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National Popular Party (Romania)

The National Popular Party (Romanian: Partidul Național Popular, PNP) was an antifascist political party in Romania, founded during World War II as the underground Union of Patriots (Uniunea Patrioților, UP). The latter had defined itself as a spontaneous movement of resistance to the dictatorial regime of Ion Antonescu, but was largely known as a front for the illegal Romanian Communist Party (PCdR, later PCR). Its founders—Dumitru Bagdasar, Gheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa, Simion Stoilow—were closely cooperating with PCdR men, but also with liberal opposition forces. Repressed by the authorities, the UP made a comeback after the pro-Allied August 23 Coup of 1944, when it endured as a small ally of the communists—mostly controlled directly by them, but sometimes rebellious.

National Popular Party
(Union of Patriots)
Partidul Național Popular
(Uniunea Patrioților)
PresidentGheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa (ca. 1943; 1946–1949)
Dumitru Bagdasar (1943–1946)
Mitiță Constantinescu (1946)
Petre Constantinescu-Iași (1949)
Founded1942
Dissolved1949
HeadquartersCrângului Street 15, Bucharest (to 1944)
Spătarului Street, Bucharest (after 1944)
NewspaperRomânia Liberă (1943–1944)
Tribuna Poporului (1944–1946)
Națiunea (1946–1949)
Military wingPatriotic Combat Formations (FLP)
Religious wingUnion of Democratic Priests (UPD)
IdeologyBig tent
Antifascism
Left-wing populism
Left-wing nationalism (Romanian)
Political positionCentre-left to far-left
National affiliationPatriotic Antihitlerite Front (1943)
National-Democratic Coalition (1944)
National Democratic Front (1944)
Bloc of Democratic Parties (1946)
People's Democratic Front (1948)

Defining itself as a party for the middle classes, the PNP sought to attract into its ranks both nationalists and ethnic minorities, and was used by the Communist Party as a means of weakening the traditional parties. From 1945, it registered its most significant successes among the repenting fascists, absorbing into its ranks former members of the Iron Guard. The UP and PNP were instrumental in helping the PCR reach some of its main objectives, including the overthrow of Nicolae Rădescu and the hastening of land reform.

The PNP was nominally loyal to King Michael I, but had no longer a part to play in decision-making when Michael was overthrown on the closing days of 1947. The party itself survived the 1948 election, but was dissolved by its leaders in early 1949, reportedly under pressure from the new government. Its former activists were either integrated into the structures of the communist state or repressed and, in some cases, imprisoned by the latter.

History

Wartime opposition

The UP's roots were planted in a semi-clandestine intellectual movement that opposed Antonescu's regime in general and, in particular, its support for Nazi Germany and the other Axis Powers, and its commitment to war against the Soviet Union. According to its own records, the UP emerged clandestinely in early 1942, centered on the activities of three left-leaning intellectuals: the brain surgeon Bagdasar, the sociologist Vlădescu-Răcoasa, and the mathematician Stoilow. As listed by historian Corneliu Crăciun, the group's explicit goals were: "sabotaging the war industry, resisting the dispatch of men on the anti-Soviet front, organizing partisans into detachments, annulling the Vienna Diktat, peace with the USA, England and the USSR."[1] Vlădescu-Răcoasa had a background in politics, initially as an affiliate of the Democratic Nationalists, then as an internationalist and antifascist with strong Marxist leanings.[2] He had also been registered as a member of the Social Democratic Party (PSDR).[3] Bagdasar was educated abroad, where he became inspired by American progressivism,[4] while Stoilow had frequented meetings of pro-Allied intellectuals, some of whom supported the mainstream National Peasants' Party (PNȚ).[5]

One of the first notable actions of the UP was publishing, starting with January 1943, the illegal newspaper România Liberă,[4][6] later joined by another antifascist organ, Lupta Patriotică.[7] The former was reportedly designed to appear in September–November 1942, but was discovered by the Siguranța police and could reemerge only in January of the next year.[8] According to various accounts, România Liberă was managed from Bucharest by George Ivașcu, on his spare time from editing the pro-Antonescu gazette Vremea and with only marginal interventions from the PCdR.[4] Party historians claimed that the newspaper "kept the popular masses informed" on the growth of resistance,[9] whereas Crăciun notes that its circulation was exceedingly small.[10] However, historian Radu Păiușan claims that the UP's history can be traced back to a propaganda operation carried out later by Romanian communists exiled on Soviet territory: in January 1943, Leonte Răutu supposedly created the newspaper România Liberă, and a radio station of the same name, with which the Soviets intended to give the impression of a rising antifascist movement in Romania.[11]

PCdR contacts

Several authors trace the original meeting between the UP and the PCdR to mid-1943. They refer to either the turn of tides on the front, after Stalingrad,[4][12] or to involvement, in 1943, of PCdR men Constantin Agiu and Petre Constantinescu-Iași, who took it upon themselves to reorganize the Union from November 1943.[13] The two were subsequently joined by other communists or communist sympathizers, including Mihai Levente, Mihai Magheru, and Stanciu Stoian.[14] Vlădescu-Răcoasa was the first person identified as leader of the UP,[4] while Agiu was designated Caretaker; Constantinescu-Iași and Bagdasar were tasked with co-opting intellectuals, while Levente served as the administrator and Magheru directed work in the provinces.[15] Nicu Rădescu, the estranged and ill-reputed son of General Nicolae Rădescu,[16] was also closely cooperating with both the PCdR and the UP.[17]

Under this guidance, the UP contacted a group of high-ranking soldiers who were seeking to depose Antonescu, the most active of whom was Gheorghe Avramescu—who was at once an antifascist and anticommunist.[13] The UP also left a historical record as a member of the PCdR's Patriotic Antihitlerite Front, which also included the revived Ploughmen's Front and two other small political groups: the Socialist Peasants' Party, the Hungarian People's Union (MADOSZ). The association pact was sealed in August 1943, after a secretive meeting in which the UP was represented by Bagdasar and an N. Dinulescu.[18] Outside of the Front, the UP still maintained links with other opposition groups, and was especially close to left-wing Social Democrats (Ion Pas, Ștefan Voitec, Theodor Iordăchescu, Leon Ghelerter).[19] Throughout 1943, Magheru, as UP representative, held talks with the PNȚ, aiming to "create a broad coalition of the democratic and patriotic forces toward bring down the Antonescu regime".[20]

Subsequently, the UP's Central Committee took residence in the same building as the PCdR archive, at the Wexler residence on Crângului Street 15, Bucharest.[17] It soon reported having some thousands of members of all ethnic backgrounds, and representation in all the main cities,[4] with most active cells in university towns and among schoolteachers' unions.[21] It also touted its presence among the workers, especially those at the Romanian Railway Company, whom it encouraged on sabotage missions.[22] According to official records, the first registered members also included Iorgu Iordan and Ștefan Vencov, with outside sympathizers such as Zevedei Barbu, Constantin Balmuș, Eduard and Florica Mezincescu, Mircea Florian, David Prodan, Teodor Bugnariu, Alexandru Graur, Constantin Daicoviciu, Constantin I. Parhon, Bazil Munteanu, and Mihai Ralea.[23] Another version suggests that Zevedei Barbu, who was also a PCdR man, was helped by Alexandru Roșca with establishing a UP nucleus at Cluj University (which had relocated to Sibiu).[24] All these records obscure the participation of the PNȚ which, through Ioan Hudiță, also claimed to have established this intellectual opposition movement.[25]

1943–1944: repression and resurgence

 
Gheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa (center) with the PCdR's Nicolae Ceaușescu and Andrei Pătrașcu, at a meeting of solidarity with the Red Army. Bucharest, August 30, 1944

In May 1943, Siguranța had captured an UP man, the statistician Mircea Biji, who was interrogated and agreed to cooperate, leading the authorities into UP safe houses.[17][26] Later that year, the authorities issued an arrest warrant for psychologist Mihai Beniuc, identifying him as another UP liaison—in fact, Beniuc had yet to join the group, and was largely unaware of its activities.[27] On December 15, the secret police organized its sting operation. At Crângului, it chanced upon a trove of PCdR documents, filed by Remus Koffler, with incriminating evidence about the UP. Several were arrested, including Vlădescu-Răcoasa and Magheru.[17][26] The landowner Petru Groza, founder of the Ploughmen's Front, was also picked up, the documents having revealed that he was sponsoring the UP.[26]

In all, fifty men and women suspected of UP membership or sympathies were subjected to a mass trial in first two months of 1944.[28] While Groza's release was ordered by Antonescu himself,[26] Vlădescu-Răcoasa found himself sentenced to 15 years of hard labor. The court found him guilty of "endangering State order and security".[15] Similar sentences were handed to Zevedei Barbu,[29] to Magheru, and to Magheru's wife Anca.[17] Bagdasar, by then also a member of the PCdR, took charge of the UP,[4] with Agiu taking a Central Committee seat.[30] Before April 1944, the movement was involved in negotiations with the PNȚ and the PCdR-backed left-leaning circles of Iași. Together, they wrote an open letter of protest to Antonescu, asking for Romania's immediate withdrawal from the Eastern Front.[4][31] On May 24, 1944, the Union also entered a "National-Democratic Coalition", alongside the National Liberal Party–Tătărescu, Groza's Front, the PSDR, the PSȚ, MADOSZ, and Petre Topa's Democratic Nationalists.[32]

In March 1944, the PCdR had joined a pan-resistance National Democratic Bloc (BND), which also included the PNȚ, PSDR, and the National Liberal Party (PNL). Together with King Michael I and his court, the group carried out the August 23 Coup, resulting in Antonescu's arrest and the unilateral cession of war with the Allies. Just one day after the coup, Vlădescu-Răcoasa was freed and resumed political activities in the open, introduced by the party press as "the combatant for Romanian freedom."[33] On August 31, UP members were on hand at the rally held to greet the Red Army upon its entrance into Bucharest,[34][35] the effective start of Soviet occupation.

By October 1944, when it had established chapters in all of sectors of Bucharest,[21] the UP had moved its headquarters on Spătarului Street. This was a former hospice of the Wehrmacht, evacuated during the street fighting, and reportedly vandalized "beyond belief" by the UP's own members.[36] While assuming a public face, the Union had to abandon its political newspaper: România Liberă was seized by the PCdR, and its first issue of this new series, presumed lost, was falsified by the PCR after 1972.[37] In its stead, on September 15, the UP inaugurated Tribuna Poporului, which was entrusted to George Călinescu, the literary historian and novelist.[38] The UP also sponsored Călinescu's foreign-policy review, Lumea.[12]

Following negotiations at the beginning of September, the Union absorbed the rump Socialist Party led by Vasile Anagnoste.[39] On September 27, the UP and its former Patriotic Antihitlerite colleagues formed a political alliance called National Democratic Front (FND), which also comprised the PSDR. As UP envoys, Vlădescu-Răcoasa, Bagdasar and Stoilow held a seat each on the FND National Council.[40] The new pact, comprising forces that were vastly unequal to each other,[41] was sealed only after the communists had resumed their pressures on the PNL and PNȚ, both of which refused to join a long-term alliance.[42] According to anticommunist diplomat Emil Ciurea, it pitted one of the PCdR's alliances (Antihitlerites, "enriched by the arrival of [the PSDR] socialists") against the other (BND).[43]

Throughout October, the UP was a participant in the PCdR-organized public rallies against the independent Premier, General Constantin Sănătescu, and his PNȚ and PNL ministers, accusing the cabinet of playing protector to war criminals.[44] Vlădescu-Răcoasa was active in the intrigue, and, at a public rally held in Călărași, discussed the imperative of creating "the new Romania at all costs".[45] On November 4, following a Soviet intervention, Sănătescu reshuffled his cabinet, with a third of the ministerial mandates, and sizable portions of provincial administrative offices, going to FND politicians.[46] In newly liberated Northern Transylvania, this meant the UP's integration at the highest level of local government. The FND, cooperating with MADOSZ, contemplated making the region into an autonomous entity, and organized an executive Northern Transylvanian Committee that included two UP activists. This body was in conflict with the PNȚ and PNL, its rallies allegedly broken up by the Maniu Guards.[47] Finally joining the UP, Beniuc was sent into the region, organizing new chapters for both the Union and the Ploughmen's Front.[48]

FND alliance and 1945 turmoil

 
Constantin Burducea addressing the Congress of Unified Labor Unions, Bucharest, on January 30, 1945. The photograph also shows the PCR's Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, Ana Pauker, Alexandru Sencovici, and Chivu Stoica, with Social Democrats Gheorghe Nicolau and Victor Brătfăleanu

Vlădescu-Răcoasa was briefly appointed Minister for Minority Affairs (renamed by him "for Nationalities"), serving until February 1945, after which he was demoted to Undersecretary.[49] During December 1944, the FND was co-opted into the new cabinet formed by General Rădescu, but continued to air its tensions with the two liberal parties with which it shared power. The UP followed suit.[50] Involved with Groza in Northern Transylvanian affairs,[51] statistician Sabin Manuilă, a former PNȚ supporter and participant in the August 1944 Coup,[37] was also welcomed into the UP, then appointed Undersecretary of State for Stately Organization.[52] The party's reservoir of cadres expanded to include many intellectuals associated with Constantinescu-Iași, for instance Balmuș and Zevedei Barbu. The latter served as UP recruiter in Sibiu County.[53] With Constantinescu-Iași, Balmuș served as a UP representative to assemblies commemorating Antonescu's antisemitic crimes.[54] Also joining the UP was physicist Ilie G. Murgulescu, who edited the daily a UP regional mouthpiece in Banat.[55]

During that period, the UP involved itself in the campaign against Rădescu, headlined by the Communist Party (which was now known as PCR, rather than PCdR). They agitated for land reform and organized the campaign against price gouging. In Jiu Valley and Hunedoara County at large, the UP carried out "democratic work" in favor of miners' welfare, distributing food and setting up price control committees.[56] Throughout the country, its activists joined hands with the Ploughmen's Front, redistributing to the peasants most of the plots that were over 50 hectares.[57] At the time, the UP also organized its religious wing for "highly conscious" Orthodox priests, called Union of Democratic Priests (Uniunea Preoților Democrați, UPD) and led by the UP's Minister of Religious Affairs, Constantin Burducea.[58]

