hated. The aim of the experimenters seems to have been that of
determining, on the basis of scientific data, the extent to which a man could be
robbed of his personality and be completely and irreversibly restructured. The
ultimate recovery of the majority of the victims proved that the transformation
thus affected was not irreversible.
1)
|
-I.e., corresponding to the office of the Judge Advocate General in the
United States Army. (Tr.)
|
2)
|
It
is noteworthy that only ordinary tortures were used, without recourse to
the techniques applied at Pitesti, and strange that the Tribunal did not
think of using one of the re-educated for this purpose. The inefficiency
of Bolshevik underlings is often astonishing. (Tr.)
|
3)
|
-Presumably orders from above. (Tr.)
|
4)
|
-Burah Tescovici (1908-?), a Jew who early adopted the Romanian name of
Teohari Georgescu to conceal his origin, became an active Communist agent
and conspirator in 1929, if not earlier, and was considered one of the
most dangerous aliens in the country. After the Soviet occupation of
Romania, he became one of the four chiefs of the Communist Party in
Romania and collaborated closely with the repellant and infamous Jewess,
Ana Rabinovich (Pauker). He became Minister of the Interior in the “Romanian”
government in 1947, and was purged in 1952. (Tr.)
|
5)
|
-See ch. XIII above.
|
6)
|
-They were probably accused of being “Fascists” and “in the pay of
the American imperialists,” terms which were synonymous in the Bolshevik
propaganda in the occupied countries of Europe charges of which the two
men were, of course, innocent, but to which Communist methodology required
a “confession,” even when the “trial,” as here, was to be kept
secret and so could not be used in local propaganda. The need to extort
such “confessions,” known to be utterly false by all concerned and
utterly useless in secret proceedings, is one of the most curious and
significant traits of an alien mentality that the West can describe only
as psychopathic. (Tr.)
|
7)
|
-This hope, formed in 1958, was, of course, in vain. (Tr.)
|
CHAPTER XXIX
AT JILAVA AS WELL
Before I conclude
this record, I shall mention another kind of unmaskings, identical in scope with
those at Pitesti and Gherla, but conducted with a variation in method. The main
feature of these unmaskings was the fact that there was no effort to dissimulate
the administration’s participation in them in fact they were openly conducted
by the prison personnel, though through prisoners as instruments.
In the spring of
1950 a special room was prepared at Jilava in one of the barracks in the
courtyard for use in torturing prisoners who were awaiting trial.
The method was very
simple. A guard, usually part of the outer watch, accompanied by the head of the
“secret” section, entered a cell and called out the name of the prisoner to
be investigated. In the corridor, the prisoner’s head was covered with a hood
so he could see nothing, The guard then took him by the arm and led him through
the courtyard and into that specially prepared room.
Here, his eyes
still covered and with the guard’s grip still on his arm, he was subjected to
a stringent inquisition usually based on information gathered in his cell by
informers introduced for that function, or through the indiscretions of his
various friends in other cells, or directly from the files being compiled at the
Ministry of the Interior for his eventual trial. Identification of the
interrogators was difficult, for the only means of recognition was by their
voices, and the victims naturally supposed they must be facing officers sent
from the Ministry of the Interior. Eventually, however, they learned that their
questioners were merely other prisoners almost exclusively chosen from among “former”
members of the Communist apparatus.
Presumably these
old Communists had sinned by agreeing to become informers for the Romanian
Securitate during the government of Antonescu. Their leader or, in any case, the
one conducting the investigations and directing the torture, was named Mihailov,
a Bessarabian seemingly of Russian origin, arrested for having denounced several
of his fellow-Communists during the War. Among his collaborators at Jilava,
assisting in the “investigations,” the meanest and also the most savage was
one by the name of Pascu, a mechanic by occupation, and a Communist arrested for
the same reasons as Mihailov. I had occasion to meet him several years later,
after he was sent to Gherla, where he continued to serve the prison’s
administration as informer. That was why he was charged with the surveillance of
the communal bath, a quite comfortable and especially convenient spot, where he
did nothing but oversee those who bathed, and could eavesdrop on every word
spoken. Another participant at Jilava was a Hungarian mechanic, Buchs, who was
sent to Aiud in 1951 and there was quite discreet, behaving relatively well. (It
is possible that the Securitate’s promises, later broken, had opened his
eyes.) In addition, it was reported that a simple worker, rather retarded
mentally, was used particularly to conduct prolonged beatings. The team of “investigators”
numbered over ten, but only those I have just mentioned were definitely
identified.
The first discovery
that the investigators were not political officers was occasioned by an
interesting coincidence. It so happened that before ex-Lieutenant Z. of the
Medical Corps was taken out of his cell for another interrogation, Mihailov had
been replaced. So in the barracks room, where Lieutenant Z. expected to hear
Mihailov’s voice, the questioner had a voice quite different. Already cruelly
brutalized and being an independent spirit (in fact, this is why he was sent off
to Archangel while he was still a prisoner of war in Russia), he became so
irritated that he snatched off the hood covering his head. To his stupefaction,
seated at the investigating table were not the Securitate officers he expected
to see, but ordinary prisoners; and the person who had always led him from his
cell and now stood at his side was just a uniformed prison guard!
The atmosphere that
prevailed at Jilava was totally different from that at other prisons, especially
because no one there had yet been sentenced and all imagined they would be
liberated before the Communists had time to try them.[1]
This explains in part the courage of various prisoners who refused to make “confessions”
when taken before Mihailov. It seems also, however, that the Ministry of the
Interior was not very insistent, for when word got around throughout the
isolation cells, they “closed” the O.D.C.C. office at Jilava, though not
before scores of “political detainees” had been tortured into bloody pulp.
