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Silviu Brucan

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Silviu Brucan (born Saul Bruckner; 18 January 1916 – 14 September 2006) was a Romanian Communist politician. Though he disagreed with Nicolae Ceauşescu's policies, he never gave up his Communist beliefs and did not oppose Communist ideology. After the Romanian Revolution, Brucan became a political analyst and author of books on Communism and Eastern Europe.

Early life

He was born in Bucharest to wealthy Jewish parents living in Berzei Street, near Matache Măcelaru Market.[1] His father was a wholesale wool merchant who imported fabrics from England in the aftermath of World War I, suits of fine English fabrics being a luxury item that was popular among the Romanian bourgeoisie that was rising by the economic boom.[1] He attended the German-language Evangelische Schule of Luterană Street and the Saint Sava National College.[2]

In 1929 came the Wall Street Crash, leading to the Great Depression and a slump in the luxury industry, including English clothes and Brucan's father's shop in Şepcari Street went bankrupt and the Brucan family was left penniless.[3][4] They moved into a modest apartment on Vlad Ţepeș Street. Brucan's father found a job as a fabric expert working for a German merchant, but as that was not enough to feed a family of six, Silviu Brucan began giving private lessons to pupils of wealthy families, thus gaining access to the world of the rich landowners and industrialists.[5] In his memories, Brucan said that the sharp contrast between the world of luxury of the privileged classes and the misery of those who worked hard all day to earn a living and the feeling of social injustice strongly influenced him.[5]

As a social outcast (his father had been indicted for fraudulent bankruptcy) and as a Jew in the 1930s, he was prevented by the Iron Guard supporters from formally studying at the University of Bucharest.[6] Nevertheless, with the help of some friends, he attended some courses at the university, such as the lectures of historian Nicolae Iorga, the philosopher Constantin Rădulescu-Motru, the aesthetician Tudor Vianu and the philosopher Nae Ionescu.[7]

Early activism

Brucan joined the left-wing movement at the age of 18. He was attracted by the opinions found leftist and antifascist weekly newspapers such as Stînga (The Left), Era Nouă (New Era) and Cuvîntul Liber (Free Word).[6] Brucan joined communist groups, which organized "cultural evenings" at the houses of some supporter. There, he met literate communist supporters such as Alexandru Sahia. He began reading Marxist literature and soon was co-opted into party operations, being asked t hide some illegal party documents (speeches at a Comintern meeting in Prague) at his home.[8]

In 1935, the moderate left-wing Dimineaţa newspaper competed against Universul, a nationalist right-wing newspaper. To eliminate his rival, the owner of Universul, Stelian Popescu, began an anti-Semitic campaign (the owners of Dimineaţa were Jews) leading to fascists burning copies of the newspaper and associated posters. The communist and socialist youth organized vigilante groups to defend the newsstands. Brucan was part of one of the left-wing groups defending the newsstands of Gara de Nord and was involved in a fight with Iron Guar supporters, sustaining a severe head injury.[7]

He subsequently worked as a journalist, first writing a fashionable social column at Gazeta de seară, then working as a proofreader at Adevărul Literar[8] Brucan met Aurel Alicu, a leader of the National Peasant Youth, with whom he started in 1937 a weekly called Dacia Nouă, having writers from both the traditional parties (National Liberal and National Peasants Party) and from left-wing circles (Miron Constantinescu, Corneliu Mănescu, Roman Moldovan and Victor Iliu). The newspaper was published for a year until the Octavian Goga government shut it down.[9]

In late 1938, he was conscripted, serving at a border guard unit at the frontier with Bulgaria, where he was acquainted with both komitadji extremists who attacked Romanian outposts, the Aromanian colonists in Southern Dobruja and the Middle Eastern smugglers who illegally crossed the border with hashish or opium.[10][11]

During World War II, Brucan lived in the attic of a house in a quiet area in Cotroceni, working as an illegal press worker for the Communist Party's newspaper Scînteia.[12] In 1943, he was arrested by a police agent who accidentally noticed him on Buzești Street, recalling his face from a photograph of a fellow Communist who had been previously arrested. However, as the police could not find any incriminating evidence, he was released a few days later.[13]

After the 23 August 1944 coup

In September 1944, upon Romania's exit from the Axis camp and the onset of Soviet occupation, he was named the general secretary of Scînteia (the deputy editor in chief to Leonte Răutu), the official newspaper of the Communist Party.[2][14][15]