As a witness to the political crisis, King Michael probably contemplated replacing Rădescu with the old UP associate, General Avramescu.[13] The latter had earned distinction in the Siege of Budapest, and was respected by the Red Army, but evidently resented Soviet interference. Vlădescu-Răcoasa noted Avramescu's acceptance of the FND program, but the PCdR refused to take him into consideration.[13] By then, Nicu Rădescu and Levente were directly involved in the effort to create and illegally arm a communist-controlled paramilitary force, the Patriotic Combat Formations (Formațiunile de Luptă Patriotică, FLP).[16] Literary critic Niculae Gheran, who was involved with the UP paramilitary as a teenager, recalls that the atmosphere was still largely apolitical, and that the formations were set out to eradicate criminality.[59] The "game of cops and robbers" ended when Eugen Alimănescu of the Bucharest Police took control of the situation, with crude but effective methods.[60]

Meanwhile, the demonstrations turned violent on February 24, 1945, when communists staged an assault on the Internal Affairs Ministry. The seminal event of this confrontation was a public rally, with Bagdasar and the UPD's Dumitru Popescu-Moșoia as guest speakers.[61] During the push-back, several protesters were killed by gunshot; later investigation uncovered that the bullets were not of the standard caliber used in the Ministry.[16][62] Nicu Rădescu, who was hiding out at the UP's headquarters, participated in the propaganda effort, publicly accusing his father of murder.[16] On March 6, 1945, Groza eventually managed to topple Premier Rădescu, who escaped to British Cyprus,[16] and set up a communist-dominated cabinet, with Constantinescu-Iași as the new Information Minister. Also joining the cabinet as the UP's appointee was Grigore Vasiliu Rășcanu, the Minister of War.[63] Bagdasar became the Minister of Health, and, as a technocrat tasked with managing the nationwide health crisis, earned the respect of his political adversaries.[35] General Avramescu, meanwhile, was killed in an air raid on the Slovakian front, reportedly shortly after being arrested by the Soviets.[13] The UP resumed its orthodox political stance. Rădescu's son, by then a card-carrying communist, was tasked with purging the Union of political undesirables, then assigned over to the Siguranța, which he helped transform into the Securitate.[16]

On November 8, 1945, Groza's military and paramilitary forces repressed a popular demonstration marking the anniversary of Michael I, who was still the reigning monarch. As noted by historian Ioan Lăcustă, these events ended in "a bloodbath", ordered by Groza's Interior Minister, Teohari Georgescu.[64] According to PNȚ investigators such as Corneliu Coposu, the UP was directly involved, asking its activists to stage a counter-manifestation in Palace Square, and to prevent the monarchists from reaching the Square.[65] The UP's press made ample reference to the events, reinterpreting them according to communist guidelines, whereas the independent newspapers were barred from even reporting on them.[66]

PNP creation

 
Gheorghiu-Dej with Petru Groza, Grigore Vasiliu Rășcanu, and Petre Constantinescu-Iași, meeting workers at Bucharest North railway station. May 2, 1946

On January 12–13, 1946, the UP held a national congress at Trianon Cinema, Bucharest, after which it reemerged as the National Popular Party.[67][68] Also at that meeting, it elected itself a new president, the economist Mitiță Constantinescu.[69] He was seconded by Vlădescu-Răcoasa, Bagdasar, and Oțetea.[70] On March 19 or 20,[71] the National Populars inaugurated their own official news outlet, Națiunea. Editorship was assigned to Călinescu, who was in the process of adapting his work to Marxist doctrines, and was by then a member of the PNP Executive Committee.[67] It heralded radical attacks against the political opposition, from the disgraced far-right to the PNȚ.[67][72] For a while, the newspaper still preserved a nominal independence in the selection of its literary staff, publishing the essays of Adrian Marino and Alexandru Piru, which were still untouched by the communist style.[67][73][74]

With assistance from its communist backers, the PNP soon began a large recruitment campaign. Among those who signed up were several famous literary and scientific figures, including poet Alexandru A. Philippide, historian Andrei Oțetea, and biologist Traian Săvulescu;[57] literary critic Mihai Gafița, a former PNL man, was its students' wing representative.[75] In Murgulescu's Banat sections, new recruits included General Teodor Șerb (President of the PNP Chapter in Timiș-Torontal County), physicist Valeriu Novacu (who went on to serve as County Prefect), poet Alexandru Jebeleanu, and industrialists Jacques Hellmann and Anton Hollander.[76]

Like the Alexandrescu Peasantists, the PNP was specifically dedicated to undermining the PNȚ, that is to say the PCdR's most powerful opponent. Constantinescu-Iași recalled that, even in 1943, the UP was working to "set up opposition groups within the PNȚ", but "in such a manner that no group would be torn away from the party".[77] As noted by political scientist Ioan Stanomir, the party was later a tool used by the PCdR "to gnaw at the PNȚ before they ultimately dissolved it".[74] This campaign was sparked in 1944 by a broadcast on Radio Moscow.[78] By 1946, the PNP had only managed to absorb remnants of the interwar Radical Peasants' Party, who had refused to rejoin the PNȚ.[79]

The recruitment drive was punctuated by episodes of dissent. Jebeleanu was almost removed from the party after he was found to be an insubordinate propagandist.[80] More embarrassingly, the PNP failed to enlist Lucian Blaga, the celebrated poet-philosopher. Blaga admitted feeling terrorized by direct threats to his artistic independence, and, at the risk of marginalization, opted not to join[81] (or, according to another version, joined, was immediately made a member of the PNP Central Committee, and just as immediately resigned).[82] Burducea, perceived by Groza as a political liability, was also sacked from his ministerial position,[83] and the UPD chairmanship was assigned to an Ion Vască.[84]

On March 22–24, 1946, the PNP held its annual reunion in Bucharest, culminating in a popular assembly presided upon by Oțetea.[79] On May 16,[85] the PNP was co-opted by a communist-led electoral alliance, the Bloc of Democratic Parties (BPD). In early November, its representative in the Assembly of Deputies and PNP General Secretary, a Mihail Dragomirescu, played a central part in the sessions which condemned and pushed aside a minor PCR ally, the National Liberal Party–Tătărescu.[86] However, there were notable setbacks for the PNP, including the sudden disappearance of Călinescu's Lumea.[67][87] Also in May, Bagdasar resigned as Health Minister and took a diplomatic posting, but died of cancer before he could take office.[35] In September of that year, his widow Florica Bagdasar made history by becoming the first ever Romanian woman minister, after being assigned the Health portfolio.[35] Mitiță Constantinescu also died at that time, prompting the PNP executive to elect Vlădescu-Răcoasa in his place.[88]

1946 election and 1947 takeover

In the general election of November 1946, which was rigged through fraud and voter intimidation,[89] the Bloc claimed a decisive victory. However, the PNP only had a minor role to play in the campaign, with a reported 7% of the BPD candidates.[90][91] The BPD and MADOSZ had counted 79.86% of the vote in its favor, obtaining 378 of the 414 total Assembly of Deputies seats,[92] of which the PNP held 26.[93] Constantinescu-Iași ran and won as head of the electoral list in Tutova County, returning to serve as Information Minister;[94] Florica Bagdasar was elected in Tulcea County, and continued to serve as the Health Minister until August 1948.[35] She sat in the Assembly next to Călinescu,[35] who had been elected in Botoșani County.[67] Other PNP deputies included Vlădescu-Răcoasa, Oțetea,[95] historian Dumitru Almaș,[96] and General Secretary Dragomirescu, who represented Timiș-Torontal.[97]

The PNP withdrew from the Groza cabinet on November 29, 1946,[98] in protest at what it felt was its under-representation. It found itself in an unusual situation as the loyal opposition to the BPD, stating its refusal to attack any of the Bloc's politicians.[99] Both Bagdasar and Săvulescu continued to serve in the cabinet, the latter as Agriculture Minister.[100] The PNP's withdrawal from power, and its general subservience to the BPD, were noted factors of stress at a local level.[101] However, it was able to attract more followers with the dissolution of Constantin Argetoianu's National Union of Labor and Rebirth (UNMR). Two of the latter's pro-communist wings were absorbed at the time: the UNMR tradesmen wing, under Petre Misale, and the formerly independent National Agrarian Action, directed by Paul Iliescu and Max Schapira.[102]

In July 1947, after the Tămădău Affair and news of an anti-communist partisan movement, PNP representatives supported the communist motion to outlaw the PNȚ.[103] Moreover, Națiunea and Călinescu himself joined in the denunciation campaign, publishing propaganda pieces that maligned the imprisoned PNȚ-ists.[67] Other party members used their last opportunity to escape the country: Manuilă settled in the United States,[104] Zevedei Barbu defected in Scotland.[105] During the following months, the PNP was in favor of a bill that politicized and de-professionalized the justice system, introducing juries selected from among the "workers and toiling peasants" by their respective trade unions and corporate bodies.[106]

In November, Vlădescu-Răcoasa became Ambassador to Moscow, which was perceived as a "posting of overwhelming importance" in that context.[107] Still the PNP president, he was abroad when the communists imposed abdication on King Michael and proclaimed the People's Republic. On February 1, 1948, the PNP resumed its activities in the new republic: the Bucharest branch of the PNP elected Balmuș as its chairman.[108] While still serving abroad, Vlădescu-Răcoasa was appointed by the Assembly of Deputies, reformed into the rubber-stamp Great National Assembly, to a committee drafting a socialist constitution.[109]

Dissolution and aftermath

The PNP remained closely aligned with the Romanian Workers' Party (PMR), as the PCR styled itself after absorbing the Social Democrats. From February 1948, it was part of the People's Democratic Front (FPD), an electoral alliance formed with the PMR, the Ploughmen's Front, and MADOSZ. Constantinescu-Iași, Dragomirescu, and Alexandru Șteflea were its delegates on the FPD National Council.[110] The subsequent elections were advertised by PMR leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej as a consolidation of "democratic conquests against imperialism", destined to "nip in the bud all attempts by the reaction to rear its head".[111] Two decorative opposition forces were allowed to survive outside the FPD: the (reorganized) Tătărescu Liberals and the Democratic Peasants' Party–Lupu.[112] The Front won 405 of the 414 seats, of which the PNP had 43. Vlădescu-Răcoasa, Almaș, Balmuș, Călinescu, Constantinescu-Iași, Oțetea and Săvulescu were among those returned to parliament.[113]

Elected as the last PNP president, Constantinescu-Iași was also designated a Vice President of the Great National Assembly.[114] However, the PNP survived until voting itself out of existence on February 6, 1949. The official notice informed its voters that, "under the watch of the Workers' Party", the PNP had "carried out the better part of its task", and that "to carry on as a separate organization would be an act of seclusion."[115] As Călinescu explained, in Națiunea, the party and its newspaper's "historical mission" had been exhausted.[116] Literary historian George Neagoe argues that this was a "public lie", as the PNP, a party of "fellow travelers", had not truly opted to dissolve itself; it was rather "discarded by its ally".[116]

Until March 21, 1949, all regional chapters had been dissolved, and PNP deputies resumed their seats as independents.[117] His influence greatly reduced, Constantinescu-Iași continued to serve in the Groza governments, and was Minister of Religious Affairs in 1953;[118] Călinescu was likewise sidelined, maintaining some of his political functions but prevented from popularizing his unorthodox interpretations of Marxist dogma and world affairs.[74][119] In 1959, he was almost arrested for "enemy-like behavior".[120] Vlădescu-Răcoasa was also recalled from Moscow, and, assigned to minor positions, had to watch on as the regime suppressed, then confiscated, Romanian sociology.[121] Florica Bagdasar was eliminated from political life by 1953, when she was also attacked in the press as a "cosmopolitan".[35] Instead, Oțetea accumulated accolades and, as an official historian, signaled the 1964 break with the Soviets, revealing to the public the anti-Russian pronunciations of Marxist classics.[122]

Several suppliant members of the Communist Party's Central Committee, down to the Romanian Revolution of 1989, and including Levente and Gheorghe Mihoc, had been activists in the original UP.[123] România Liberă's Ivașcu rose through the ranks of the PMR until, owing to a case of mistaken identity, was prosecuted for war crimes, imprisoned, then rehabilitated and again assigned party work.[124] Contrarily, Nicu Rădescu was tempted by a career in the repressive apparatus. He was sacked from the Securitate in 1956 for his disregard of decorum, and began a second career as a Centrocoop functionary, dying in anonymity in 1993.[16]

Doctrines

Functions

The UP and PNP functioned mainly as a testing ground for the PCdR, filtering its future members and making its ideology palatable to the general public. Many scholars see the UP/PNP as mainly a front for the exceedingly minor PCdR, variously describing it as "rather decorative",[125] an "electioneering vent",[126] an "organization designed to fulfill the communists' objectives",[6] a "diversion",[67] "instrument"[127] or "windscreen",[95] and a "quasi-party".[36][128] Literary historian and former communist politician Pavel Țugui disagrees: with an "antifascist and antiracist program",[12] standing for "various democratic orientations", the UP "did not form any alliances with any party whatsoever between 1942 and spring 1944."[4] He notes that the collaboration with the communists should be seen as one between "two distinct political and organizational entities", with the UP on the center-left.[12]

Initially, the UP itself acknowledged that it had a short-term role, presenting itself not as a party, but as a big tent movement of antifascists and PCdR members, irrespective of ethnicity, social class, or creed.[129] Members called each other prieten ("friend"), mirroring the communist tovarăș ("comrade").[130][131] In a December 1944 address to the people, Novacu presented the August 23 Coup as top-down seizure of power, rather than as a popular revolution, noting that the action of a few would "impel and enrich the populace".[132] At around the same time, Vlădescu-Răcoasa was claiming that, in the "new world", it would matter not whether "one is a bourgeois or a proletarian, but if one is a democrat". The one "true democracy", he indicated, was a people's democracy.[133] He also stated that the UP was not about distributing "posts and ministries."[57]