It could be that
there was no direct connection between the unmaskings at Pitesti and what
happened at Jilava, but the coincidence in time and some similarity of method
make it impossible to deny that there was some coordination toward a
previously well-determined end. It should be remembered also that Pitesti, an
execution penitentiary, and Jilava, a stockade for the Ministry of the Interior,
were the two prisons closest to Bucharest; in other words, the most accessible
to those who wanted to maintain close supervision and rigorous control.
If I mention the
inquisitions at Jilava, pallid in comparison with those of Pitesti, but brutal
and sadistic, it is only to show that a single intelligence planned and directed
the use of prisoners to torture their fellow prisoners. Jilava was evidently a
part of the experiment.[2]
CHAPTER XXX
A LAST WORD
Perhaps more will
be written about what happened at Pitesti and at the other prisons, if the
information ever penetrates the Iron Curtain.[1]
The contents of
this little book of mine aim only to direct the reader’s attention to a
phenomenon too vast in its scope and application to permit the possibility of
ascertainment of complete factual information (what is available from Communist
prisons is very limited), and a definitive explanation of it in strictly
psychological terms. In addition to the strict supervision of prison life, my
observations were limited by the understandable embarrassment that the victims
felt over many details of their experiences and conduct. Nor were they a few who
simply refused to discuss at all the most painful sector of their lives.
But fragmentary as
they are, the contents of this book are true. Nobody can deny this, not even the
“Communist authorities” at the helm of my country. I do not believe that a
better account of these events can be found than the one given by the victims of
the experiment themselves.
It is possible that
the “Party” may not take notice of this work, or it may institute a campaign
of denial and slander against it, specifically by ordering those who were
tortured to “indignantly deny the lies put out in the service of capitalism.”
If this proves to be the case, it will not be without many precedents. I shall
cite one here, since it involves students, who, of all prisoners, suffered the
most. This example comes from the experience of students in the so-called “free”
life of a Romanian university in 1956.
In those days, hope
of liberation was less chimerical than it now is, and the West had not yet
proved conclusively that it is completely disinterested in human freedom. In
Hungary the students in Budapest joined forces with workers and, side by side
with them, endeavored to break their chains; they succeeded in visibly shaking
for a short time the rule of Satan. Their act had great repercussions in the
universities of Romania, particularly at Timisoara, the closest to Hungary, and
at Bucharest, where the student body was largest and the most agitated. A
successful uprising in two colleges of Bucharest university (Letters and
Medicine) was quickly put down by force through the power of the Securitate. But
at Timisoara, events were more complicated.
To begin with, the
Minister of Education, Murgulescu, tried to reduce tensions there but to no
avail. In fact, he only succeeded in stirring things up to such a pitch that,
notwithstanding his high position, he was forced to flee through a window of the
cafeteria under a bombardment of handfuls of mush thrown by irate students. As a
result, the demonstration which the students had planned for four o’clock that
afternoon was cancelled by the authorities, and several battalions of troops
from the Securitate were sent in and stationed around the dormitories.
In the evening, the
Minister of the Interior himself arrived by plane and tried to pacify the
students. He promised to meet all three of their demands, namely: elimination of
Marxism and the Russian language as required subjects; liberalization of the
whole university; and the dissolution of the cadre of students acting as spies
for the Securitate. But after promising these things and getting the students
quieted down and back to their rooms, he gave them the real answer: machine gun
fire! For over two hours, in order to give the Securitate time to rush in
reinforcements, the dormitory of the Medical College was kept under fire from
automatic weapons. Then the assault was staged, with soldiers rushing into the
building with arms at the ready. To oppose them the students had only their
books and marmalade jars. For several hours, students were arrested and hauled
away in trucks to an army camp unoccupied since the war, about 40 miles from
Timisoara. Then for three days a vigorous search was conducted for students in
the streets and homes of the city. Everyone whose card identified him as
a student was arrested on the spot with no reason given, then hustled out to the
camp. Not until the Hungarian uprising had been suppressed, however, were the
arrested students given hearings. The majority were then freed provided they
signed a declaration that they would never again participate in any action
directed against the “Workers’ Party!” Several hundred were expelled from
the university. In all this, social status obviously played no part at all, for
the most rebellious of the students were those who came from poor families!
Several score were considered “instigators of the rebellion against the legal
social order” and spent some time in the cellars of the Securitate, then
before the Tribunal, where sentences decreed by the Securitate were pronounced.
The sentences varied in length from five years’ imprisonment to hard labor for
life.
By late December of
1956, when the situation had quieted down and the Communists felt secure of
their victory, some strange “meetings” began to take place in various
centers throughout the country. Under strict supervision by the Securitate,
students vigorously protested “slanders in the capitalistic press,” which
had reported, rather vaguely, some “unrest” on the campuses. Speeches,
previously written and dictated by the Securitate, were “spontaneously”
delivered from many rostra. These contained fulsome praise of the Party and the
Soviet and affirmed the “unconditional attachment” of all students to the
“working class in the People’s Romania”, expressing their deep indignation
and their “pledges” of vigilance against the “enemy [sic] of the
Romanian people.” Such slop was poured out for days. The same students in
whom, several weeks earlier, had been stirred a hope of liberation, now denied
everything and professed loyalty to the regime.
It is not unlikely
that a similar denunciation of this book will be launched, and a comparable
denial of its veracity manufactured by the same process.