As long as the other newspapers still were published, Scînteia competed with them for the readers and Brucan, with the rest of the editors, tried to make a professional newspaper.[16] However, as party newspapers and independent newspapers were forcefully closed, one by one, by the new communist authorities, the Scînteia journalists became office clerks working 9 to 5 and writing ideological editorials for the indoctrination of the workers, who were "full of hope for a glorious future".[17]

As editor of Scînteia, he supported the prison sentences of Iuliu Maniu, Gheorghe I. Brătianu and Corneliu Coposu (see Tămădău Affair).[18] He also supported the repression of anticommunist journalists, such as Radu Gyr and Pamfil Şeicaru, asking for the death penalty for the latter.[18]

During this period, Brucan's wife, the Stalinist Alexandra Sidorovici (with whom he had three children: daughter Anca, and sons Dinu and Vlad), became a public prosecutor of the Romanian People's Tribunals, which allowed her to ask for death sentences for many enemies of the Communist regime; the sister of Teofil Sidorovici,[19] she was a member of the nomenklatura of the Communist government.[18][20]

For a short while (1948–1949), Brucan was Professor of Journalism at the University of Bucharest although he never graduated from college.[2]

A close collaborator of Communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej,[2][19] Brucan, along with Sorin Toma and Mihail Roller, was among the prominent party ideologues of the group that was co-ordinated by Leonte Răutu after the late 1940s and into the 1950s.[19][21]

Ambassador to the United States

A loyal Soviet agent, Brucan was ambassador of Romania to the United States in 1955. He used the experience as the basis of a book that he co-authored with Sidorovici (a virulent attack on American institutions),[19] He was ambassador to the United Nations between 1959 and 1962 as well as the head of Televiziunea Română.[14][22]

Conflict with Ceauşescu

Progressively from the 1960s, Brucan became an opponent of the new leadership around Ceauşescu. Initially, upon news that Ceauşescu had been appointed general secretary, he considered renouncing his political career to focus on an office at the university, but he was persuaded by Emil Bodnăraş to remain an activist.[14] He was a professor of Scientific Socialism at the Bucharest Faculty of Medicine.[18][23] According to Brucan himself, he faced a period of financial insecurity and began work as a translator to cover his expenses.[14] He also sent several works, subject to censorship at home, to be published in the United States. They showed his move towards reformism that he advocated to be applied inside the Eastern bloc.[24]

In 1987, after sending an anti-Ceauşescu declaration to the foreign press (to the BBC, the International Herald Tribune, and United Press International), a relatively -mild criticism for the violent repression of the Braşov Rebellion,[2][19][20][25] he was sentenced to house arrest. At the time, Brucan had won the approval of Soviet authorities, which had already engaged in Perestroika policies and had been extended informal protection by the Soviet embassy in Bucharest, allowing him a relevant degree of freedom.[26]

With the help from Iulian Vlad, the chief of the Securitate, he was issued a passport, and in 1988, despite being expelled from the party,[2] he spent six months in the United States, where he was in contact with the United States Department of State,[14] headed by George P. Shultz. Brucan also claimed to have been invited to Moscow by Soviet politicians Mikhail Gorbachev and Anatoly Dobrynin,[2][14] who endorsed criticism of Ceauşescu and a Romanian version of Glasnost.[19] Based on the personal testimonies of Gorbachev's adviser, scholar Vladimir Tismăneanu has disputed all of Brucan's account.[19]

The fact that Ceaușescu allowed Brucan freedom of movement shows that Ceaușescu was not subjecting him to the same restrictions as to common dissidents, especially because of the interest about the safety of Brucan by both the Soviet Union (by making sure that the Pravda correspondent in Bucharest would keep close contact with him) and the governments of Britain and the United States by inviting him as a special guest in their countries.[27]

Letter of the Six

In March 1989, together with five other Communist dignitaries (Gheorghe Apostol, Alexandru Bârlădeanu, Grigore Răceanu, Corneliu Mănescu and Constantin Pîrvulescu), he signed the open letter known as Scrisoarea celor şase("The Letter of the Six").[2][14][19][28][29]

The document, which was immediately broadcast on Radio Free Europe and Voice of America, was a left-wing critique of Ceauşescu's policies,[19][30] and it led to the swift arrest and interrogation of the signatories by the Securitate and then to their internal exile and house arrest at various locations.[2] The Securitate depicted Brucan as one of several "hostile, inveterate, elements" and "the agent of foreign imperialist secret services".[28] Although lacking in actual popular support,[31] the letter was argued to be the among most important and influential acts of opposition and a notorious break with the traditions of strict obedience and party discipline.[31]