The UP also sought to profit from the introduction of women's suffrage, putting out a manifesto specifically aimed at women voters. Critical of "vain feminism", it proposed equal responsibilities for women in the effort to reconstruct Romania.[134] A female activist, Cornelia Sterian, also explained that "woman must become equal in rights, she must play an active part in the political struggle for a free and fulfilling life."[78] A Bucharest female section had been formed by 1946, animated by Margareta Vlădescu-Răcoasa and by Mihail Sadoveanu's wife Valeria.[135]

In its later electoral manifestos, the UP called itself "a political organization in support of the people", consolidating "an independent, democratic and merry Romania",[136] emerging naturally from "the movement of resistance against the Hitlerites and the Antonescu dictatorship".[137] By then, the movement advertised a more specific corporate goal, namely "the democratization of the middle classes".[138] These were taken to include all categories between the proletariat (represented by the PCdR) and the "rich bankers, great landlords, dealers and speculators" it claimed were represented by the PNȚ and PNL; more specifically, the PNP was supposed to stand for professional workers, artisans, traders, industrialists, functionaries, pensioners, and freelancers.[139] Writing about the accomplished "historical mission" of 1949, George Călinescu explained that it consisted of "educating non-proletarian working strata to understand and receive the coming social order."[116]

Reviewing such claims, Păiușan argues that the PNP's objectives interfered with those of other FND members: the Ploughmen's Front and the Alexandrescu Peasantists existed specifically to draw in "the urban middle class."[140] As noted by Lucian Blaga, its putative member, the PNP manifestly failed at becoming "an independent autonomous party of the petty bourgeoisie", and was simply "a maneuverable mass".[141] Physician Epifanie Cozărescu of Săveni recalled in 2008 that he and his colleagues joined the PNP because it seemed like a protective cover against the "oppression of intellectuals by the Communist Party". Overall, "[we] were no longer given much attention".[142]

Populism and nationalism

As noted by historian Carol Terteci, the UP shared a BPD platform of "populist promises".[92] Party notables took pride in asserting that the BPD's program was largely inspired by its own charter, and thus "closest to the soul of the masses."[138] A 1945 manifesto in Bârlad called on UP members to "erect a country where there would be no more poor people on this rich a land."[143] With its involvement in the PCdR's war on price gauging, the PNP was soon identified as an anti-capitalist force by the middle class and the industrialists, who were reticent about joining its ranks. The UP tried to dissuade their fears, assuring them that the measures were only temporary.[144] The PNȚ had some success in identifying the PNP as a front of the PCdR: PNP territorial offices complained that Nationalist Peasantist propaganda on this topic was driving away potential recruits.[145]

Păiușan describes the UP as an organization which "betrayed the country" by "turning Romanians against the anti-Bolshevik war and sealing a pact with the Soviet enemy."[137] When addressing a Romanian public, the National Populars took on the promotion of left-wing nationalism. Party speakers argued that "the criminal fascist war" offered "an occasion for verifying one's patriotism", and held that fascists "exploited patriotic sentiment", "poisoning the soul of the people".[130] Writing in Lupta Patriotică, Novacu theorized that: "Motherland and patriotism stand for combat and sacrifice for mankind's permanent ideals. For liberty and independence, for one's language, art, for one's credo, one's bread, for our factories and our fields."[146] Despite the UP's involvement in Northern Transylvanian regionalism, its leadership in Banat alleged that the PNȚ was only superficially and opportunistically patriotic.[147] Party documents also identified the PNP with a struggle against Hungarian "revisionism",[55] or against "venomous chauvinism" in general.[148] The Northern Transylvanian issue was solved in Romania's favor, according to PNP sources, only because of "the unconditioned help of our great Eastern friend, the USSR, and our old friend, France."[149]

The UP and later the PNP were formally dedicated to purging the country of fascists, in particular former members of the Iron Guard.[67][150] The UP was the first organization to propose arresting Maria Antonescu, Veturia Goga, and Alexandru Hodoș.[151] In practice, it proved immediately attractive for a category of former wartime fascists, and especially for Guardist sympathizers within the Orthodox Church. Notorious examples include the Religious Affairs Minister, Constantin Burducea and Religious Affairs Undersecretary Ion Vască, whose fascist past was a tool for extortion.[152] Burducea had it that the Church was compatible with socialism, and that the FND was not "godless": "How could one hold suspicions of anti-Christian or anti-religious sentiment the FND's sincerely democratic parties, when the Front works for the brotherhood of all men, for bringing the Gospel to life within this nation, and for toppling hatred, injustice, obscurantism and social inequality?"[153]

As Burducea's patron, Constantinescu-Iași extended his protection to one other PNP sympathizer and former Guardist, the bishop Antim Nica, who in turn sought to protect his colleagues by directing them into the party.[154] Constantinescu-Iași also negotiated with Guard representatives such as Petre Țuțea to have its members join the PCdR and the UP en masse.[155] Other efforts involved a former high-ranking figure in the Guard, historian P. P. Panaitescu, who similarly urged his former subordinates to make their way into the UP.[156] In Putna County, that is to say Vlădescu-Răcoasa's own fief, the PNP chapter was weakened by disputes over the fascist past of its leaders, including its local secretary, the Orthodox priest Streche.[157] Other PNP members of the far-right clergy, exposed by the Workers' Party only after 1949, included a head of the clergy syndicate in Baia County.[158] In 1945, a circular letter presented to Teohari Georgescu of Internal Affairs estimated that there were 110 Guardists co-opted by the UP.[159]

Minority issues

 
Triumphal arch with Hungarian and Romanian inscriptions and symbols, erected in Târgu Mureș in honor of Vlădescu-Răcoasa. August 4, 1945

While appealing to the Orthodox clergy, the PNP also enlisted members of the Eastern Catholic Church, including priest Gheorghe Zagrai.[160] The UP had been especially active among the ethnic minorities, which were the focus of Vlădescu-Răcoasa's time in office. The PNP heralded denazification among the Banat Swabians, protecting some Swabians who, it claimed, were wrongly prosecuted by the People's Tribunals, while targeting others who supported the anti-communist opposition.[161] Its relationship with the ethnic Hungarians was more tense, despite official rhetoric encouraging cooperation: the UP's Bihor County cell divided itself into competing cells, representing the region's ethnic groups, and was sabotaged by its MADOSZ allies. In February 1945, it voted to bar Hungarians from joining its ranks.[162]

The communists also experimented by creating a parallel, UP-modeled, organization of Armenian Romanians. Called Union of Armenian Patriots (or Armenian Front), it drew Armenians away from the anti-Soviet Dashnaktsutyun.[163] A similar body existed for exiled Spanish Republicans, who voted Vlădescu-Răcoasa as their honorary president.[148]

The PNP had a more ambiguous stance concerning the Jewish and Romani communities, which had been the victims of deportation and murder during the Holocaust. During the Antonescu years, UP founder Manuilă had in fact come up with the project to deport Jews and Romanies into occupied Transnistria, singling them out as "stateless" communities.[164] When this had been enforced, however, he had protected some 5,000 Jews, keeping them in Bucharest.[165] Engineer Cornel Năstăsescu, who was at once a member of the PNP Committee and a leader of its branch in Năsăud County, made efforts to hide his wartime involvement with building projects that used Jewish labor.[166]

In 1943, the UP participants in Patriotic Antihitlerite meetings argued that: "The Jewish group must have its own commission to allow the Jews to take care of purely Jewish issues."[167] Speaking in February 1946, the communist politico Vasile Luca set his PNP partners the goal of attracting as many as possible from the 150,000 Jewish voters still living in Romania.[168] There were Jewish members of the PNP, including one who, in 1947, also had a leadership position in the Jewish Democratic Committee of Fălciu County.[169] Nevertheless, at official commemorations, PNP activists downplayed the historical impact of episodes such as the Iași pogrom of 1941, noting that, "other than the minor misunderstandings that are inherent to life in common, one can say that [Jews] have been fully embraced by their friends, the Romanian people."[170] Călinescu's reference to the pogrom as "German-and-Iron Guard excesses" received negative coverage in the Zionist press, who saw evidence of whitewashing.[171] Vlădescu-Răcoasa also clashed with the Zionists when, in November 1944, he announced that Jews would not be recognized as a distinct minority, but instead assimilated into their group of choice.[172]

Factionalism and divergence

Even in its late years, PNP officials expressed a "belief in the eternal life of the Romanian Monarchy."[173] This resolution passed into its statues, where "the recognition of the Monarchy" was one of the core ideas.[70] Although it adopted a pro-Soviet policy that Păiușan sees as "treasonous",[174] the UP included, at its original core, supporters of the Western Allies such as Bagdasar and Ivașcu.[4] The Bagdasars worked closely with American officials in the Allied Commission, and were upset that Romania was prevented from joining the Marshall Plan.[35]

Beyond its national representation and its trans-ethnic agenda, the PNP remained a minor and recessive force. As noted by Corneliu Crăciun, it was always less powerful than the Patriotic Defense,[175] a workers' aid organization also gravitating around the PCdR, and also organized as a paramilitary wing.[43] The UP's 1944 recruitment drive in Bihor, which was still nominally held by a rump Hungarian state, only managed some 200 enlistments, of which 150 were inactive members. Only 40 card-carrying members still existed in 1945, after Hungarians and Jews were expelled from the party.[176] Likewise, in Cluj County, the UP was preferred by Romanian communist sympathizers, with the PCdR section dominated by Hungarians.[177] In Putna, the UP only mustered some 1,700 members in all (compared to the 6,000 enlisted with the Alexandrescu Peasantists, but well ahead of the PCdR's 400).[178] The Timiș-Torontal section, presided over by General Teodor Șerb, had some 2,000 to 2,500 members, the majority of whom were male peasants, with no representation for women and youth.[179] Năstăsescu's branch in Năsăud went from 150 affiliates to a claimed 6,012 in the summer of 1946. The latter number is suspect, since 5,861 were peasants, and as such probably enlisted against their will.[180]

As a corollary of its dependence on the PCdR, the party was heavily infiltrated by communist cells—the PCdR's own circulars commended the Putna cell as highly "dynamic".[181] In Bihor, the UP was directly managed by a communist envoy, Imre Tóth.[182] A similar situation reputedly occurred in Alba County, where the UP's temporary representative in 1945 was Dumitru Ciumbrudean, who had been stripped of his PCdR membership.[183] These interventions divided the party. Some in the PNP struggled to maintain independence "with equal rights within the Bloc of Democratic Parties". In 1946, the Severin County chapter unanimously passed a resolution ruling the communists' transgressions as "inadmissible and impolite".[138] The PNP also reported on abuses committed by paramilitary "citizens' guards", which, it implied, were terrorizing the populace,[184] while activists such as Bagdasar expressed bafflement over the anti-Peasantist rhetorical violence.[35] In early 1946, Călinescu and Națiunea demanded a "purge of the purgers", that is to say a toning down of repression against political undesirables.[67][73]

Contrarily, other party branches were more readily enforcing persecution of the opposition. This was the case in Năsăud, where the Ploughmen's Front complained that overzealous PNP men were unwittingly alerting the PNȚ and PNL as to what lay in store for them.[185] Father Burducea's unwavering support for the purge of anti-communists alienated the clergy, many of whom resented and mocked him; this matter contributed to his sacking.[186] Seeing the BPD as an authoritarian instrument, members deserted in significant numbers during 1947,[187] and some even became involved with a group of anti-communist partisans, formed by Gheorghe Arsenescu in Muscel County.[188]

Electoral history

Legislative elections

Election Votes % Seats +/– Position
1946 Part of the BDP
26 / 414
6th
1948 Part of the FDP
43 / 414
  17   3rd

