Tag: Queen Marie of Romania

  • November 8, 2019 UPDATE

    November 8, 2019 UPDATE

    INFLATION – Romania in neither in the
    precipice, nor on the verge of it, Central Bank Governor Mugur Isarescu has
    said upon presenting the quarterly report on inflation. According to the
    Romanian official, the country’s main vulnerability is that most of the
    economic growth is based on consumption. Mugur Isarescu also said that
    Romania’s deficit of 6.1% for 2021, as estimated by the European Commission,
    cannot be taken into account, because it would endanger Romania’s position on
    the external markets, where it has incurred significant debt. Isarescu has said
    that the Central Bank has decreased to 3.8% the inflation forecast for the end
    of the year and estimates a 3.1% inflation rate for end-2020. The Central Bank
    estimated, in August 2019, a 4.2% inflation rate for the end of 2019 and of
    3.4% for December 2020.




    ELECTION – The campaign for the first
    round of the presidential election comes to an end on Saturday morning. Voters
    will hit the polls on Sunday in Romania, but Romanians living abroad will vote
    over the course of three days, starting Friday at noon and ending Sunday
    evening. Postal voting was for the first time introduced for the voting process
    abroad. These measures were taken to avoid the long waiting hours, which were
    reported at the last presidential election and the European Parliament
    election. A total of 14 candidates have enrolled in the race. The second ballot
    is scheduled for November 24.




    MEETING – Prime Minister Ludovic Orban
    on Friday met US Ambassador Hans Klemm. The parties agreed to deepen and
    develop the Strategic Partnership between the two countries in all its aspects,
    with a focus on military and security cooperation, reads a Government release.
    Ludovic Orban underlined Romania’s openness towards dialogue in order to ensure
    a stable and investor-friendly environment.




    MOTION – The Socialist Party in the
    Republic of Moldova, a ruling coalition party, on Friday filed a no-confidence
    motion against Maia Sandu’s Cabinet. The Socialists decided to withdraw their
    political support for the government, claiming the Government’s bill on the
    regulation of the Prosecutor’s Office is in breach of the Constitution and
    international standards. Igor Dodon’s Socialist Party has two representatives
    in the Government, the Deputy Prime Minister for Reintegration, Vasile Sova,
    and Defense Minister Pavel Voicu.




    HEARINGS – The hearings of the new
    commissioners designated by Romania, Hungary and France will held on November
    14, the European Parliament’s leaders decided on Friday. Once the candidates
    are greenlit by the JURI Committee on Legal Affairs, which will investigate any
    potential conflcits of interest, the three candidates, namely Adina Valean from
    Romania, Olivier Varhelyi from Hungary and Thierry Breton from France, will
    appear before Parliament’s special committees. Adina Valean will appear before
    the Transport and Tourism Committee, Olivier Varhelyi will appear before the
    Foreign Affairs Committee, while Thierry Breton will appear before the
    Industry, Research and Energy Committee. The European Commission’s President
    Elect Ursula von der Leyen will subsequently present her team and governing
    program in a joint Parliament session. We recall the nomination of Romanian MEP
    Adina Valean for the position of EU Commissioner for Transport was accepted by
    Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday.




    FILM – The film Queen Marie of Romania directed by Alexis Sweet
    Cahill is as of Friday screened in cinemas across Romania. Based on true
    events, the film follows a landmark of the year 1919, the Paris Peace
    Conference. The script relies on excerpts from the Queen’s diary, period press
    articles as well as testimonies of politicians at the time. The film was shot
    in genuine locations from Bucharest and Paris, recreating the mood of 1919.
    Relying on an international cast, the film features Romanian actress Roxana
    Lupu in the lead role. The granddaughter of Queen Victoria of England, Queen
    Marie (1875-1938) was wife to King Ferdinand I. She constantly sought to
    strengthen ties between Romania and the UK. Following the Paris Peace
    Conference, she undertook diplomatic efforts for the international recognition
    of enlarged Romania.




    TABLE TENNIS – The Romanian women’s
    table tennis team, the defending European champions, lost nil-3 to Japan in the
    quarterfinals of the World Cup venued in Tokyo. In September, Romania won gold
    at the European Table Tennis Championships in Nantes, France, after defeating
    Portugal in the final.