* * *
These lines have
been written to fulfill a pledge I made to several victims of the unmaskings
who, knowing that some day I would be able to smuggle the book through the Iron
Curtain, had confided to me, frequently with pain and great inner anxiety,
everything they thought it was man’s duty not to forget.
More than just a
record of these events, this book is a warning; it is a voice from beyond the
grave, from the living dead behind the Iron Curtain. Let anyone draw conclusions
according to his own heart.
Lastly, I would
like to say that while some died and some were obdurate, most of the victims
recovered. Man has within himself certain powers that nobody can destroy not
even himself; for man does not belong to himself, and the powers within him
proclaim Him Who created man.
Bucharest,
1958
Paris, 1962
New York, 1970
Paris, 1962
New York, 1970
1)
|
-On the recent book by Dr. Carja, see the first footnote on p.
x. Editor.
|
POSTSCRIPT
Let not the reader
imagine that there has been any change in the Beasts of the Apocalypse or any
“mellowing” or “relaxation” of their sadism in Romania or any other
country they have captured. In Romania, when the extraordinarily severe floods
began in May, 1970, the Communist Ministry of the Interior ordered the directors
and staffs of the prisons at Aiud and Gherla to abandon them after having locked
the prisoners in their cells. How many Romanians were thus disposed of at Aiud
has not been learned, but at Gherla 600 helpless men watched the waters slowly
rise in their cells and were eventually drowned.
About the Author
He
attended high school in Greece, obtained his baccalaureate in Constanta, then
registered in a Polytechnic (Engineering) Institute, from which he was later
discreetly eased out because of his political convictions.
His
father, an orthodox priest, was ‘fired’ in 1946 when Greek authorities
closed down Romanian churches in Greece as a result of Ana Pauker’s suspension
of the priest’s salaries, which traditionally had always been paid by the
Romanian government.
Arrested
in September of 1949, Bacu learned about the unmaskings in 1951 while a prisoner
at Aiud, and after being transferred to Gherla prison in May 1953, he decided to
begin his own investigation of the “Pitesti Phenomenon”.
He
was freed in April of 1956, by decree of amnesty for foreigners, for, though a
Romanian, he held a dual citizenship by virtue of having been born in Greece.
Following his release, he spent three more years gathering further material for
his book. Then he left the country.
In
these pages, translated from the Romanian, the reader will, for the first time,
have at his disposal a fairly complete account of the Bolshevik techniques of
dehumanization, including some details here mentioned as delicately as possible,
of which we do not like to think ... The book was written to make known what is
in store for the West if it permits itself to continue to be fascinated by the
song of the co-existentialist sirens.
The
persons selected by the Bolshevik beast for de-humanization were a clearly
defined group, namely, university students. That was because in Romania, in
sharp contrast to what we see in the United States today, university students
were a highly respected elite, and included men who combined the vigor and ardor
of youth with unsurpassed patriotism and a lucid conservatism, intellectual and
religious.
So
devoted were they to the memory of their leader, Codreanu, a man of noble
purpose and pure religious faith, that thirty years after his death, and twenty
years after the loss of their country, these dedicated followers, exiles in
foreign lands, are menaced even there by the ubiquitous power of the anti-humans
and the ever accelerated conquest of the Western world by its furtive enemies.
Even
though the greatest proportion of students and of those who underwent unmaskings
were Legionaries, one must not forget that such an experiment encompasses MAN in
his totality, and that it is possible at any time and in any place.
The
essential ideas of this book are two-fold: the Satanism of the method used,
implying total disregard for the human condition; and the impossibility of
fundamental re-structurization of character, of the human essence.
The
Western reader must understand that in his country too these things can happen
with certainty, if apathy makes possible the inauguration of such a regime as
that which caused the disaster in Romania. All they have to do is look at the
so-called ‘cultural revolution’ in Mao’s China, and at the public
unmaskings not of the enemies of the regime, but of that regime’s high echelon
cadres. Or no one can affirm seriously that these ‘self-criticisms’ are the
result of convictions that appeared overnight. We, sufferers under the Romanian
regime, as administered by the Bolsheviks, know how these ‘confessions’ were
extracted.
When
the United States has progressed to the point reached by Romania in 1948, there
will be no place on earth to which Americans can flee, and there will be no one
to hear their screams.
INDEX
A
Adrianople, Treaty of (1829): ...
Aiud: ...
Alexander II, Czar: ...
Alupoaei: ...
Americans: ...
American Opinion: ...
American Public Relations Forum: ...
Anagnostu, Iuliu: ...
Andreescu: ...
anti-humans: ...
anti-Semites: ...
Antonescu, General Ion: ...
Apuseni Mountains: ...
Archide: ...
Archangel: ...
ARLUS: ...
Arsenescu, Colonel: ...
Austria: ...
Avadanei, Lieutenant: ...
Aiud: ...
Alexander II, Czar: ...
Alupoaei: ...
Americans: ...
American Opinion: ...
American Public Relations Forum: ...
Anagnostu, Iuliu: ...
Andreescu: ...
anti-humans: ...
anti-Semites: ...
Antonescu, General Ion: ...
Apuseni Mountains: ...
Archide: ...
Archangel: ...
ARLUS: ...
Arsenescu, Colonel: ...
Austria: ...
Avadanei, Lieutenant: ...
B
Babel ou le vertige technique
(G. Thibau): ...
Bacău: ...
Bacău Region: ...
Back Door to War (Charles Callan Tansill): ...
Bacu, D.: ...
Baia Sprie: ...
Balan, Gheorghe: ...
Balkans: ...
Ball: ...
Banat Region: ...
Baragan: ...