Notes

  1. ^ Crăciun, p. 299. The same goals are attested by Covaci (pp. 167–169) with a different emphasis
  2. ^ Rostás, in Bulgaru, pp. XI–XIII. See also Boia, p. 174; N. D. Cocea, Al. Gh. Savu, "Jurnal", in Magazin Istoric, May 1968, p. 83
  3. ^ Boia, p. 175
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j (in Romanian) Pavel Țugui, , in România Literară, Nr. 18/2013
  5. ^ Boia, p. 226
  6. ^ a b Crăciun, p. 299
  7. ^ Păiușan (2010), pp. 293, 295
  8. ^ Covaci, p. 170; Crăciun, p. 299
  9. ^ Covaci, p. 170
  10. ^ Crăciun, pp. 299, 300
  11. ^ Păiușan (2010), pp. 292–293
  12. ^ a b c d Țugui (2009), p. 48
  13. ^ a b c d e (in Romanian) Paltin Sturdza, "6 martie 1945: Guvern general Avramescu sau dr. Petru Groza?", in Historia, April 2014
  14. ^ Covaci, p. 169; Crăciun, pp. 299–300
  15. ^ a b Bulgaru, p. XXXIII
  16. ^ a b c d e f g (in Romanian) Oana Demetriade, "Fiul împotriva tatălui. Securistul Nicu Rădescu vs. primul ministrul Nicolae Rădescu", in Revista 22, Nr. 1232, October 2013
  17. ^ a b c d e (in Romanian) Mihai Burcea, Sidonia Bogdan, "Mărturiile unui ilegalist comunist: unde conspirau să pună mână pe puterea de la București", in România Liberă, July 1, 2013
  18. ^ Covaci, pp. 178–179; Crăciun, pp. 299–300
  19. ^ Covaci, pp. 176, 177, 179
  20. ^ Paul Cernovodeanu, "Cronici de familii. Magherii", in Magazin Istoric, September 1977, p. 32
  21. ^ a b Crăciun, p. 300
  22. ^ Covaci, pp. 187–191
  23. ^ Covaci, pp. 169, 171–174. See also Boia, pp. 235–237
  24. ^ Zavarache, pp. 207–208
  25. ^ Boia, pp. 235–236
  26. ^ a b c d (in Romanian) Laurențiu Ungureanu, "Apostolii lui Stalin: Petru Groza, ultimul burghez. De la tentativa eșuată de suicid la idila cu Elena Lupescu și 'divorțul decent şi elegant de monarhie'", in Adevărul, October 27, 2014
  27. ^ Zavarache, pp. 213, 216, 220
  28. ^ Covaci, pp. 184–185; Crăciun, p. 300
  29. ^ Boia, p. 236
  30. ^ Covaci, p. 192
  31. ^ Boia, pp. 235–236; Covaci, pp. 186–187
  32. ^ Tiberiu Dumitru Costăchescu, "Partidul Național Liberal în anii regimurilor autoritare (februarie 1938 – august 1944)", in Transilvania, Nr. 2/2006, p. 85
  33. ^ Bulgaru, p. XXXIV
  34. ^ Cioroianu, p. 172
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h i (in Romanian) Alexandra Bellow, , in Revista 22, Nr. 755, September 2004
  36. ^ a b (in Romanian) Alexandru George, "Revenind la vechi cuvinte noi", in România Literară, Nr. 8/2011
  37. ^ a b (in Romanian) Lavinia Betea, Cristina Vohn, , in Jurnalul Național, October 25, 2005
  38. ^ Țugui (2009), pp. 47–48. See also Boia, pp. 282, 288–290
  39. ^ Gheorghe Onişoru, Alianțe și confruntări între partidele politice din România: 1944-1947, Fundaţia Academia Civică, Bucharest, 1996, p. 185
  40. ^ Bulgaru, p. XXXIV; Păiușan (2010), p. 293
  41. ^ Cioroianu, p. 55
  42. ^ Păiușan (2010), pp. 294, 296
  43. ^ a b Ciurea, p. 872
  44. ^ Cioroianu, p. 55–56; Păiușan (2010), pp. 296–297
  45. ^ Bulgaru, p. XXXV
  46. ^ Păiușan (2010), pp. 297–298
  47. ^ Nagy & Vincze, pp. 61–62, 71
  48. ^ Zavarache, p. 220
  49. ^ Bulgaru, pp. XXXV–XXXVII; Miron, p. 226
  50. ^ Bulgaru, p. XXXVI; Păiușan (2010), p. 300
  51. ^ Nagy & Vincze, p. 29
  52. ^ Păiușan (2010), p. 297
  53. ^ Blaga, pp. 25–26
  54. ^ Gușu, p. 288
  55. ^ a b Păiușan (2012), p. 389
  56. ^ Ștefan Nemecsek, Presa hunedoreană (de la origini până în prezent), Vol. I, Realitatea Românească, Vulcan, 2007, pp. 200–201. ISBN 978-973-88085-3-9
  57. ^ a b c Moisa, p. 108
  58. ^ Enache, pp. 60–62; Kalkandjieva, pp. 266–267
  59. ^ Gheran, pp. 301–312
  60. ^ Gheran, pp. 306–308
  61. ^ Ionel, p. 151
  62. ^ Ionel, pp. 152, 164–166, 178
  63. ^ Crăciun, p. 302
  64. ^ Lăcustă, p. 61
  65. ^ Tudor Călin Zarojanu, Viața lui Corneliu Coposu, Editura Mașina de Scris, Bucharest, 2005, pp. 37, 42. ISBN 973-8491-23-1
  66. ^ Lăcustă, pp. 60–61
  67. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Oana Soare, Cristina Balinte, Andrei Terian, Mihai Iovănel, "În obiectiv: G. Călinescu", in Cultura, Nr. 211, February 2009
  68. ^ Bulgaru, p. XLIII; Cioroianu, p. 126; Ciurea, pp. 871–872; Crăciun, p. 308; Moisa, p. 108; Țugui (2009), p. 48
  69. ^ Bulgaru, p. XLIII; Crăciun, p. 308. See also Boia, p. 271
  70. ^ a b Bulgaru, p. XLIII
  71. ^ Păiușan (2013 I), p. 511; Țugui (2009), p. 48
  72. ^ Boa, pp. 288–289
  73. ^ a b (in Romanian) Elvira Sorohan, , in Convorbiri Literare, October 2007
  74. ^ a b c (in Romanian) Ioan Stanomir, "G. Călinescu și totalitarismul castrator", in Observator Cultural, Nr. 592, September 2011
  75. ^ G. Brătescu, Ce-a fost să fie. Notații autobiografice, Humanitas, Bucharest, 2003, pp. 158, 170, 189. ISBN 973-50-0425-9
  76. ^ Păiușan (2012), pp. 384, 385, 386
  77. ^ Covaci, p. 181
  78. ^ a b Păiușan (2010), p. 300
  79. ^ a b Păiușan (2013 I), p. 511
  80. ^ Păiușan (2013 I), p. 508
  81. ^ Blaga, pp. 26–27; (in Romanian) Ilie Rad, "O declarație inedită a lui Lucian Blaga", in România Literară, Nr. 13/2012
  82. ^ George Neagoe, "Jurnal indirect", in Cultura, Nr. 445, November 2013
  83. ^ Enache, p. 71–74, 76–78
  84. ^ Kalkandjieva, p. 270
  85. ^ Miron, pp. 228, 322; Terteci, p. 173
  86. ^ Razi, pp. 272–273
  87. ^ Boia, p. 290
  88. ^ Bulgaru, pp. XLIX–L. See also Cioroianu, p. 126
  89. ^ Boia, pp. 246–247; Cioroianu, pp. 64–66; Terteci, passim
  90. ^ Păiușan (2013 II), p. 961
  91. ^ (in Romanian) Doron Dobrincu, "Stalin și pregătirea alegerilor din România anului 1946", in Revista 22, Nr. 960, July–August 2008
  92. ^ a b Terteci, p. 173
  93. ^ Dieter Nohlen, Philip Stöver, Elections in Europe: A Data Handbook, Nomos, Baden-Baden, 2010, p. 1610. ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  94. ^ Gheorghe Clapa, "Lupta forțelor democratice din fostul județ Tutova pentru victoria Blocului Partidelor Democratice în alegerile parlamentare din noiembrie 1946", in Acta Moldaviae Meridionalis. Anuarul Muzeului Județean Vaslui, Vols. III–IV, 1981–1982, pp. 189–193. See also Petcu, p. 166
  95. ^ a b Boia, p. 273
  96. ^ (in Romanian) "Dumitru Almaș — cel mai prolific scriitor din Neamț", in Ceahlăul, March 12, 2014
  97. ^ Păiușan (2013 II), pp. 959, 961–962
  98. ^ Bulgaru, pp. XXXVII, L–LI
  99. ^ "Cum stă lumea și țara?", in Unirea Poporului, December 8, 1946, p. 3; Păiușan (2013 II), pp. 961–962, 966
  100. ^ Boia, p. 261; Bulgaru, pp. LIII, LV
  101. ^ Păiușan (2013 II), pp. 956–962
  102. ^ Petre Otu, "1946–1947. Se pregătește guvernul Argetoianu!", in Magazin Istoric, May 2000, pp. 40–42
  103. ^ Georgescu, pp. 310–311; Cristina Vohn, "Național-țărăniștii, trimiși în ilegalitate", in Jurnalul Național, August 16, 2006
  104. ^ Boia, p. 253
  105. ^ (in Romanian) Claudiu Pădurean, "Cum este recuperată biografia lui Zevedei Barbu", in România Liberă, November 16, 2014
  106. ^ Georgescu, pp. 316–317
  107. ^ Rostás, in Bulgaru, p. XIII
  108. ^ Bulgaru, p. LVIII
  109. ^ Bulgaru, p. LIX
  110. ^ "Constituirea Frontului Democrației Populare. Comunicat", in Scînteia, February 29, 1948, p. 1
  111. ^ Ciurea, p. 880
  112. ^ Ciurea, p. 881
  113. ^ Boia, pp. 310–311
  114. ^ Petcu, p. 166. See also Bulgaru, p. LXI; Razi, p. 277
  115. ^ Razi, p. 277. See also Ciurea, pp. 880–881; Nicolae Videnie, "Revolte anticomuniste ale țăranilor din Câmpia Română în 1948", in Ilie Popa, Experimentul Pitești (comunicări prezentate la Simpozionul internațional "Experimentul Pitești - Reeducarea prin tortură. Opresiunea țărănimii române în timpul dictaturii comuniste", ediția a 4-a, Pitești, 24-26 septembrie 2004), Editura Fundației Culturale Memoria, Bucharest, 2005, p. 256. ISBN 973-86965-4-2
  116. ^ a b c Neagoe (2010), p. 6
  117. ^ Bulgaru, p. LX
  118. ^ Petcu, p. 166
  119. ^ Neagoe (2010), pp. 6–7
  120. ^ Boia, pp. 331–332
  121. ^ Rostás, in Bulgaru, pp. XIII–XIV
  122. ^ Cioroianu, p. 220
  123. ^ Florica Dobre, Liviu Marius Bejenaru, Clara Cosmineanu-Mareș, Monica Grigore, Alina Ilinca, Oana Ionel, Nicoleta Ionescu-Gură, Elisabeta Neagoe-Pleșa, Liviu Pleșa, Membrii C.C. al P.C.R. (1945–1989). Dicționar, Editura Enciclopedică, Bucharest, 2004, pp. 87, 200–201, 362, 394, 417, 465. ISBN 973-45-0486-X
  124. ^ (in Romanian) Ion Cristoiu, , in Jurnalul Național, September 2, 2005
  125. ^ Cioroianu, p. 126
  126. ^ Păiușan (2010), p. 291
  127. ^ Razi, p. 277
  128. ^ Nagy & Vincze, pp. 41, 61
  129. ^ Covaci, pp. 167–168; Moisa, p. 110; Păiușan (2010), pp. 293–295, 300
  130. ^ a b "Intrunirile de Duminică ale Uniunii Patrioților La 'Marna'", in Scînteia, August 15, 1945, p. 5
  131. ^ Gheran, pp. 308, 311
  132. ^ Păiușan (2010), pp. 299
  133. ^ Păiușan (2010), p. 294
  134. ^ Păiușan (2010), p. 295
  135. ^ Bulgaru, pp. XLIX, LII
  136. ^ Dumitru Huțanu, "Aspecte privind participarea maselor populare din fostul județ Putna la evenimentele anilor 1945-1946", in Studii și Comunicări. Publicația Complexului Muzeal al Județului Vrancea, Vol. III, 1980, p. 293
  137. ^ a b Păiușan (2010), p. 292
  138. ^ a b c Păiușan (2012), p. 386
  139. ^ Păiușan (2013 I), p. 510
  140. ^ Păiușan (2013 I), pp. 506, 510
  141. ^ Blaga, pp. 25–27
  142. ^ Epifanie Cozărescu, "Amintiri despre modul în care au fost 'duse' și rezultatul 'Alegerilor din 19 noiembrie 1946'", in Memoria. Revista Gândirii Arestate, Issues 64–65, 2018, p. 64
  143. ^ Cornelia Elena Andriescu, "Industria orașelor județului Vaslui în perioada 23 August 1944—11 iunie 1948", in Acta Moldaviae Meridionalis. Anuarul Muzeului Județean Vaslui, Vol. V–VI, 1983–1984, p. 287
  144. ^ Păiușan (2012), pp. 384, 386
  145. ^ Păiușan (2013 I), pp. 506, 510–512
  146. ^ Păiușan (2010), p. 293
  147. ^ Păiușan (2012), pp. 384–385
  148. ^ a b Bulgaru, p. XXXVIII
  149. ^ Păiușan (2012), p. 385
  150. ^ Covaci, pp. 193; Moisa, pp. 107–108; Rotar, pp. 351–352; Țugui (2009), passim. See also Enache, pp. 56, 61, 64–65
  151. ^ Rotar, pp. 351–352
  152. ^ (in Romanian) Sorin Bocancea, "Dincolo de actualele mituri. Biserica Ortodoxă în primii ani ai regimului comunist din România", in Sfera Politicii, Nr. 160, June 2011; Enache, pp. 60–61, 74, 78–80. See also Kalkandjieva, p. 299
  153. ^ Enache, p. 62
  154. ^ Petcu, p. 161, 166
  155. ^ Lăcustă, pp. 61–62; Țurlea, passim
  156. ^ (in Romanian) Ilarion Țiu, , in Jurnalul Național, May 10, 2006
  157. ^ Miron, pp. 192, 197, 226–227
  158. ^ Petcu, p. 176
  159. ^ Țurlea, p. 46
  160. ^ Uilăcan, p. 301
  161. ^ Păiușan (2012), pp. 388–390; (2013 I), pp. 505–506
  162. ^ Crăciun, pp. 300–308; Moisa, pp. 111–112, 113–114
  163. ^ Lucian Nastasă, "Studiu introductiv", in Armenii din nord-vestul Transilvaniei în anii instaurării comunismului (1945-1953). Mărturii documentare, Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center, Cluj-Napoca, pp. 17–22. ISBN 973-8399-62-9
  164. ^ Final Report, p. 227
  165. ^ Boia, p. 235
  166. ^ Uilăcan, pp. 270, 283
  167. ^ Final Report, p. 104
  168. ^ "Documente. Ședința resortului central al organizației de masă din 21 februarie 1946 (Comitetul Democratic Evreiesc)", in Andreea Andreescu, Lucian Nastasă, Andreea Varga, Minorităţi etnoculturale. Mărturii documentare. Evreii din România (1945-1965), Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center, Cluj-Napoca, 2003, p. 217. ISBN 973-85738-4-X
  169. ^ Costin Clit, "Comitetul Democratic Evreiesc din Huși", in Costin Clit, Mihai Rotariu (eds.), Studii și articole privind istoria orașului Huși, Vol. II, Editura Sfera, Bârlad, 2009, pp. 407, 418. ISBN 978-606-8056-53-1
  170. ^ Gușu, pp. 288–289
  171. ^ B. I. (Ben Israel), "Panopticum. Flori de stil", in Tineretul Nou/Hanoar Hazioni, Vol. II, Issue 3, October 1944, p. 3
  172. ^ Hildrun Glass, "Câteva note despre activitatea iui Avram L. Zissu", in Liviu Rotman, Camelia Crăciun, Ana-Gabriela Vasiliu (eds.), Noi perspective în istoriografia evreilor din România, Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania & Editura Hasefer, Bucharest, 2010, pp. 164–165
  173. ^ Păiușan (2012), p. 387
  174. ^ Păiușan (2010), pp. 292, 300
  175. ^ Crăciun, p. 308
  176. ^ Moisa, pp. 108–109, 112
  177. ^ Artur Lakatos, "Partidul Comunist Român din Cluj în 1945", in Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai. Historia, Nr. 1–2/2010, p. 44
  178. ^ Miron, pp. 194, 227
  179. ^ Păiușan (2012), pp. 383–384, 387–388; (2013 II), pp. 955–956, 963–964
  180. ^ Uilăcan, pp. 274, 283
  181. ^ Miron, p. 194
  182. ^ Crăciun, p. 304; Moisa, pp. 110–112
  183. ^ Rotar, p. 351
  184. ^ Păiușan (2013 I), p. 512
  185. ^ Uilăcan, p. 303
  186. ^ Enache, pp. 64–73
  187. ^ Păiușan (2013 II), pp. 956–958
  188. ^ (in Romanian) Radu Petrescu, "Haiducii Muscelului, mișcarea de rezistență a colonelului Gheorghe Arsenescu", in Historia, February 2012