Brucan was sent to a location on the outskirts of Bucharest, in Dămăroaia,[2][27] the reason for his subsequent colloquial moniker, "The Oracle of Dămăroaia".[18] Despite increased pressure, most of the contributors to the protest refused to withdraw their statement.[31] Brucan later accused Apostol of having given in to pressures.[32]

During and after the Revolution

Brucan was part of the National Salvation Front (FSN) during the Romanian Revolution, joining its Provisional Council and its Executive Committee. As a member of the Council, he was also involved in selecting Roman for the office of Premier.[19][33]

He was a member of the Council (together with Ion Iliescu, Petre Roman and some generals, including Nicolae Militaru) who decided to put the Ceaușescu couple on trial at the site in which they were being held in Târgoviște. That was due to the fear that Securitate snipers might attack the barracks and free them.[34] According to the testimony of Petre Roman, Brucan was among those who insisted for Nicolae and Elena Ceauşescu to be executed immediately after the trial,[14][34] a claim that was denied by Brucan.[34]

When it was decided that the 10-point programme be read on national television on 22 December, according to Dumitru Mazilu, Brucan wanted it to include a clause that Romania would honour its obligations under the Soviet-controlled Warsaw Pact.[33]

In early January, Brucan made an assurance that the FSN had no intention of turning into a political party but would support some candidates.[35] However, only three weeks later, he supported the transformation of the FSN into a political party,[19] arguing that otherwise, there would be a "political vacuum" that the new political parties would be unable to fill.[36]

After public allegations, Brucan resigned from the FSN in February 1990, claiming that he had accomplished his mission to restore stability in Romania and to put the country on a course toward multi-party elections.[33] His prediction that the FSN would win the elections by more than 90%, supported the already-wide suspicions of falsified ballots.

Early that year, he bad been the host of investor George Soros at the Group for Social Dialogue, a Romanian NGO that had been formed around the intellectual élite of the previous regime.[37]

He did not wish to run in the 1990 elections[36] but to be "just the adviser" of now-President Iliescu.[38] Nevertheless, he later issued a vocal criticism of President Iliescu.[2][14][24]

In 1990, Brucan contended that Romanians would need 20 years to become accustomed to democracy. That claim became well known in Romania.[2]

On the eve of the day of the first free post-communist elections (20 May 1990), Brucan argued that the 1989 Revolution was not anticommunist but only against Ceauşescu, not the communism of the 1950s and 1960s. He said that Iliescu made a "monumental" mistake in "conceding to the crowd" and banning the Romanian Communist Party.[38]

As a supporter of Soviet revival and expansion, he was an important contributor in defining Eurasianism as a geopolitical concept.[39]

Later life

From the late 1990s, Brucan hosted a news commentary program on the ProTV network (Profeţii despre trecut - "Foretellings on the Past"), initially together with Lucian Mândruţă. During his final years, he was also a columnist for Ziarul Financiar.

In 1998, he was brought to court by Vasile Lupu, a leader of the Christian-Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNŢCD) and a deputy for Iaşi County.[18] Speaking on his show, Brucan had called Lupu "astute to the square" and "trained Securitate informant" and indicated that "any good-faithed National Peasantist who still views himself as a party colleague with Vasile Lupu is self-excluding himself from the PNŢCD".[18] In 2002, courts decided in Lupu's favour, and Brucan was found guilty of calumny. Brucan was required to pay Lupu the sum of 30 million lei as compensation.[18]

At the age of 90, Brucan underwent a seven-hour stomach operation on 4 September 2006.[2] Despite an initial good recovery from surgery, his condition suddenly worsened on 13 September, and he died the following day of cardiac arrest.[2]

Legacy

Writing in 2006, Vladimir Tismăneanu criticized Brucan, arguing that, despite his renunciation of Communism, Brucan had continued to support authoritarianism in public life and to display a taste for intrigue, and that he had attempted to transform the FSN into a "big party", virtually replacing the PCR.[19][40] Tismăneanu pointed out Brucan's post-1990 opposition to Mircea Răceanu, who had been imprisoned on dubious espionage charges under Ceauşescu, and who was later rehabilitated by Romanian courts.[19] He has also contended that memoirs authored by Brucan showed little remorse, if not at all, for his early involvement in support of political repression.[41]

According to Victor Neumann, Brucan's role in the Bucharest episode of the 1989 Revolution had apparently helped indirectly the original and virtually unrelated revolt in Timişoara, especially by preventing a more violent repression against it, but it was never explained.[42] He also argued that Brucan's group of former inner-Party dissidents was, in the eyes of the uninformed public at large, the only "credible alternative" at the time,[43] and cited Brucan's own statement: "The train had arrived in the station and we were the only ones who could get on it. What were we to say, that we will not get on? We did it".[44] Overall, Neumann contended, Silviu Brucan's political and diplomatic expertise, as well as his adaptability, had made this old Stalinist the "ideologist of political transformations in 1989 Romania",[45] and had contributed to the supremacy of left-wing discourse in the years following the Revolution[46] (in regard to the latter point, he cited Brucan arguments, which challenged the existence of the right-wing themes in the ideological makeup of the 1989 movement).[47]