Barbosu, Dr.: ...
Barefoot (Zaharia Stancu): ...
Bârlad: ...
Barracks No. 13 & 14: ...
Baruch, Bernard: ...
Başchioi: ...
Bavaria: ...
Beria, Lavrentiy: ...
Bessarabia: ...
La Bête sans nom ... (Michel Sturdza): ...
Bicaz: ...
Bihor Region: ...
Bismarck, Otto E. L. von: ...
Bodnărenco (alias Emil Bodnaras): ...
Bogdanescu: ...
Bogdanovici: ...
Bolfosu, Eugen: ...
Bolsheviks: ...
Boncescu, Gheorghe: ...
Borila, General Petre: ...
Botea, Lieutenant: ...
Botoşani Region: ...
Brain-washing, a Synthesis ... (Kenneth Goff): ...
Brainwashing (Edward Hunter): ...
Braşov-Codlea: ...
Brătianu, Dinu: ...
Brătianu, George: ...
Brittany: ...
Britton, Frank: ...
Brotherhood of the Cross (F.d.C.): ...
Bucharest: ...
Buchs: ...
Bucoveanu, Ion: ...
Budapest: ...
Bulgaria: ...
Butler, Eric D.: ...
Byron, Lord: ...
Bacău: ...
Bacău Region: ...
Back Door to War (Charles Callan Tansill): ...
Bacu, D.: ...
Baia Sprie: ...
Balan, Gheorghe: ...
Balkans: ...
Ball: ...
Banat Region: ...
Baragan: ...
Barbosu, Dr.: ...
Barefoot (Zaharia Stancu): ...
Bârlad: ...
Barracks No. 13 & 14: ...
Baruch, Bernard: ...
Başchioi: ...
Bavaria: ...
Beria, Lavrentiy: ...
Bessarabia: ...
La Bête sans nom ... (Michel Sturdza): ...
Bicaz: ...
Bihor Region: ...
Bismarck, Otto E. L. von: ...
Bodnărenco (alias Emil Bodnaras): ...
Bogdanescu: ...
Bogdanovici: ...
Bolfosu, Eugen: ...
Bolsheviks: ...
Boncescu, Gheorghe: ...
Borila, General Petre: ...
Botea, Lieutenant: ...
Botoşani Region: ...
Brain-washing, a Synthesis ... (Kenneth Goff): ...
Brainwashing (Edward Hunter): ...
Braşov-Codlea: ...
Brătianu, Dinu: ...
Brătianu, George: ...
Brittany: ...
Britton, Frank: ...
Brotherhood of the Cross (F.d.C.): ...
Bucharest: ...
Buchs: ...
Bucoveanu, Ion: ...
Budapest: ...
Bulgaria: ...
Butler, Eric D.: ...
Byron, Lord: ...
C
Calciu, Gheorghe: ...
Camilar, Eusebiu: ...
Câmpeanu, Colonel: ...
Câmpu-Lungul, Moldavia: ...
Camus, Albert: ...
Cantemir: ...
Caranica, Gheorghe: ...
Caravia: ...
Cârja, Dr. Ion: ...
Carol II, King: ...
Cavnic: ...
cazinca: ...
The Center for Student Re-education: ...
Cernăuţi: ...
Cerna-Voda: ...
Charles, Prince (later King Carol I): ...
China: ...
Chişinevski, Josef: ...
Ciobanu, prison guard: ...
Climescu: ...
Cluj: ...
Coifan, Coriolan: ...
Cojocaru: ...
Codreanu, Corneliu Zelea: ...
Codreanu et la Garde de Fer (Paul Guiraud): ...
Cohen, Israel (alias Bela Kun): ...
Comte, Auguste: ...
Constanţa: ...
Constantin, Puiu: ...
Corneliu Codreanu, prezent (various authors): ...
Corneliu Z. Codreanu in perspectiva a douăzeci de ani (various authors): ...
Cosmici, Colonel: ...
Costăchescu: ...
Crăciunaş, Colonel: ...
Craciunescu: ...
Cristo-Loveanu, Professor Miron: ...
Cronologie Legionara: ...
Cuba: ...
Cucole, Gheorghe: ...
Cucu, prison guard: ...
Cuza, Professor Alexandru C.: ...
Cuza, Prince Alexander (later Cuza-Voda): ...
Cuzist Party: ...
Czecho-Slovakia: ...
Camilar, Eusebiu: ...
Câmpeanu, Colonel: ...
Câmpu-Lungul, Moldavia: ...
Camus, Albert: ...
Cantemir: ...
Caranica, Gheorghe: ...
Caravia: ...
Cârja, Dr. Ion: ...
Carol II, King: ...
Cavnic: ...
cazinca: ...
The Center for Student Re-education: ...
Cernăuţi: ...
Cerna-Voda: ...
Charles, Prince (later King Carol I): ...
China: ...
Chişinevski, Josef: ...
Ciobanu, prison guard: ...
Climescu: ...
Cluj: ...
Coifan, Coriolan: ...
Cojocaru: ...
Codreanu, Corneliu Zelea: ...
Codreanu et la Garde de Fer (Paul Guiraud): ...
Cohen, Israel (alias Bela Kun): ...
Comte, Auguste: ...
Constanţa: ...
Constantin, Puiu: ...
Corneliu Codreanu, prezent (various authors): ...
Corneliu Z. Codreanu in perspectiva a douăzeci de ani (various authors): ...
Cosmici, Colonel: ...
Costăchescu: ...
Crăciunaş, Colonel: ...
Craciunescu: ...
Cristo-Loveanu, Professor Miron: ...