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national, popular, party, romania, national, popular, party, romanian, partidul, național, popular, antifascist, political, party, romania, founded, during, world, underground, union, patriots, uniunea, patrioților, latter, defined, itself, spontaneous, moveme. The National Popular Party Romanian Partidul Național Popular PNP was an antifascist political party in Romania founded during World War II as the underground Union of Patriots Uniunea Patrioților UP The latter had defined itself as a spontaneous movement of resistance to the dictatorial regime of Ion Antonescu but was largely known as a front for the illegal Romanian Communist Party PCdR later PCR Its founders Dumitru Bagdasar Gheorghe Vlădescu Răcoasa Simion Stoilow were closely cooperating with PCdR men but also with liberal opposition forces Repressed by the authorities the UP made a comeback after the pro Allied August 23 Coup of 1944 when it endured as a small ally of the communists mostly controlled directly by them but sometimes rebellious National Popular Party Union of Patriots Partidul Național Popular Uniunea Patrioților PresidentGheorghe Vlădescu Răcoasa ca 1943 1946 1949 Dumitru Bagdasar 1943 1946 Mitiță Constantinescu 1946 Petre Constantinescu Iași 1949 Founded1942Dissolved1949HeadquartersCrangului Street 15 Bucharest to 1944 Spătarului Street Bucharest after 1944 NewspaperRomania Liberă 1943 1944 Tribuna Poporului 1944 1946 Națiunea 1946 1949 Military wingPatriotic Combat Formations FLP Religious wingUnion of Democratic Priests UPD IdeologyBig tentAntifascismLeft wing populismLeft wing nationalism Romanian Political positionCentre left to far leftNational affiliationPatriotic Antihitlerite Front 1943 National Democratic Coalition 1944 National Democratic Front 1944 Bloc of Democratic Parties 1946 People s Democratic Front 1948 Politics of RomaniaPolitical partiesElectionsDefining itself as a party for the middle classes the PNP sought to attract into its ranks both nationalists and ethnic minorities and was used by the Communist Party as a means of weakening the traditional parties From 1945 it registered its most significant successes among the repenting fascists absorbing into its ranks former members of the Iron Guard The UP and PNP were instrumental in helping the PCR reach some of its main objectives including the overthrow of Nicolae Rădescu and the hastening of land reform The PNP was nominally loyal to King Michael I but had no longer a part to play in decision making when Michael was overthrown on the closing days of 1947 The party itself survived the 1948 election but was dissolved by its leaders in early 1949 reportedly under pressure from the new government Its former activists were either integrated into the structures of the communist state or repressed and in some cases imprisoned by the latter Contents 1 History 1 1 Wartime opposition 1 2 PCdR contacts 1 3 1943 1944 repression and resurgence 1 4 FND alliance and 1945 turmoil 1 5 PNP creation 1 6 1946 election and 1947 takeover 1 7 Dissolution and aftermath 2 Doctrines 2 1 Functions 2 2 Populism and nationalism 2 3 Minority issues 2 4 Factionalism and divergence 3 Electoral history 3 1 Legislative elections 4 Notes 5 ReferencesHistory EditWartime opposition Edit The UP s roots were planted in a semi clandestine intellectual movement that opposed Antonescu s regime in general and in particular its support for Nazi Germany and the other Axis Powers and its commitment to war against the Soviet Union According to its own records the UP emerged clandestinely in early 1942 centered on the activities of three left leaning intellectuals the brain surgeon Bagdasar the sociologist Vlădescu Răcoasa and the mathematician Stoilow As listed by historian Corneliu Crăciun the group s explicit goals were sabotaging the war industry resisting the dispatch of men on the anti Soviet front organizing partisans into detachments annulling the Vienna Diktat peace with the USA England and the USSR 1 Vlădescu Răcoasa had a background in politics initially as an affiliate of the Democratic Nationalists then as an internationalist and antifascist with strong Marxist leanings 2 He had also been registered as a member of the Social Democratic Party PSDR 3 Bagdasar was educated abroad where he became inspired by American progressivism 4 while Stoilow had frequented meetings of pro Allied intellectuals some of whom supported the mainstream National Peasants Party PNȚ 5 One of the first notable actions of the UP was publishing starting with January 1943 the illegal newspaper Romania Liberă 4 6 later joined by another antifascist organ Lupta Patriotică 7 The former was reportedly designed to appear in September November 1942 but was discovered by the Siguranța police and could reemerge only in January of the next year 8 According to various accounts Romania Liberă was managed from Bucharest by George Ivașcu on his spare time from editing the pro Antonescu gazette Vremea and with only marginal interventions from the PCdR 4 Party historians claimed that the newspaper kept the popular masses informed on the growth of resistance 9 whereas Crăciun notes that its circulation was exceedingly small 10 However historian Radu Păiușan claims that the UP s history can be traced back to a propaganda operation carried out later by Romanian communists exiled on Soviet territory in January 1943 Leonte Răutu supposedly created the newspaper Romania Liberă and a radio station of the same name with which the Soviets intended to give the impression of a rising antifascist movement in Romania 11 PCdR contacts Edit Several authors trace the original meeting between the UP and the PCdR to mid 1943 They refer to either the turn of tides on the front after Stalingrad 4 12 or to involvement in 1943 of PCdR men Constantin Agiu and Petre Constantinescu Iași who took it upon themselves to reorganize the Union from November 1943 13 The two were subsequently joined by other communists or communist sympathizers including Mihai Levente Mihai Magheru and Stanciu Stoian 14 Vlădescu Răcoasa was the first person identified as leader of the UP 4 while Agiu was designated Caretaker Constantinescu Iași and Bagdasar were tasked with co opting intellectuals while Levente served as the administrator and Magheru directed work in the provinces 15 Nicu Rădescu the estranged and ill reputed son of General Nicolae Rădescu 16 was also closely cooperating with both the PCdR and the UP 17 Under this guidance the UP contacted a group of high ranking soldiers who were seeking to depose Antonescu the most active of whom was Gheorghe Avramescu who was at once an antifascist and anticommunist 13 The UP also left a historical record as a member of the PCdR s Patriotic Antihitlerite Front which also included the revived Ploughmen s Front and two other small political groups the Socialist Peasants Party the Hungarian People s Union MADOSZ The association pact was sealed in August 1943 after a secretive meeting in which the UP was represented by Bagdasar and an N Dinulescu 18 Outside of the Front the UP still maintained links with other opposition groups and was especially close to left wing Social Democrats Ion Pas Ștefan Voitec Theodor Iordăchescu Leon Ghelerter 19 Throughout 1943 Magheru as UP representative held talks with the PNȚ aiming to create a broad coalition of the democratic and patriotic forces toward bring down the Antonescu regime 20 Subsequently the UP s Central Committee took residence in the same building as the PCdR archive at the Wexler residence on Crangului Street 15 Bucharest 17 It soon reported having some thousands of members of all ethnic backgrounds and representation in all the main cities 4 with most active cells in university towns and among schoolteachers unions 21 It also touted its presence among the workers especially those at the Romanian Railway Company whom it encouraged on sabotage missions 22 According to official records the first registered members also included Iorgu Iordan and Ștefan Vencov with outside sympathizers such as Zevedei Barbu Constantin Balmuș Eduard and Florica Mezincescu Mircea Florian David Prodan Teodor Bugnariu Alexandru Graur Constantin Daicoviciu Constantin I Parhon Bazil Munteanu and Mihai Ralea 23 Another version suggests that Zevedei Barbu who was also a PCdR man was helped by Alexandru Roșca with establishing a UP nucleus at Cluj University which had relocated to Sibiu 24 All these records obscure the participation of the PNȚ which through Ioan Hudiță also claimed to have established this intellectual opposition movement 25 1943 1944 repression and resurgence Edit Gheorghe Vlădescu Răcoasa center with the PCdR s Nicolae Ceaușescu and Andrei Pătrașcu at a meeting of solidarity with the Red Army Bucharest August 30 1944 In May 1943 Siguranța had captured an UP man the statistician Mircea Biji who was interrogated and agreed to cooperate leading the authorities into UP safe houses 17 26 Later that year the authorities issued an arrest warrant for psychologist Mihai Beniuc identifying him as another UP liaison in fact Beniuc had yet to join the group and was largely unaware of its activities 27 On December 15 the secret police organized its sting operation At Crangului it chanced upon a trove of PCdR documents filed by Remus Koffler with incriminating evidence about the UP Several were arrested including Vlădescu Răcoasa and Magheru 17 26 The landowner Petru Groza founder of the Ploughmen s Front was also picked up the documents having revealed that he was sponsoring the UP 26 In all fifty men and women suspected of UP membership or sympathies were subjected to a mass trial in first two months of 1944 28 While Groza s release was ordered by Antonescu himself 26 Vlădescu Răcoasa found himself sentenced to 15 years of hard labor The court found him guilty of endangering State order and security 15 Similar sentences were handed to Zevedei Barbu 29 to Magheru and to Magheru s wife Anca 17 Bagdasar by then also a member of the PCdR took charge of the UP 4 with Agiu taking a Central Committee seat 30 Before April 1944 the movement was involved in negotiations with the PNȚ and the PCdR backed left leaning circles of Iași Together they wrote an open letter of protest to Antonescu asking for Romania s immediate withdrawal from the Eastern Front 4 31 On May 24 1944 the Union also entered a National Democratic Coalition alongside the National Liberal Party Tătărescu Groza s Front the PSDR the PSȚ MADOSZ and Petre Topa s Democratic Nationalists 32 In March 1944 the PCdR had joined a pan resistance National Democratic Bloc BND which also included the PNȚ PSDR and the National Liberal Party PNL Together with King Michael I and his court the group carried out the August 23 Coup resulting in Antonescu s arrest and the unilateral cession of war with the Allies Just one day after the coup Vlădescu Răcoasa was freed and resumed political activities in the open introduced by the party press as the combatant for Romanian freedom 33 On August 31 UP members were on hand at the rally held to greet the Red Army upon its entrance into Bucharest 34 35 the effective start of Soviet occupation By October 1944 when it had established chapters in all of sectors of Bucharest 21 the UP had moved its headquarters on Spătarului Street This was a former hospice of the Wehrmacht evacuated during the street fighting and reportedly vandalized beyond belief by the UP s own members 36 While assuming a public face the Union had to abandon its political newspaper Romania Liberă was seized by the PCdR and its first issue of this new series presumed lost was falsified by the PCR after 1972 37 In its stead on September 15 the UP inaugurated Tribuna Poporului which was entrusted to George Călinescu the literary historian and novelist 38 The UP also sponsored Călinescu s foreign policy review Lumea 12 Following negotiations at the beginning of September the Union absorbed the rump Socialist Party led by Vasile Anagnoste 39 On September 27 the UP and its former Patriotic Antihitlerite colleagues formed a political alliance called National Democratic Front FND which also comprised the PSDR As UP envoys Vlădescu Răcoasa Bagdasar and Stoilow held a seat each on the FND National Council 40 The new pact comprising forces that were vastly unequal to each other 41 was sealed only after the communists had resumed their pressures on the PNL and PNȚ both of which refused to join a long term alliance 42 According to anticommunist diplomat Emil Ciurea it pitted one of the PCdR s alliances Antihitlerites enriched by the arrival of the PSDR socialists against the other BND 43 Throughout October the UP was a participant in the PCdR organized public rallies against the independent Premier General Constantin Sănătescu and his PNȚ and PNL ministers accusing the cabinet of playing protector to war criminals 44 Vlădescu Răcoasa was active in the intrigue and at a public rally held in Călărași discussed the imperative of creating the new Romania at all costs 45 On November 4 following a Soviet intervention Sănătescu reshuffled his cabinet with a third of the ministerial mandates and sizable portions of provincial administrative offices going to FND politicians 46 In newly liberated Northern Transylvania this meant the UP s integration at the highest level of local government The FND cooperating with MADOSZ contemplated making the region into an autonomous entity and organized an executive Northern Transylvanian Committee that included two UP activists This body was in conflict with the PNȚ and PNL its rallies allegedly broken up by the Maniu Guards 47 Finally joining the UP Beniuc was sent into the region organizing new chapters for both the Union and the Ploughmen s Front 48 FND alliance and 1945 turmoil Edit Constantin Burducea addressing the Congress of Unified Labor Unions Bucharest on January 30 1945 The photograph also shows the PCR s Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej Ana Pauker Alexandru Sencovici and Chivu Stoica with Social Democrats Gheorghe Nicolau and Victor Brătfăleanu Vlădescu Răcoasa was briefly appointed Minister for Minority Affairs renamed by him for Nationalities serving until February 1945 after which he was demoted to Undersecretary 49 During December 1944 the FND was co opted into the new cabinet formed by General Rădescu but continued to air its tensions with the two liberal parties with which it shared power The UP followed suit 50 Involved with Groza in Northern Transylvanian affairs 51 statistician Sabin Manuilă a former PNȚ supporter and participant in the