    (Translated by
    V. Palcu)

  • The Cult of National Heroes

    The Cult of National Heroes

    In 2014, Europe celebrated the centennial of the start of WWI, an event that deeply scarred the 20th century. It was a century that put into practice ideas from the 19th century, ideas that themselves formed in late 18th century, around the French Revolution. Socialism and nationalism, generous ideas that aimed to emancipate individuals and society, had moved away from their original aim and had gone radical. Through the world war of 1914-1918, humanity had spent bloodily the raging energies of radicalism, but much of that energy was not spent, and would erupt in the Second World War.



    Modern heroes are the product of wars that raged across Europe in the first half of the 20th century. Men and women of various social categories went to war with enthusiasm for their ideas. Romanians were no exception, and proof of that are the hundreds of thousands who died. In 1918, when the peace treaties were signed, the descendants of the 10 million dead left by the 4 years of conflict wanted to honor their sacrifice. This was the beginning of the cult of heroes in its grandiose, monumental form.



    Historian Daniel Gheorghe: “After WWI, the Versailles peace treaty established the cult of heroes as a measure of reconciliation and rapprochement between the nations that had fought in the war that left tens of millions dead, politically, socially and morally. Romania was one of the first European countries that had taken on the responsibility of paying homage both to its heroes and to those of other nations that had fallen on Romanian soil fighting against Romanians. Hero day was created by decree by King Ferdinand I on May 4, 1920, one month before the treaty of Trianon, which endorsed the Union of 1918, after 3 years of fighting on the frontline, and two years of diplomatic struggle. In Paris, Queen Marie played a crucial role in the recognition of the union.”



    All communities feel a need to celebrate their heroes. This cult in its modern state form was the result of the traumas inflicted by WWI. Here is Daniel Gheorghe:


    “The cult of heroes also worked during the reign of Carol I, when the heroes of the 1877-1878 War of Independence were honored, as well as the heroes of the Battle of Dealul Spirii of 13 September 1848. In WWI, Romania lost around 960,000 citizens, mostly as a result of disease, epidemics and hardship. At least 350,000 Romanians died weapon in hand, 30,000 in the Battle of Marasesti alone, in July-August 1917, when, on the hottest day, 6,000 Romanians died. The sacrifice was immense, and the cult of heroes was the way of paying homage to them.”



    In the years that followed the war, the cult of heroes manifested in various forms. The most important constructions, in addition to countless cemeteries, crypts, monuments and roadside crosses are the Mausoleum in Marasesti, the monument of the nameless hero in Bucharest, and the ensemble called Heroes’ Path built by sculptor Constantin Brancusi in Tg. Jiu.



    Here is Daniel Gheorghe: “The cult was under the patronage of the Royal House and the Orthodox Church. There was a Society of Heroes’ Tombs, presided over by Metropolitan Miron Cristea. Romania had hundreds of tombs of Romanian heroes, but also those of other nationals, German, Russian, English, American, French, Hungarians, Bulgarians, Poles who died in the first and second world wars. The Society of Fallen Heroes, under Queen Marie’s high patronage, took care of the tombs. Queen Marie had been the head of the Romanian Red Cross, and the member of the Royal House most sensitive to the suffering of Romanian heroes on fields of battle.”



    Heroes’ Day is today a day for all Romanian heroes who fell in battle against the enemies of democracy and freedom. December is a special month, full of symbolism, as it is the month when Romanians freed themselves from communism:



    “Heroes’ Day was set on the day of the Lord’s Ascension, a day dedicated to all those who have given their lives for country and freedom, the heroes fallen in the two world wards, the martyrs in communist prisons, the heroes in the anti-communist armed resistance, and the heroes of December 1989. The significance was that of the sacrifice that redeems, that liberates, the sacrifice that uplifts. Patriotism was the fundamental value. There was even a generation of the national ideal of 1918, politicians like the Bratianu brothers, Iuliu Maniu, Alexandru Vaida-Voevod, Nicolae Iorga, and others.”



    The cult of heroes is the last homage by which descendants value the sacrifice of people who left for the frontline not to die, but for ideas in interesting and exceptional times. But, as Chinese leader and reformer Deng Xiao Ping said, living in interesting times can be a curse.