Cronologie Legionara: ...
Cuba: ...
Cucole, Gheorghe: ...
Cucu, prison guard: ...
Cuza, Professor Alexandru C.: ...
Cuza, Prince Alexander (later Cuza-Voda): ...
Cuzist Party: ...
Czecho-Slovakia: ...
D
Dacia: ...
Dacians: ...
Dall, Colonel Curtis B.: ...
Damocles: ...
Dănilă: ...
Danube-Black Sea Canal: ...
Destroy the Accuser (Frederick Seelig): ...
Diaca: ...
Djugashvili (alias Stalin): ...
Dobrogea: ...
Dorneanu: ...
Drăghici, Alexandru: ...
Dullberger (alias Dulgheru): ...
Dumitrescu, Lieutenant: ...
Duţă: ...
Dacians: ...
Dall, Colonel Curtis B.: ...
Damocles: ...
Dănilă: ...
Danube-Black Sea Canal: ...
Destroy the Accuser (Frederick Seelig): ...
Diaca: ...
Djugashvili (alias Stalin): ...
Dobrogea: ...
Dorneanu: ...
Drăghici, Alexandru: ...
Dullberger (alias Dulgheru): ...
Dumitrescu, Lieutenant: ...
Duţă: ...
E
Einstein, Albert: ...
elev: ...
Ellul, Jacques: ...
Eminescu, Mihail: ...
Enăchescu: ...
Englishmen: ...
L’Envoye de l’Archange (Jerome and Jean Tharaud): ...
Der erzwungene Krieg (David L. Hoggan): ...
Esquisse d’une theorie des opinions (Jean Stoetzel): ...
Europe: ...
evrei: ...
elev: ...
Ellul, Jacques: ...
Eminescu, Mihail: ...
Enăchescu: ...
Englishmen: ...
L’Envoye de l’Archange (Jerome and Jean Tharaud): ...
Der erzwungene Krieg (David L. Hoggan): ...
Esquisse d’une theorie des opinions (Jean Stoetzel): ...
Europe: ...
evrei: ...
F
Făgăraş: ...
Făgăraş Mountains: ...
Făgăraş Prison: ...
Facing the Truth (Vasile Iasinschi): ...
Fascists: ...
Father Joseph: ...
F.d.C. (Brotherhood of the Cross): ...
F.D.R. (Curtis B. Dall): ...
Federal Reserve System: ...
Fischer: ...
Florescu: ...
Fleuraş: ...
France: ...
France, Anatole: ...
Franklin, Benjamin: ...
Făgăraş Mountains: ...
Făgăraş Prison: ...
Facing the Truth (Vasile Iasinschi): ...
Fascists: ...
Father Joseph: ...
F.d.C. (Brotherhood of the Cross): ...
F.D.R. (Curtis B. Dall): ...
Federal Reserve System: ...
Fischer: ...
Florescu: ...
Fleuraş: ...
France: ...
France, Anatole: ...
Franklin, Benjamin: ...
G
Gafencu: ...
Gal: ...
Galaţi: ...
Garda Conştiinţei Naţionale: ...
Garda de Fier: ...
Gavenescul, Professor Ion: ...
Genealogy of Morals (Friedrich Nietzsche): ...
Georgescu, Lieutenant: ...
Georgescu, Sergeant: ...
Georgescu, Teohari (Burăh Tescovici): ...
Germans: ...
Germany: ...
Gheorghiu, Captain, director of Gherla Prison: ...
Gheorghiu-Dej, Gheorghe: ...
Gherla Prison: ...
Glodeanu, Inocenţiu: ...
Goff, Reverend Kenneth: ...
Goga, Octavian: ...
Goiciu, Captain Petre, director of Gherla Prison: ...
Grama brothers: ...
Granovsky, Anatoli: ...
Great Britain: ...
Great Powers: ...
Greece: ...
Guard of the National Conscience: ...
Guiraud, Paul: ...
guguştiuci: ...
Gal: ...
Galaţi: ...
Garda Conştiinţei Naţionale: ...
Garda de Fier: ...
Gavenescul, Professor Ion: ...
Genealogy of Morals (Friedrich Nietzsche): ...
Georgescu, Lieutenant: ...
Georgescu, Sergeant: ...
Georgescu, Teohari (Burăh Tescovici): ...
Germans: ...
Germany: ...
Gheorghiu, Captain, director of Gherla Prison: ...
Gheorghiu-Dej, Gheorghe: ...
Gherla Prison: ...
Glodeanu, Inocenţiu: ...
Goff, Reverend Kenneth: ...
Goga, Octavian: ...
Goiciu, Captain Petre, director of Gherla Prison: ...
Grama brothers: ...
Granovsky, Anatoli: ...
Great Britain: ...
Great Powers: ...
Greece: ...
Guard of the National Conscience: ...
Guiraud, Paul: ...
guguştiuci: ...
H
Heine, Heinrich: ...
Henteş: ...
History of the Byzantine Empire (Nicolae Iorga): ...
History of Romania (Nicolae Iorga): ...
Hitler, Adolf: ...
Hoggan, Professor David L. ...
Hospital Room Four: ...
Hosu: ...
Hunedoara Prison: ...
Hungarian Uprising: ...
Hungary: ...
Hunter, Edward: ...
Henteş: ...
History of the Byzantine Empire (Nicolae Iorga): ...
History of Romania (Nicolae Iorga): ...
Hitler, Adolf: ...
Hoggan, Professor David L. ...
Hospital Room Four: ...
Hosu: ...
Hunedoara Prison: ...