August 1944 Coup 37 was also welcomed into the UP then appointed Undersecretary of State for Stately Organization 52 The party s reservoir of cadres expanded to include many intellectuals associated with Constantinescu Iași for instance Balmuș and Zevedei Barbu The latter served as UP recruiter in Sibiu County 53 With Constantinescu Iași Balmuș served as a UP representative to assemblies commemorating Antonescu s antisemitic crimes 54 Also joining the UP was physicist Ilie G Murgulescu who edited the daily a UP regional mouthpiece in Banat 55 During that period the UP involved itself in the campaign against Rădescu headlined by the Communist Party which was now known as PCR rather than PCdR They agitated for land reform and organized the campaign against price gouging In Jiu Valley and Hunedoara County at large the UP carried out democratic work in favor of miners welfare distributing food and setting up price control committees 56 Throughout the country its activists joined hands with the Ploughmen s Front redistributing to the peasants most of the plots that were over 50 hectares 57 At the time the UP also organized its religious wing for highly conscious Orthodox priests called Union of Democratic Priests Uniunea Preoților Democrați UPD and led by the UP s Minister of Religious Affairs Constantin Burducea 58 As a witness to the political crisis King Michael probably contemplated replacing Rădescu with the old UP associate General Avramescu 13 The latter had earned distinction in the Siege of Budapest and was respected by the Red Army but evidently resented Soviet interference Vlădescu Răcoasa noted Avramescu s acceptance of the FND program but the PCdR refused to take him into consideration 13 By then Nicu Rădescu and Levente were directly involved in the effort to create and illegally arm a communist controlled paramilitary force the Patriotic Combat Formations Formațiunile de Luptă Patriotică FLP 16 Literary critic Niculae Gheran who was involved with the UP paramilitary as a teenager recalls that the atmosphere was still largely apolitical and that the formations were set out to eradicate criminality 59 The game of cops and robbers ended when Eugen Alimănescu of the Bucharest Police took control of the situation with crude but effective methods 60 Meanwhile the demonstrations turned violent on February 24 1945 when communists staged an assault on the Internal Affairs Ministry The seminal event of this confrontation was a public rally with Bagdasar and the UPD s Dumitru Popescu Moșoia as guest speakers 61 During the push back several protesters were killed by gunshot later investigation uncovered that the bullets were not of the standard caliber used in the Ministry 16 62 Nicu Rădescu who was hiding out at the UP s headquarters participated in the propaganda effort publicly accusing his father of murder 16 On March 6 1945 Groza eventually managed to topple Premier Rădescu who escaped to British Cyprus 16 and set up a communist dominated cabinet with Constantinescu Iași as the new Information Minister Also joining the cabinet as the UP s appointee was Grigore Vasiliu Rășcanu the Minister of War 63 Bagdasar became the Minister of Health and as a technocrat tasked with managing the nationwide health crisis earned the respect of his political adversaries 35 General Avramescu meanwhile was killed in an air raid on the Slovakian front reportedly shortly after being arrested by the Soviets 13 The UP resumed its orthodox political stance Rădescu s son by then a card carrying communist was tasked with purging the Union of political undesirables then assigned over to the Siguranța which he helped transform into the Securitate 16 On November 8 1945 Groza s military and paramilitary forces repressed a popular demonstration marking the anniversary of Michael I who was still the reigning monarch As noted by historian Ioan Lăcustă these events ended in a bloodbath ordered by Groza s Interior Minister Teohari Georgescu 64 According to PNȚ investigators such as Corneliu Coposu the UP was directly involved asking its activists to stage a counter manifestation in Palace Square and to prevent the monarchists from reaching the Square 65 The UP s press made ample reference to the events reinterpreting them according to communist guidelines whereas the independent newspapers were barred from even reporting on them 66 PNP creation Edit Gheorghiu Dej with Petru Groza Grigore Vasiliu Rășcanu and Petre Constantinescu Iași meeting workers at Bucharest North railway station May 2 1946 On January 12 13 1946 the UP held a national congress at Trianon Cinema Bucharest after which it reemerged as the National Popular Party 67 68 Also at that meeting it elected itself a new president the economist Mitiță Constantinescu 69 He was seconded by Vlădescu Răcoasa Bagdasar and Oțetea 70 On March 19 or 20 71 the National Populars inaugurated their own official news outlet Națiunea Editorship was assigned to Călinescu who was in the process of adapting his work to Marxist doctrines and was by then a member of the PNP Executive Committee 67 It heralded radical attacks against the political opposition from the disgraced far right to the PNȚ 67 72 For a while the newspaper still preserved a nominal independence in the selection of its literary staff publishing the essays of Adrian Marino and Alexandru Piru which were still untouched by the communist style 67 73 74 With assistance from its communist backers the PNP soon began a large recruitment campaign Among those who signed up were several famous literary and scientific figures including poet Alexandru A Philippide historian Andrei Oțetea and biologist Traian Săvulescu 57 literary critic Mihai Gafița a former PNL man was its students wing representative 75 In Murgulescu s Banat sections new recruits included General Teodor Șerb President of the PNP Chapter in Timiș Torontal County physicist Valeriu Novacu who went on to serve as County Prefect poet Alexandru Jebeleanu and industrialists Jacques Hellmann and Anton Hollander 76 Like the Alexandrescu Peasantists the PNP was specifically dedicated to undermining the PNȚ that is to say the PCdR s most powerful opponent Constantinescu Iași recalled that even in 1943 the UP was working to set up opposition groups within the PNȚ but in such a manner that no group would be torn away from the party 77 As noted by political scientist Ioan Stanomir the party was later a tool used by the PCdR to gnaw at the PNȚ before they ultimately dissolved it 74 This campaign was sparked in 1944 by a broadcast on Radio Moscow 78 By 1946 the PNP had only managed to absorb remnants of the interwar Radical Peasants Party who had refused to rejoin the PNȚ 79 The recruitment drive was punctuated by episodes of dissent Jebeleanu was almost removed from the party after he was found to be an insubordinate propagandist 80 More embarrassingly the PNP failed to enlist Lucian Blaga the celebrated poet philosopher Blaga admitted feeling terrorized by direct threats to his artistic independence and at the risk of marginalization opted not to join 81 or according to another version joined was immediately made a member of the PNP Central Committee and just as immediately resigned 82 Burducea perceived by Groza as a political liability was also sacked from his ministerial position 83 and the UPD chairmanship was assigned to an Ion Vască 84 On March 22 24 1946 the PNP held its annual reunion in Bucharest culminating in a popular assembly presided upon by Oțetea 79 On May 16 85 the PNP was co opted by a communist led electoral alliance the Bloc of Democratic Parties BPD In early November its representative in the Assembly of Deputies and PNP General Secretary a Mihail Dragomirescu played a central part in the sessions which condemned and pushed aside a minor PCR ally the National Liberal Party Tătărescu 86 However there were notable setbacks for the PNP including the sudden disappearance of Călinescu s Lumea 67 87 Also in May Bagdasar resigned as Health Minister and took a diplomatic posting but died of cancer before he could take office 35 In September of that year his widow Florica Bagdasar made history by becoming the first ever Romanian woman minister after being assigned the Health portfolio 35 Mitiță Constantinescu also died at that time prompting the PNP executive to elect Vlădescu Răcoasa in his place 88 1946 election and 1947 takeover Edit In the general election of November 1946 which was rigged through fraud and voter intimidation 89 the Bloc claimed a decisive victory However the PNP only had a minor role to play in the campaign with a reported 7 of the BPD candidates 90 91 The BPD and MADOSZ had counted 79 86 of the vote in its favor obtaining 378 of the 414 total Assembly of Deputies seats 92 of which the PNP held 26 93 Constantinescu Iași ran and won as head of the electoral list in Tutova County returning to serve as Information Minister 94 Florica Bagdasar was elected in Tulcea County and continued to serve as the Health Minister until August 1948 35 She sat in the Assembly next to Călinescu 35 who had been elected in Botoșani County 67 Other PNP deputies included Vlădescu Răcoasa Oțetea 95 historian Dumitru Almaș 96 and General Secretary Dragomirescu who represented Timiș Torontal 97 The PNP withdrew from the Groza cabinet on November 29 1946 98 in protest at what it felt was its under representation It found itself in an unusual situation as the loyal opposition to the BPD stating its refusal to attack any of the Bloc s politicians 99 Both Bagdasar and Săvulescu continued to serve in the cabinet the latter as Agriculture Minister 100 The PNP s withdrawal from power and its general subservience to the BPD were noted factors of stress at a local level 101 However it was able to attract more followers with the dissolution of Constantin Argetoianu s National Union of Labor and Rebirth UNMR Two of the latter s pro communist wings were absorbed at the time the UNMR tradesmen wing under Petre Misale and the formerly independent National Agrarian Action directed by Paul Iliescu and Max Schapira 102 In July 1947 after the Tămădău Affair and news of an anti communist partisan movement PNP representatives supported the communist motion to outlaw the PNȚ 103 Moreover Națiunea and Călinescu himself joined in the denunciation campaign publishing propaganda pieces that maligned the imprisoned PNȚ ists 67 Other party members used their last opportunity to escape the country Manuilă settled in the United States 104 Zevedei Barbu defected in Scotland 105 During the following months the PNP was in favor of a bill that politicized and de professionalized the justice system introducing juries selected from among the workers and toiling peasants by their respective trade unions and corporate bodies 106 In November Vlădescu Răcoasa became Ambassador to Moscow which was perceived as a posting of overwhelming importance in that context 107 Still the PNP president he was abroad when the communists imposed abdication on King Michael and proclaimed the People s Republic On February 1 1948 the PNP resumed its activities in the new republic the Bucharest branch of the PNP elected Balmuș as its chairman 108 While still serving abroad Vlădescu Răcoasa was appointed by the Assembly of Deputies reformed into the rubber stamp Great National Assembly to a committee drafting a socialist constitution 109 Dissolution and aftermath Edit The PNP remained closely aligned with the Romanian Workers Party PMR as the PCR styled itself after absorbing the Social Democrats From February 1948 it was part of the People s Democratic Front FPD an electoral alliance formed with the PMR the Ploughmen s Front and MADOSZ Constantinescu Iași Dragomirescu and Alexandru Șteflea were its delegates on the FPD National Council 110 The subsequent elections were advertised by PMR leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej as a consolidation of democratic conquests against imperialism destined to nip in the bud all attempts by the reaction to rear its head 111 Two decorative opposition forces were allowed to survive outside the FPD the reorganized Tătărescu Liberals and the Democratic Peasants Party Lupu 112 The Front won 405 of the 414 seats of which the PNP had 43 Vlădescu Răcoasa Almaș Balmuș Călinescu Constantinescu Iași Oțetea and Săvulescu were among those returned to parliament 113 Elected as the last PNP president Constantinescu Iași was also designated a Vice President of the Great National Assembly 114 However the PNP survived until voting itself out of existence on February 6 1949 The official notice informed its voters that under the watch of the Workers Party the PNP had carried out the better part of its task and that to carry on as a separate organization would be an act of seclusion 115 As Călinescu explained in Națiunea the party and its newspaper s historical mission had been exhausted 116 Literary historian George Neagoe argues that this was a public lie as the PNP a party of fellow travelers had not truly opted to dissolve itself it was rather discarded by its ally 116 Until March 21 1949 all regional chapters had been dissolved and PNP deputies resumed their seats as independents 117 His influence greatly reduced Constantinescu Iași continued to serve in the Groza governments and was Minister of Religious Affairs in 1953 118 Călinescu was likewise sidelined maintaining some of his political functions but prevented from popularizing his unorthodox interpretations of Marxist dogma and world affairs 74 119 In 1959 he was almost arrested for enemy like behavior 120 Vlădescu Răcoasa was also recalled from Moscow and assigned to minor positions had to watch on as the regime suppressed then confiscated Romanian sociology 121 Florica Bagdasar was eliminated from political life by 1953 when she was also attacked in the press as a cosmopolitan 35 Instead Oțetea accumulated accolades and as an official historian signaled the 1964 break with the Soviets revealing to the public the anti Russian pronunciations of Marxist classics 122 Several suppliant members of the Communist Party s Central Committee down to the Romanian Revolution of 1989 and including Levente and Gheorghe Mihoc had been activists in the original UP 123 Romania Liberă s Ivașcu rose through the ranks of the PMR until owing to a case of mistaken identity was prosecuted for war crimes imprisoned then rehabilitated and again assigned party work 124 Contrarily Nicu Rădescu was tempted by a career in the repressive apparatus He was sacked from the Securitate in 1956 for his disregard of decorum and began a second career as a Centrocoop