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  • The February 16, 1933, railway workers’ strikes in Bucharest

    The February 16, 1933, railway workers’ strikes in Bucharest

    A deep economic crisis hit the whole world between
    1929-1933. Also known as the Great economic Crash, the crisis, among other
    things, translated into violence, an increasingly poor living standard, strikes
    and protest rallies. Romania was also marred by this crisis, having its dismal share
    of the aftermath and the ensuing social unrest. Strikes and protest rallies
    flared up countrywide, especially in the industrial regions. Illustrative of such
    a situation was the 1929 miners’ strike in Lupeni. Back then workers were
    protesting against the so-called sacrifice curbs, meaning salary cuts and price
    hikes. During the aforementioned four-year span, another strong protest
    movement was the strike staged over January-February 1933 by the railway
    workers employed by Bucharest’s Grivita Repair workshops. However, the strike
    was equally politicized by the communist regime that held Romania under its
    grip between 1945 and 1989.


    If we take some time to examine documents of that
    time, we can detect two stages in the unfolding of events. The first stage was
    the legitimate strike staged by the railway workers’ unions, who negotiated
    some of the claims employers even complied with. Over January 31st
    and February 2nd, 1922, the Grivita trade unions obtained an increase
    in wages as well as other benefits, for their members. The second stage unfolded
    after the communist and Comintern-controlled unions were a lot more focused on their political claims. We
    recall the Comintern used any form of social unrest to cause instability.


    Negotiations were brought to a standstill
    for a couple of days, while immediately afterwards, on the morning of February
    16, 1933, the government took forceful action against the 4,000 workers who had
    barricaded themselves on the premises of the repair workshops. The gendarmes’
    intervention claimed the lives of seven workers, while 15 others were wounded. 160 workers were arrested.


    The communist regime that was instated in Romania after
    1945 had been constantly using that strike as a propaganda tool and for the particular
    reason whereby communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej had been employed by
    Grivita, where he was one of the instigators and where he was imprisoned. Notwithstanding,
    after 1989, archive research and the interviewing of the very few surviving
    witnesses have revealed a different kind of reality. In 1998, Radio Romania’s Oral
    History Centre interviewed engineer Constantin
    Negrea, who in 1927 was a young employee with the Romanian Railway Repair Workshops.
    Negrea reminisced the 1931 protest rallies he joined himself with the 800
    workers, and which claimed the lives of two people.

    Constantin Negrea:


    In 1931, certain
    problems occurred. We had been threatened with the sacrifice curb. And we, on
    January 29, 1931, we staged a protest rally against the implementation of the
    sacrifice curb. We were deprived of our dues, bit by bit. And then, we took to the
    streets after 4 pm, heading towards the Grant Bridge, to the Repair workshops,
    we wanted to get there. We also had a couple of sergeants in tow, they were
    accompanying us. We were shouting we did not want the sacrifice curb. When
    we hit the Grant Bridge, we got shot at! One man, Craciun, died, he was a carpenter,
    and a Jew, Schwartz, who came from
    Oradea to get married. So there were two people dead!


    Two years later, the 1933 strikes began with staging
    protest rallies, just like their predecessors, yet they changed the tactics, so
    their voice could be better heard.


    Instead of moving about and shouting in the street we
    didn’t want the sacrifice curb, we replaced that with the activation of the siren
    every thirty minutes, many times. We replaced taking to the streets in protest
    rallies. We began to organize ourselves in union groups and everyone knew on
    the day of 15 we were supposed to rally, all of us, even though the frost was
    so harsh. We intended to get out in the repair workshops’ courtyard where there
    was some kind of a little park set up on the premises. Constructions works for
    the park were not completed, so a couple of sand loads had been unloaded, and
    there was a sand bank there. Well, several cauldrons were brought there, 5,
    maybe 6, where we warmed ourselves lighting a fire. After that, a plank
    barricade was erected at the back entrance of the Locomotives Division, it was
    an entrance there and there also was a roof.


    Despite strikers’ radicalism, among
    them there were people who were talking sense and the fears they voiced turned out
    to be real, in the long run.


    Evening set in and,
    logically, the people there, there was a one Mogos who worked at the plant and there
    was another one, they stepped aside, they kind of dodged, and said: We get
    fired and we won’t be able to earn our keep anymore! They were older, more sensible,
    more well-advised, quite unlike us, who were younger. The last time we rallied
    was around 5 pm, at five past I’d already made for the siren, and in ten
    minutes I walked back to the gates. At 5.45am sharp, live rounds were fired. They
    shot on sight and six people died, that’s how many were shot dead.


    The dead and the communist
    organizers, who were sentenced to prison, saw their worst when the strike of
    February 1933 ended. The events in Grivita that happened 90 years ago were the events
    of a generation that firmly opposed the deterioration of their lives. Sadly,
    the February 1933 strikes were partially hijacked by the radical communists, the advocates of
    a criminal regime.(EN)


    .