Hungarian Uprising: ...
Hungary: ...
Hunter, Edward: ...
I
I Was an NKVD Agent (Anatoli
Granovsky): ...
Iaşi: ...
Iaşi County: ...
Iasinschi, Vasile: ...
Imperativul momentului istoric (Ion Gavenescul): ...
India: ...
International Brigade: ...
International Conspiracy: ...
Întoarcerea din Infern: amintirile ... (Ion Cârja): ...
Ionescu, Virgil: ...
Iorga, Prof. Nicolae: ...
Iron Curtain: ...
Iron Guard: ...
Israel: ...
Iaşi: ...
Iaşi County: ...
Iasinschi, Vasile: ...
Imperativul momentului istoric (Ion Gavenescul): ...
India: ...
International Brigade: ...
International Conspiracy: ...
Întoarcerea din Infern: amintirile ... (Ion Cârja): ...
Ionescu, Virgil: ...
Iorga, Prof. Nicolae: ...
Iron Curtain: ...
Iron Guard: ...
Israel: ...
J
Jew: ...
Jewish Revolution: ...
Jianu: ...
Jilava Prison: ...
John Birch Society: ...
Juberian, Constantin: ...
Judaism: ...
Judea: ...
Jurilofca: ...
Jewish Revolution: ...
Jianu: ...
Jilava Prison: ...
John Birch Society: ...
Juberian, Constantin: ...
Judaism: ...
Judea: ...
Jurilofca: ...
K
Khruschev, Nikita: ...
Kirion: ...
Knupffer, George: ...
Kremlin: ...
Kun, Bela (alias Israel Cohen): ...
Kirion: ...
Knupffer, George: ...
Kremlin: ...
Kun, Bela (alias Israel Cohen): ...
L
Laitin: ...
Landowsky, J.: ...
Lazăr, Captain: ...
Legion of Michael the Archangel: ...
Legionaries: ...
Legionary Movement: ...
Legiunea Archangelului Mihail: ...
“Legiunea şi L.A.N.C.” (Ion Mota): ...
Lenin, Nikolay (Ulyanov, Vladimir Ilich): ...
Lenin University: ...
Leonida, Titus: ...
Leopardi, Giacomo: ...
Levinschi: ...
Liberal Dissident Party: ...
Liberal Party: ...
liceu: ...
Liga Apărării Naţionale Crestine: ...
Limberea, Paul: ...
Lugoj Prison: ...
Lupaşcu: ...
Lupescu, Magda (alias Magda Wolff): ...
Landowsky, J.: ...
Lazăr, Captain: ...
Legion of Michael the Archangel: ...
Legionaries: ...
Legionary Movement: ...
Legiunea Archangelului Mihail: ...
“Legiunea şi L.A.N.C.” (Ion Mota): ...
Lenin, Nikolay (Ulyanov, Vladimir Ilich): ...
Lenin University: ...
Leonida, Titus: ...
Leopardi, Giacomo: ...
Levinschi: ...
Liberal Dissident Party: ...
Liberal Party: ...
liceu: ...
Liga Apărării Naţionale Crestine: ...
Limberea, Paul: ...
Lugoj Prison: ...
Lupaşcu: ...
Lupescu, Magda (alias Magda Wolff): ...
M
Macedonia: ...
Macedonians: ...
Magirescu, Captain: ...
Magirescu, Eugen: ...
Makarenko, Anton Semenovich: ...
Malmaison Prison: ...
Mandinescu, Sergiu: ...
Mândruţă, prison guard: ...
Maniu, Iuliu: ...
Manoilescu, Professor Mihai: ...
Maromet, director of Jilava Prison: ...
Marshall, Louis: ...
Mărtinuş: ...
Marxism: ...
Mateiaş: ...
Mătuşu, Nicolae: ...
McCabe, Joseph: ...
mental health: ...
Messaroş, political officer at Gherla Prison: ...
Mihai (Michael), King: ...
Mihai-Viteazul village: ...
Mihailov, Lenin: ...
Mihalcea, Lieutenant: ...
Military Tribunal of Bucharest: ...
Milwaukee, Wisconsin: ...
Ministry of the Interior: ...
The Mist (Eusebiu Camilar): ...
Moldavia: ...
Moldavian Region: ...
Moldavian Republic: ...
Molotov, Viachislav Mikhailovich (Scryabin): ...
Morărescu: ...
Moscovici, Ilie: ...
Moscovites: ...
Moscow: ...
Moslems: ...
Moţa, Ion: ...
Munich: ...
Munteanu, Eugen: ...
Muntenia (Wallachia): ...
Murfatlar: ...
Murgulescu: ...
Macedonians: ...
Magirescu, Captain: ...
Magirescu, Eugen: ...
Makarenko, Anton Semenovich: ...
Malmaison Prison: ...
Mandinescu, Sergiu: ...
Mândruţă, prison guard: ...
Maniu, Iuliu: ...
Manoilescu, Professor Mihai: ...
Maromet, director of Jilava Prison: ...
Marshall, Louis: ...
Mărtinuş: ...
Marxism: ...
Mateiaş: ...
Mătuşu, Nicolae: ...
McCabe, Joseph: ...
mental health: ...
Messaroş, political officer at Gherla Prison: ...
Mihai (Michael), King: ...
Mihai-Viteazul village: ...
Mihailov, Lenin: ...
Mihalcea, Lieutenant: ...
Military Tribunal of Bucharest: ...
Milwaukee, Wisconsin: ...
Ministry of the Interior: ...
The Mist (Eusebiu Camilar): ...
Moldavia: ...