functionary dying in anonymity in 1993 16 Doctrines EditFunctions Edit The UP and PNP functioned mainly as a testing ground for the PCdR filtering its future members and making its ideology palatable to the general public Many scholars see the UP PNP as mainly a front for the exceedingly minor PCdR variously describing it as rather decorative 125 an electioneering vent 126 an organization designed to fulfill the communists objectives 6 a diversion 67 instrument 127 or windscreen 95 and a quasi party 36 128 Literary historian and former communist politician Pavel Țugui disagrees with an antifascist and antiracist program 12 standing for various democratic orientations the UP did not form any alliances with any party whatsoever between 1942 and spring 1944 4 He notes that the collaboration with the communists should be seen as one between two distinct political and organizational entities with the UP on the center left 12 Initially the UP itself acknowledged that it had a short term role presenting itself not as a party but as a big tent movement of antifascists and PCdR members irrespective of ethnicity social class or creed 129 Members called each other prieten friend mirroring the communist tovarăș comrade 130 131 In a December 1944 address to the people Novacu presented the August 23 Coup as top down seizure of power rather than as a popular revolution noting that the action of a few would impel and enrich the populace 132 At around the same time Vlădescu Răcoasa was claiming that in the new world it would matter not whether one is a bourgeois or a proletarian but if one is a democrat The one true democracy he indicated was a people s democracy 133 He also stated that the UP was not about distributing posts and ministries 57 The UP also sought to profit from the introduction of women s suffrage putting out a manifesto specifically aimed at women voters Critical of vain feminism it proposed equal responsibilities for women in the effort to reconstruct Romania 134 A female activist Cornelia Sterian also explained that woman must become equal in rights she must play an active part in the political struggle for a free and fulfilling life 78 A Bucharest female section had been formed by 1946 animated by Margareta Vlădescu Răcoasa and by Mihail Sadoveanu s wife Valeria 135 In its later electoral manifestos the UP called itself a political organization in support of the people consolidating an independent democratic and merry Romania 136 emerging naturally from the movement of resistance against the Hitlerites and the Antonescu dictatorship 137 By then the movement advertised a more specific corporate goal namely the democratization of the middle classes 138 These were taken to include all categories between the proletariat represented by the PCdR and the rich bankers great landlords dealers and speculators it claimed were represented by the PNȚ and PNL more specifically the PNP was supposed to stand for professional workers artisans traders industrialists functionaries pensioners and freelancers 139 Writing about the accomplished historical mission of 1949 George Călinescu explained that it consisted of educating non proletarian working strata to understand and receive the coming social order 116 Reviewing such claims Păiușan argues that the PNP s objectives interfered with those of other FND members the Ploughmen s Front and the Alexandrescu Peasantists existed specifically to draw in the urban middle class 140 As noted by Lucian Blaga its putative member the PNP manifestly failed at becoming an independent autonomous party of the petty bourgeoisie and was simply a maneuverable mass 141 Physician Epifanie Cozărescu of Săveni recalled in 2008 that he and his colleagues joined the PNP because it seemed like a protective cover against the oppression of intellectuals by the Communist Party Overall we were no longer given much attention 142 Populism and nationalism Edit As noted by historian Carol Terteci the UP shared a BPD platform of populist promises 92 Party notables took pride in asserting that the BPD s program was largely inspired by its own charter and thus closest to the soul of the masses 138 A 1945 manifesto in Barlad called on UP members to erect a country where there would be no more poor people on this rich a land 143 With its involvement in the PCdR s war on price gauging the PNP was soon identified as an anti capitalist force by the middle class and the industrialists who were reticent about joining its ranks The UP tried to dissuade their fears assuring them that the measures were only temporary 144 The PNȚ had some success in identifying the PNP as a front of the PCdR PNP territorial offices complained that Nationalist Peasantist propaganda on this topic was driving away potential recruits 145 Păiușan describes the UP as an organization which betrayed the country by turning Romanians against the anti Bolshevik war and sealing a pact with the Soviet enemy 137 When addressing a Romanian public the National Populars took on the promotion of left wing nationalism Party speakers argued that the criminal fascist war offered an occasion for verifying one s patriotism and held that fascists exploited patriotic sentiment poisoning the soul of the people 130 Writing in Lupta Patriotică Novacu theorized that Motherland and patriotism stand for combat and sacrifice for mankind s permanent ideals For liberty and independence for one s language art for one s credo one s bread for our factories and our fields 146 Despite the UP s involvement in Northern Transylvanian regionalism its leadership in Banat alleged that the PNȚ was only superficially and opportunistically patriotic 147 Party documents also identified the PNP with a struggle against Hungarian revisionism 55 or against venomous chauvinism in general 148 The Northern Transylvanian issue was solved in Romania s favor according to PNP sources only because of the unconditioned help of our great Eastern friend the USSR and our old friend France 149 The UP and later the PNP were formally dedicated to purging the country of fascists in particular former members of the Iron Guard 67 150 The UP was the first organization to propose arresting Maria Antonescu Veturia Goga and Alexandru Hodoș 151 In practice it proved immediately attractive for a category of former wartime fascists and especially for Guardist sympathizers within the Orthodox Church Notorious examples include the Religious Affairs Minister Constantin Burducea and Religious Affairs Undersecretary Ion Vască whose fascist past was a tool for extortion 152 Burducea had it that the Church was compatible with socialism and that the FND was not godless How could one hold suspicions of anti Christian or anti religious sentiment the FND s sincerely democratic parties when the Front works for the brotherhood of all men for bringing the Gospel to life within this nation and for toppling hatred injustice obscurantism and social inequality 153 As Burducea s patron Constantinescu Iași extended his protection to one other PNP sympathizer and former Guardist the bishop Antim Nica who in turn sought to protect his colleagues by directing them into the party 154 Constantinescu Iași also negotiated with Guard representatives such as Petre Țuțea to have its members join the PCdR and the UP en masse 155 Other efforts involved a former high ranking figure in the Guard historian P P Panaitescu who similarly urged his former subordinates to make their way into the UP 156 In Putna County that is to say Vlădescu Răcoasa s own fief the PNP chapter was weakened by disputes over the fascist past of its leaders including its local secretary the Orthodox priest Streche 157 Other PNP members of the far right clergy exposed by the Workers Party only after 1949 included a head of the clergy syndicate in Baia County 158 In 1945 a circular letter presented to Teohari Georgescu of Internal Affairs estimated that there were 110 Guardists co opted by the UP 159 Minority issues Edit Triumphal arch with Hungarian and Romanian inscriptions and symbols erected in Targu Mureș in honor of Vlădescu Răcoasa August 4 1945 While appealing to the Orthodox clergy the PNP also enlisted members of the Eastern Catholic Church including priest Gheorghe Zagrai 160 The UP had been especially active among the ethnic minorities which were the focus of Vlădescu Răcoasa s time in office The PNP heralded denazification among the Banat Swabians protecting some Swabians who it claimed were wrongly prosecuted by the People s Tribunals while targeting others who supported the anti communist opposition 161 Its relationship with the ethnic Hungarians was more tense despite official rhetoric encouraging cooperation the UP s Bihor County cell divided itself into competing cells representing the region s ethnic groups and was sabotaged by its MADOSZ allies In February 1945 it voted to bar Hungarians from joining its ranks 162 The communists also experimented by creating a parallel UP modeled organization of Armenian Romanians Called Union of Armenian Patriots or Armenian Front it drew Armenians away from the anti Soviet Dashnaktsutyun 163 A similar body existed for exiled Spanish Republicans who voted Vlădescu Răcoasa as their honorary president 148 The PNP had a more ambiguous stance concerning the Jewish and Romani communities which had been the victims of deportation and murder during the Holocaust During the Antonescu years UP founder Manuilă had in fact come up with the project to deport Jews and Romanies into occupied Transnistria singling them out as stateless communities 164 When this had been enforced however he had protected some 5 000 Jews keeping them in Bucharest 165 Engineer Cornel Năstăsescu who was at once a member of the PNP Committee and a leader of its branch in Năsăud County made efforts to hide his wartime involvement with building projects that used Jewish labor 166 In 1943 the UP participants in Patriotic Antihitlerite meetings argued that The Jewish group must have its own commission to allow the Jews to take care of purely Jewish issues 167 Speaking in February 1946 the communist politico Vasile Luca set his PNP partners the goal of attracting as many as possible from the 150 000 Jewish voters still living in Romania 168 There were Jewish members of the PNP including one who in 1947 also had a leadership position in the Jewish Democratic Committee of Fălciu County 169 Nevertheless at official commemorations PNP activists downplayed the historical impact of episodes such as the Iași pogrom of 1941 noting that other than the minor misunderstandings that are inherent to life in common one can say that Jews have been fully embraced by their friends the Romanian people 170 Călinescu s reference to the pogrom as German and Iron Guard excesses received negative coverage in the Zionist press who saw evidence of whitewashing 171 Vlădescu Răcoasa also clashed with the Zionists when in November 1944 he announced that Jews would not be recognized as a distinct minority but instead assimilated into their group of choice 172 Factionalism and divergence Edit Even in its late years PNP officials expressed a belief in the eternal life of the Romanian Monarchy 173 This resolution passed into its statues where the recognition of the Monarchy was one of the core ideas 70 Although it adopted a pro Soviet policy that Păiușan sees as treasonous 174 the UP included at its original core supporters of the Western Allies such as Bagdasar and Ivașcu 4 The Bagdasars worked closely with American officials in the Allied Commission and were upset that Romania was prevented from joining the Marshall Plan 35 Beyond its national representation and its trans ethnic agenda the PNP remained a minor and recessive force As noted by Corneliu Crăciun it was always less powerful than the Patriotic Defense 175 a workers aid organization also gravitating around the PCdR and also organized as a paramilitary wing 43 The UP s 1944 recruitment drive in Bihor which was still nominally held by a rump Hungarian state only managed some 200 enlistments of which 150 were inactive members Only 40 card carrying members still existed in 1945 after Hungarians and Jews were expelled from the party 176 Likewise in Cluj County the UP was preferred by Romanian communist sympathizers with the PCdR section dominated by Hungarians 177 In Putna the UP only mustered some 1 700 members in all compared to the 6 000 enlisted with the Alexandrescu Peasantists but well ahead of the PCdR s 400 178 The Timiș Torontal section presided over by General Teodor Șerb had some 2 000 to 2 500 members the majority of whom were male peasants with no representation for women and youth 179 Năstăsescu s branch in Năsăud went from 150 affiliates to a claimed 6 012 in the summer of 1946 The latter number is suspect since 5 861 were peasants and as such probably enlisted against their will 180 As a corollary of its dependence on the PCdR the party was heavily infiltrated by communist cells the PCdR s own circulars commended the Putna cell as highly dynamic 181 In Bihor the UP was directly managed by a communist envoy Imre Toth 182 A similar situation reputedly occurred in Alba County where the UP s temporary representative in 1945 was Dumitru Ciumbrudean who had been stripped of his PCdR membership 183 These interventions divided the party Some in the PNP struggled to maintain independence with equal rights within the Bloc of Democratic Parties In 1946 the Severin County chapter unanimously passed a resolution ruling the communists transgressions as inadmissible and impolite 138 The PNP also reported on abuses committed by paramilitary citizens guards which it implied were terrorizing the populace 184 while activists such as Bagdasar expressed bafflement over the anti Peasantist rhetorical violence 35 In early 1946 Călinescu and Națiunea demanded a purge of the purgers that is to say a toning down of repression against political undesirables 67 73 Contrarily other party branches were more readily enforcing persecution of the opposition This was the case in Năsăud where the Ploughmen s Front complained that overzealous PNP men were unwittingly alerting the PNȚ and PNL as to what lay in store for them 185 Father Burducea s unwavering support for the purge of anti communists alienated the clergy many of whom resented and mocked him this matter contributed to his sacking 186 Seeing the BPD as an authoritarian instrument members deserted in significant numbers during 1947 187 and some even became involved with a group of anti communist partisans formed by Gheorghe Arsenescu in Muscel County 188 Electoral history EditLegislative elections Edit Election Votes Seats Position1946 Part of the BDP 26 414 6th1948 Part of the FDP 43 414 17 3rdNotes Edit Crăciun p 299 The same goals are attested by Covaci pp 167 169 with a different emphasis Rostas in Bulgaru pp XI XIII See also Boia p 174 N D Cocea Al Gh Savu Jurnal in Magazin Istoric May 1968 p 83 Boia p 175 a b c d e f g h i j in Romanian Pavel Țugui George Ivașcu cronicar de război la ziarul Vremea 1941 1944 II in Romania Literară Nr 18 2013 Boia p 226 a b Crăciun p 299 Păiușan 2010 pp 293 295 Covaci p 170 Crăciun p 299 Covaci p 170 Crăciun pp 299 300 Păiușan 2010 pp 292 293 a b c d Țugui 2009 p 48 a b c d e in Romanian Paltin Sturdza 6 martie 1945 Guvern general Avramescu sau dr Petru Groza in Historia April 2014 Covaci p 169 Crăciun pp 299 300 a b Bulgaru p XXXIII a b c d e f g in Romanian Oana Demetriade Fiul impotriva tatălui Securistul Nicu Rădescu vs primul ministrul Nicolae Rădescu in Revista 22 Nr 1232 October 2013 a b c d e in Romanian Mihai Burcea Sidonia Bogdan Mărturiile unui ilegalist comunist unde conspirau să pună mană pe puterea de la București in Romania Liberă July 1 2013 Covaci pp 178 179 Crăciun pp 299 300 Covaci pp 176 177 179 Paul Cernovodeanu Cronici de familii Magherii in Magazin Istoric September 1977 p 32 a b Crăciun p 300 Covaci pp 187 191 Covaci pp 169 171 174 See also Boia pp 235 237 Zavarache pp 207 208 Boia pp 235 236 a b c d in Romanian Laurențiu Ungureanu Apostolii lui Stalin Petru Groza ultimul burghez De la tentativa eșuată de suicid la idila cu Elena Lupescu și divorțul decent si elegant de monarhie in Adevărul October 27 2014 Zavarache pp 213 216 220 Covaci pp 184 185 Crăciun p 300 Boia p 236 Covaci p 192 Boia pp 235 236 Covaci pp 186 187 Tiberiu Dumitru Costăchescu Partidul Național Liberal in anii regimurilor autoritare februarie 1938 august 1944 in Transilvania Nr 2 2006 p 85 Bulgaru p XXXIV Cioroianu p 172 a b c d e f g h i in Romanian Alexandra Bellow Asclepios versus Hades in Romania II in Revista 22 Nr 755 September 2004 a b in Romanian Alexandru George Revenind la vechi cuvinte noi in Romania Literară Nr 8 2011 a b in Romanian Lavinia Betea Cristina Vohn Inedit Primul ziar legal al PCdR a fost falsificat in Jurnalul Național October 25 2005 Țugui 2009 pp 47 48 See also Boia pp 282 288 290 Gheorghe Onisoru Alianțe și confruntări intre partidele politice din Romania 1944 1947 Fundaţia Academia Civică Bucharest 1996 p 185 Bulgaru p XXXIV Păiușan 2010 p 293 Cioroianu p 55 Păiușan 2010 pp 294 296 a b Ciurea p 872 Cioroianu p 55 56 Păiușan 2010 pp 296 297 Bulgaru p XXXV Păiușan 2010 pp 297 298 Nagy amp Vincze pp 61 62 71 Zavarache p 220 Bulgaru pp XXXV XXXVII Miron p 226 Bulgaru p XXXVI Păiușan 2010 p 300 Nagy amp Vincze p 29 Păiușan 2010 p 297 Blaga pp 25 26 Gușu p 288 a b Păiușan 2012 p 389 Ștefan Nemecsek Presa hunedoreană de la origini pană in prezent Vol I Realitatea Romanească Vulcan 2007 pp 200 201 ISBN 978 973 88085 3 9 a b c Moisa p 108 Enache pp 60 62 Kalkandjieva pp 266 267 Gheran pp 301 312 Gheran pp 306 308 Ionel p 151 Ionel pp 152 164 166 178 Crăciun p 302 Lăcustă p 61 Tudor Călin Zarojanu Viața lui Corneliu Coposu Editura Mașina de Scris Bucharest 2005 pp 37 42 ISBN 973 8491 23 1 Lăcustă pp 60 61 a b c d e f g h i j Oana Soare Cristina Balinte Andrei Terian Mihai Iovănel In obiectiv G Călinescu in Cultura Nr 211 February 2009 Bulgaru p XLIII Cioroianu p 126 Ciurea pp 871 872 Crăciun p 308 Moisa p 108 Țugui 2009 p 48 Bulgaru p XLIII Crăciun p 308 See also Boia p 271 a b Bulgaru p XLIII Păiușan 2013 I p 511 Țugui 2009 p 48 Boa pp 288 289 a b in Romanian Elvira Sorohan Damnarea cărturarului in Convorbiri Literare October 2007 a b c in Romanian Ioan Stanomir G Călinescu și totalitarismul castrator in Observator Cultural Nr 592 September 2011 G Brătescu Ce a fost să fie Notații autobiografice Humanitas Bucharest 2003 pp 158 170 189 ISBN 973 50 0425 9 Păiușan 2012 pp 384 385 386 Covaci p 181 a b Păiușan 2010 p 300 a b Păiușan 2013 I p 511 Păiușan 2013 I p 508 Blaga pp 26 27 in Romanian Ilie Rad O declarație inedită a lui Lucian Blaga in Romania Literară Nr 13 2012 George Neagoe Jurnal indirect in Cultura Nr 445 November 2013 Enache p 71 74 76 78 Kalkandjieva p 270 Miron pp 228 322 Terteci p 173 Razi pp 272 273 Boia p 290 Bulgaru pp XLIX L See also Cioroianu p 126 Boia pp 246 247 Cioroianu pp 64 66 Terteci passim Păiușan 2013 II p 961 in Romanian Doron Dobrincu Stalin și pregătirea alegerilor din Romania anului 1946 in Revista 22 Nr 960 July August 2008 a b Terteci p 173 Dieter Nohlen Philip Stover Elections in Europe A Data Handbook Nomos Baden Baden 2010 p 1610 ISBN 978 3 8329 5609 7 Gheorghe Clapa Lupta forțelor democratice din fostul județ Tutova pentru victoria Blocului Partidelor Democratice in alegerile parlamentare din noiembrie 1946 in Acta Moldaviae Meridionalis Anuarul Muzeului Județean Vaslui Vols III IV 1981 1982 pp 189 193 See also Petcu p 166 a b Boia p 273 in Romanian Dumitru Almaș cel mai prolific scriitor din Neamț in Ceahlăul March 12 2014 Păiușan 2013 II pp 959 961 962 Bulgaru pp XXXVII L LI Cum stă lumea și țara in Unirea Poporului December 8 1946 p 3 Păiușan 2013 II pp 961 962 966 Boia p 261 Bulgaru pp LIII LV Păiușan 2013 II pp 956 962 Petre Otu 1946 1947 Se pregătește guvernul Argetoianu in Magazin Istoric May 2000 pp 40 42 Georgescu pp 310 311 Cristina Vohn Național țărăniștii trimiși in ilegalitate in Jurnalul Național August 16 2006 Boia p 253 in Romanian Claudiu Pădurean Cum este recuperată biografia lui Zevedei Barbu in Romania Liberă November 16 2014 Georgescu pp 316 317 Rostas in Bulgaru p XIII Bulgaru p LVIII Bulgaru p LIX Constituirea Frontului Democrației Populare Comunicat in Scinteia February 29 1948 p 1 Ciurea p 880 Ciurea p 881 Boia pp 310 311 Petcu p 166 See also Bulgaru p LXI Razi p 277 Razi p 277 See also Ciurea pp 880 881 Nicolae Videnie Revolte anticomuniste ale țăranilor din Campia Romană in 1948 in Ilie Popa Experimentul Pitești comunicări prezentate la Simpozionul internațional Experimentul Pitești Reeducarea prin tortură Opresiunea țărănimii romane in timpul dictaturii comuniste ediția a 4 a Pitești 24 26 septembrie 2004 Editura Fundației Culturale Memoria Bucharest 2005 p 256 ISBN 973 86965 4 2 a b c Neagoe 2010 p 6 Bulgaru p LX Petcu p 166 Neagoe 2010 pp 6 7 Boia pp 331 332 Rostas in Bulgaru pp XIII XIV Cioroianu p 220 Florica Dobre Liviu Marius Bejenaru Clara Cosmineanu Mareș Monica Grigore Alina Ilinca Oana Ionel Nicoleta Ionescu Gură Elisabeta Neagoe Pleșa Liviu Pleșa Membrii C C al P C R 1945 1989 Dicționar Editura Enciclopedică Bucharest 2004 pp 87 200 201 362 394 417 465 ISBN 973 45 0486 X in Romanian Ion Cristoiu Securitatea un bun istoric literar in Jurnalul Național September 2 2005 Cioroianu p 126 Păiușan 2010 p 291 Razi p 277 Nagy amp Vincze pp 41 61 Covaci pp 167 168 Moisa p 110 Păiușan 2010 pp 293 295 300 a b Intrunirile de Duminică ale Uniunii Patrioților La Marna in Scinteia August 15 1945 p 5 Gheran pp 308 311 Păiușan 2010 pp 299 Păiușan 2010 p 294 Păiușan 2010 p 295 Bulgaru pp XLIX LII Dumitru Huțanu Aspecte privind participarea maselor populare din fostul județ Putna la evenimentele anilor 1945 1946 in Studii și Comunicări Publicația Complexului Muzeal al Județului Vrancea Vol III 1980 p 293 a b Păiușan 2010 p 292 a b c Păiușan 2012 p 386 Păiușan 2013 I p 510 Păiușan 2013 I pp 506 510 Blaga pp 25 27 Epifanie Cozărescu Amintiri despre modul in care au fost duse și rezultatul Alegerilor din 19 noiembrie 1946 in Memoria Revista Gandirii Arestate Issues 64 65 2018 p 64 Cornelia Elena Andriescu Industria orașelor județului Vaslui in perioada 23 August 1944 11 iunie 1948 in Acta Moldaviae Meridionalis Anuarul Muzeului Județean Vaslui Vol V VI 1983 1984 p 287 Păiușan 2012 pp 384 386 Păiușan 2013 I pp 506 510 512 Păiușan 2010 p 293 Păiușan 2012 pp 384 385 a b Bulgaru p XXXVIII Păiușan 2012 p 385 Covaci pp 193 Moisa pp 107 108 Rotar pp 351 352 Țugui 2009 passim See also Enache pp 56 61 64 65 Rotar pp 351 352 in Romanian Sorin Bocancea Dincolo de actualele mituri Biserica Ortodoxă in primii ani ai regimului comunist din Romania in Sfera Politicii Nr 160 June 2011 Enache pp 60 61 74 78 80 See also Kalkandjieva p 299 Enache p 62 Petcu p 161 166 Lăcustă pp 61 62 Țurlea passim in Romanian Ilarion Țiu Și verzi și roșii in Jurnalul Național May 10 2006 Miron pp 192 197 226 227 Petcu p 176 Țurlea p 46 Uilăcan p 301 Păiușan 2012 pp 388 390 2013 I pp 505 506 Crăciun pp 300 308 Moisa pp 111 112 113 114 Lucian Nastasă Studiu introductiv in Armenii din nord vestul Transilvaniei in anii instaurării comunismului 1945 1953 Mărturii documentare Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center Cluj Napoca pp 17 22 ISBN 973 8399 62 9 Final Report p 227 Boia p 235 Uilăcan pp 270 283 Final Report p 104 Documente Ședința resortului central al organizației de masă din 21 februarie 1946 Comitetul Democratic Evreiesc in Andreea Andreescu Lucian Nastasă Andreea Varga Minorităţi etnoculturale Mărturii documentare Evreii din Romania 1945 1965 Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center Cluj Napoca 2003 p 217 ISBN 973 85738 4 X Costin Clit Comitetul Democratic Evreiesc din Huși in Costin Clit Mihai Rotariu eds Studii și articole privind istoria orașului Huși Vol II Editura Sfera Barlad 2009 pp 407 418 ISBN 978 606 8056 53 1 Gușu pp 288 289 B I Ben Israel Panopticum Flori de stil in Tineretul Nou Hanoar Hazioni Vol II Issue 3 October 1944 p 3 Hildrun Glass Cateva note despre activitatea iui Avram L Zissu in Liviu Rotman Camelia Crăciun Ana Gabriela Vasiliu eds Noi perspective in istoriografia evreilor din Romania Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania amp Editura Hasefer Bucharest 2010 pp 164 165 Păiușan 2012 p 387 Păiușan 2010 pp 292 300 Crăciun p 308 Moisa pp 108 109 112 Artur Lakatos Partidul Comunist Roman din Cluj in 1945 in Studia Universitatis Babeș Bolyai Historia Nr 1 2 2010 p 44 Miron pp 194 227 Păiușan 2012 pp 383 384 387 388 2013 II pp 955 956 963 964 Uilăcan pp 274 283 Miron p 194 Crăciun p 304 Moisa pp 110 112 Rotar p 351 Păiușan 2013 I p 512 Uilăcan p 303 Enache pp 64 73 Păiușan 2013 II pp 956 958 in Romanian Radu Petrescu Haiducii Muscelului mișcarea de rezistență a colonelului Gheorghe Arsenescu in Historia February 2012References 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Petri eds Din lupta antifascistă pentru independența și suveranitatea Romaniei Culegere de studii Editura Militară Bucharest 1969 pp 164 194 Corneliu Crăciun Uniunea Patrioților in Bihor in Revista Crisia Nr XXXIX 2009 pp 299 310 George Enache Strategii de infiltrare și atragere la colaborare a cultelor religioase elaborate de autoritățile procomuniste din Romania in perioada 1945 1947 cu o privire specială asupra cazului Bisericii Ortodoxe Romane in Caietele CNSAS Nr 1 2008 pp 53 92 Florin Georgescu Caracterul politic al legilor adoptate intre 1 decembrie 1946 și 24 februarie 1948 și instaurarea regimului de democrație populară in Acta Moldaviae Meridionalis Anuarul Muzeului Județean Ștefan cel Mare Vaslui Vol XXI 1999 2000 pp 308 324 Niculae Gheran Arta de a fi păgubaș 1 Targul Moșilor Editura Biblioteca Bucureștilor Bucharest 2008 ISBN 978 973 8369 28 3 Cosmina Gușu Emergența memoriei colective a Holocaustului in Romania 1944 1947 in Liviu Rotman Camelia Crăciun Ana Gabriela Vasiliu eds Noi perspective in istoriografia evreilor din Romania Editura Hasefer Bucharest 2010 ISBN 973 630 223 7 Oana Ionel Lotul 24 februarie 1945 Propagandă și inscenare judiciară in Caietele CNSAS Nr 1 2010 pp 149 182 Daniela Kalkandjieva The Russian Orthodox Church 1917 1948 From Decline to Resurrection Routledge London amp New York 2014 ISBN 978 1 138 78848 0 Ioan Lăcustă In București acum 50 ani in Magazin Istoric November 1995 pp 60 63 Gheorghe Miron Aspecte privind activitatea Comitetului Județean Putna al P C R in anul 1945 Aspecte privind viața politică putneană in anul 1946 in Horia Dumitrescu ed Cronica Vrancei XVI Editura Pallas Focșani pp 191 235 ISBN 978 973 7815 53 8 Gabriel Moisa Election Practices in a Changing World The Case of the Patriotic Union from Bihor County 1945 1947 in Analele Universității din Craiova Seria Istorie Nr 1 2014 pp 107 114 Mihaly Zoltan Nagy Gabor Vincze Transilvania de Nord intre cele două ocupații romanești septembrie 1944 martie 1945 in Autonomiști și centraliști Enigmele unor decizii istorice Transilvania de Nord din septembrie 1944 pană in martie 1945 Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center Cluj Napoca 2008 pp 11 98 ISBN 978 973 86239 8 9 George Neagoe Mizantropul optimist in Caiete Critice Nr 4 2010 pp 6 10 Radu Păiușan Activitatea Uniunii Patrioților in Banat in anul 1944 in Analele Banatului Arheologie Istorie Vol XVIII 2010 pp 291 301 Din istoricul Partidului Național Popular in Banat in a doua jumătate a anului 1946 in Analele Banatului Arheologie Istorie Vol XX 2012 pp 383 391 Noi date despre istoricul activității Partidului Național Popular in Banat in anul 1946 in Analele Banatului Arheologie Istorie Vol XXI 2013 pp 505 512 Activitatea Partidului Național Popular in Banat la inceputul anului 1947 in Andrei Stavilă Dorel Micle Adrian Cintar Cristian Floca Sorin Forție eds Arheovest I Interdisciplinaritate in Arheologie și Istorie JATEPress Kiado Szeged 2013 pp 955 967 ISBN 978 963 315 153 2 Adrian Nicolae Petcu Preoții basarabeni și bucovineni in atenția Securității in Caietele CNSAS Nr 1 2009 pp 144 178 G M Razi La constitution de la Republique Populaire de Roumanie in Revue Internationale de Droit Compare Nr 3 1951 pp 262 298 Marius Rotar Comuniști albaiulieni pană la 23 august 1944 Cazul unui oraș din provincie in Terra Sebus Acta Musei Sabesiensis Vol 10 2018 pp 333 374 Carol Terteci Alegerile anului 1946 in documente de arhivă valcene in Buridava Nr VI 2008 pp 173 176 Pavel Țugui G Călinescu un text cenzurat Denunțurile in Caiete Critice Nr 1 2 3 2009 pp 46 59 Petre Țurlea Legionarii mană de lucru calificată pentru P C R in Magazin Istoric January 2008 pp 45 46 Iosif Uilăcan Județul Năsăud in anul 1946 in Revista Bistriței Vol XXVII 2013 pp 267 340 Camelia Zavarache Geometria unei relații complexe elite modele ale modernizării statale și regimuri politice in Romania secolului XX in Cristian Vasile ed Ne trebuie oameni Elite intelectuale și transformări istorice in Romania modernă și contemporană Nicolae Iorga Institute of History amp Editura Cetatea de Scaun Targoviște 2017 pp 181 283 ISBN 978 606 537 385 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Popular Party Romania amp oldid 1128001241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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