Moldavian Region: ...
Moldavian Republic: ...
Molotov, Viachislav Mikhailovich (Scryabin): ...
Morărescu: ...
Moscovici, Ilie: ...
Moscovites: ...
Moscow: ...
Moslems: ...
Moţa, Ion: ...
Munich: ...
Munteanu, Eugen: ...
Muntenia (Wallachia): ...
Murfatlar: ...
Murgulescu: ...
N
N., Petre: ...
Napoleon Bonaparte: ...
National Peasant Party: ...
Năvodari: ...
Nazis: ...
New Times: ...
Nicholas II, Czar: ...
Nicolschi, General: ...
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm: ...
Niki: ...
Napoleon Bonaparte: ...
National Peasant Party: ...
Năvodari: ...
Nazis: ...
New Times: ...
Nicholas II, Czar: ...
Nicolschi, General: ...
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm: ...
Niki: ...
O
Obreja, Spiru: ...
Ocnele-Mari Prison: ...
Oliver, Professor Revilo P.: ...
Oltenia: ...
Onac: ...
Opriş: ...
Oprişan, Constantin: ...
Organization of Detainees of Communist Convictions (O.D.C.C.): ...
The Origins of the Second World War (A. J. P. Taylor): ...
Orwell, George: ...
Outer Mongolia: ...
Ocnele-Mari Prison: ...
Oliver, Professor Revilo P.: ...
Oltenia: ...
Onac: ...
Opriş: ...
Oprişan, Constantin: ...
Organization of Detainees of Communist Convictions (O.D.C.C.): ...
The Origins of the Second World War (A. J. P. Taylor): ...
Orwell, George: ...
Outer Mongolia: ...
P
Pancu, Constantin: ...
Papahagi: ...
Papanace, Atanase: ...
Paris: ...
Paris, Peace Treaty of (1856): ...
Parliament, Romanian: ...
Pascu: ...
Pătrăşcanu, Nuti: ...
Pauker, Ana (alias Rabinovich): ...
Pavlov, Dr. Ivan Petrovich: ...
Pegler, Westbrook: ...
Peninsula Labor Colony: ...
Pennsylvania: ...
The Pentagon Case (Robert A. Winston): ...
Petrescu, General Alexandru, military judge: ...
Piedmont: ...
Pirinei: ...
Pitea: ...
Piteşti Prison: ...
Piţigoi: ...
Ploeşti: ...
Poarta Albă: ...
politruks: ...
Pompilian: ...
Pop, Cornel: ...
Pop, Gheorghe: ...
Popa, Alexandru: ...
Popescu: ...
Popescu, Florin: ...
Predeal: ...
Principalities, Romanian: ...
Prisăcaru: ...
Propagandes (Jacques Ellul): ...
psychological warfare: ...
psychopolitics: ...
Public Opinion: ...
Papahagi: ...
Papanace, Atanase: ...
Paris: ...
Paris, Peace Treaty of (1856): ...
Parliament, Romanian: ...
Pascu: ...
Pătrăşcanu, Nuti: ...
Pauker, Ana (alias Rabinovich): ...
Pavlov, Dr. Ivan Petrovich: ...
Pegler, Westbrook: ...
Peninsula Labor Colony: ...
Pennsylvania: ...
The Pentagon Case (Robert A. Winston): ...
Petrescu, General Alexandru, military judge: ...
Piedmont: ...
Pirinei: ...
Pitea: ...
Piteşti Prison: ...
Piţigoi: ...
Ploeşti: ...
Poarta Albă: ...
politruks: ...
Pompilian: ...
Pop, Cornel: ...
Pop, Gheorghe: ...
Popa, Alexandru: ...
Popescu: ...
Popescu, Florin: ...
Predeal: ...
Principalities, Romanian: ...
Prisăcaru: ...
Propagandes (Jacques Ellul): ...
psychological warfare: ...
psychopolitics: ...
Public Opinion: ...
R
Rabinovich, Ana (alias
Pauker): ...
Rădăuţi: ...
Rahova Road: ...
The Rebel (Albert Camus): ...
Reck, Ludovic: ...
Red Symphony (J. Landowsky): ...
Reds in America (R. M. Whitney): ...
Renan, Ernest: ...
Richelieu, Cardinal: ...
A Ride to Panmunjon (Duane Thorin): ...
Rodaş: ...
Roman, Bubi: ...
Romans: ...
Roman Empire: ...
România şi sfârşitul Europei ... (Michel Sturdza): ...
Romanian People's Republic: ...
Rome: ...
Room 99: ...
Roosevelt, Franklin D.: ...
Roosevelt, Theodore: ...
Rădăuţi: ...
Rahova Road: ...
The Rebel (Albert Camus): ...
Reck, Ludovic: ...
Red Symphony (J. Landowsky): ...
Reds in America (R. M. Whitney): ...
Renan, Ernest: ...
Richelieu, Cardinal: ...
A Ride to Panmunjon (Duane Thorin): ...
Rodaş: ...
Roman, Bubi: ...
Romans: ...
Roman Empire: ...
România şi sfârşitul Europei ... (Michel Sturdza): ...
Romanian People's Republic: ...
Rome: ...
Room 99: ...
Roosevelt, Franklin D.: ...
Roosevelt, Theodore: ...
S
Sade, Donatien Alphonse, ‘Marquise
de’: ...
Schiffs: ...
Schopenhauer, Arthur: ...
Scryabin (alias Molotov): ...
Sebesteny, political officer: ...
Secu, Şerban: ...
Seelig, Frederick: ...
Seneca, Lucius Annaeus: ...
Şerban, Gheorghe: ...
Sikorsky, General: ...
Simionescu, student: ...
Simionescu, Dr.: ...
Sinfonía en rojo mayor (J. Landowsky): ...
Siut-Ghiol lake: ...
Sokoloff, Dr. Boris: ...
Solomon: ...
Someş River: ...
The Soviet Inferno (Louis Zoul): ...
Soviet Union (Russia): ...
Sovroms (Soviet-Romanian exploitation companies): ...
Spain: ...
Springfield, Missouri: ...
Saint Nicholas’ Day: ...
Stalin, Joseph V. (Djugashvili): ...
Stancu, Zaharia: ...
Stickley, Professor Charles: ...
Stoetzel, Jean: ...
Stoicanescu: ...
student: ...
Sturdza, Prince Michel (Mihai): ...
Suceava Prison: ...
Suciu, Silviu: ...
Suicide of Europe (Michel Sturdza): ...
Supreme Court: ...
Schiffs: ...
Schopenhauer, Arthur: ...
Scryabin (alias Molotov): ...
Sebesteny, political officer: ...
Secu, Şerban: ...
Seelig, Frederick: ...
Seneca, Lucius Annaeus: ...
Şerban, Gheorghe: ...
Sikorsky, General: ...
Simionescu, student: ...
Simionescu, Dr.: ...
Sinfonía en rojo mayor (J. Landowsky): ...
Siut-Ghiol lake: ...
Sokoloff, Dr. Boris: ...
Solomon: ...
Someş River: ...
The Soviet Inferno (Louis Zoul): ...
Soviet Union (Russia): ...
Sovroms (Soviet-Romanian exploitation companies): ...
Spain: ...
Springfield, Missouri: ...
Saint Nicholas’ Day: ...
Stalin, Joseph V. (Djugashvili): ...
Stancu, Zaharia: ...
Stickley, Professor Charles: ...
Stoetzel, Jean: ...
Stoicanescu: ...
student: ...
Sturdza, Prince Michel (Mihai): ...
Suceava Prison: ...
Suciu, Silviu: ...
Suicide of Europe (Michel Sturdza): ...
Supreme Court: ...
T
Talmud: ...
Tănase, Alexandru: ...
Ţăncăbeşti: ...
Tansill, Professor Charles Callan: ...
Tărgu-Mureş: ...
Tărgu-Ocna: ...
Taylor, Professor A. J. P.: ...
Teodoru: ...
terci: ...
Tescovici, Burăh (alias Teohari Georgescu): ...
Tharaud, Jerome and Jean: ...
Thibau, G.: ...
Thorin, Duane: ...
Thugs and Communists (Louis Zoul): ...
Timişoara: ...
Tomuţă, Octavian: ...
Transcaucasia: ...
Transylvania: ...
Trevor-Roper, H. R.: ...
troiţe: ...
Tudose: ...
Tulcea County: ...
Ţurcanu, Eugen: ...
Turkey: ...
Turkish Rule: ...
Turkish Sultan: ...
Turks: ...
Turnu-Severin: ...
Ţuţea, Petre: ...
Tănase, Alexandru: ...
Ţăncăbeşti: ...
Tansill, Professor Charles Callan: ...
Tărgu-Mureş: ...
Tărgu-Ocna: ...
Taylor, Professor A. J. P.: ...
Teodoru: ...
terci: ...
Tescovici, Burăh (alias Teohari Georgescu): ...
Tharaud, Jerome and Jean: ...
Thibau, G.: ...
Thorin, Duane: ...
Thugs and Communists (Louis Zoul): ...
Timişoara: ...
Tomuţă, Octavian: ...
Transcaucasia: ...
Transylvania: ...
Trevor-Roper, H. R.: ...
troiţe: ...
Tudose: ...
Tulcea County: ...
Ţurcanu, Eugen: ...
Turkey: ...
Turkish Rule: ...
Turkish Sultan: ...
Turks: ...
Turnu-Severin: ...
Ţuţea, Petre: ...
U
Ulyanov, Vladimir Ilich (alias
Lenin): ...
United Nations: ...
United States: ...
United Nations: ...
United States: ...
V
Valea-Neagră: ...
Valea Nistrului: ...
Victorian League of Rights: ...
Victoriei Street: ...
Vojen: ...
Valea Nistrului: ...
Victorian League of Rights: ...
Victoriei Street: ...
Vojen: ...
W
Walker, General Edwin A.: ...
Wallachia (Muntenia): ...
Wall Street: ...
Warburgs: ...
Washington, D.C.: ...
Weizmann Laboratories: ...
The White Nights (Boris Sokoloff): ...
Whitney, R. M.: ...
Wilson, Woodrow: ...
Winston, Captain Robert A.: ...
Wolff, Magda (alias Magda Lupescu), consort of King Carol: ...
World Festival of Democratic Youth: ...
World War I: ...
World War II: ...
Wright brothers: ...
Wallachia (Muntenia): ...
Wall Street: ...
Warburgs: ...
Washington, D.C.: ...
Weizmann Laboratories: ...
The White Nights (Boris Sokoloff): ...
Whitney, R. M.: ...
Wilson, Woodrow: ...
Winston, Captain Robert A.: ...
Wolff, Magda (alias Magda Lupescu), consort of King Carol: ...
World Festival of Democratic Youth: ...
World War I: ...
World War II: ...
Wright brothers: ...
Y
Yezhov: ...
Z
Zeller, Colonel: ...
Zionists: ...
Zoul, Louis: ...
Zionists: ...
Zoul, Louis: ...