Works

English

  • The dissolution of power; a sociology of international relations and politics, Knopf (1971) ISBN 0-394-46741-8
  • The Dialectic of World Politics (1978) ISBN 0-02-904680-7
  • The post-Brezhnev era: an insider's view, Praeger (1983) ISBN 0-03-069409-4
  • World Socialism at the Crossroads: An Insider's View, Praeger (1987) ISBN 0-275-92782-2
  • Pluralism and social conflict: a social analysis of the communist world, Praeger (1990) ISBN 0-275-93475-6
  • The wasted generation : memoirs of the Romanian journey from capitalism to socialism and back, Westview Press (1993) ISBN 0-8133-1833-5
  • Social Change in Russia and Eastern Europe, Praeger/Greenwood (1998) ISBN 0-275-96322-5

Romanian

  • Originile politicii americane Bucharest, Editura Ştiinţifică, 1968 - (Origins of the American policy)
  • Democratizarea relaţiilor internaţionale: premise şi realităţi, Bucharest, Editura Politică, 1975 - (The democratization of international relations: premisses and realities)
  • Dialectica politicii internaţionale, Cluj-Napoca, Editura Dacia, 1985 - (The dialectic of world politics)
  • Pluralism şi conflict social. O analiză socială a lumii comuniste, Bucharest, Editura Enciclopedică, 1990 - (Pluralism and social conflict. A social analysis of the communist world)
  • Piaţă şi democraţie, Bucharest, Editura Ştiinţifică, 1990 - (Market and democracy)
  • Îndreptar-dicţionar de politologie, Bucharest, Nemira, 1993 - (Handbook-dictionary of politology)
  • Stâlpii noii puteri in România, Bucharest, Nemira, 1996 - (The bases of the new power structure in Romania)
  • Lumea după războiul rece. Locul României şi viitorul ei, Bucharest, Editura România Liberă, 1996 - (The World after the Cold War. Romania's place and her future)
  • O biografie între două revoluţii: De la capitalism la socialism şi retur, Bucharest, Nemira, 1998 - (A biography between two revolutions: from capitalism to socialism and back)
  • România în derivă, Bucharest, Nemira, 2000 - (Romania adrift)
  • Profeţii despre trecut şi despre viitor, Iaşi, Polirom, 2004 ISBN 973-681-692-3 - (Prophecies about the past and the future)
  • Secolul XXI. Viitorul Uniunii Europene. Războaiele in secolul XXI, Iaşi, Polirom, 2005 ISBN 973-46-0119-9 - (The 21st century. The future of the European Union. Wars in the 21st century)

Notes

  1. ^ a b Brucan, p.7
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Template:Ro icon "Politologul Silviu Brucan a decedat la vârsta de 90 de ani" ("The Political Scientist Silviu Brucan Has Died at the Age of 90") Archived 2008-02-14 at the Wayback Machine, in Gardianul, September 16, 2006
  3. ^ Brucan, p.8
  4. ^ AP, "Silviu Brucan, 90, Opponent of Ceausescu, Dies", New York Times, September 16, 2006
  5. ^ a b Brucan, p.9
  6. ^ a b Brucan, p.11
  7. ^ a b Brucan, p.12
  8. ^ a b Brucan, p.13
  9. ^ Brucan, p.14
  10. ^ Brucan, p.14-15
  11. ^ Koliopoulos, Giannēs. Plundered Loyalties: Axis Occupation and Civil Strife in Greek West Macedonia, 1941–1949, C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 1999, ISBN 185065381X. p. 69.
  12. ^ Brucan, p.31
  13. ^ Brucan, p.31-32
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Template:Ro icon Mirona Hriţcu, "Silviu Brucan e gata să-şi îngroape profeţia" ("Silviu Brucan Is About to Outlive His Prophecy"), in Cotidianul, February 5, 2005
  15. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.212, 304, 309
  16. ^ Brucan, p.35
  17. ^ Brucan, p.35-36
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h Template:Ro icon Ondine Gherguţ, "Brucan, condamnat în procesul cu Vasile Lupu" ("Brucan, Sentenced in His Trial with Vasile Lupu") Archived 2007-10-13 at the Wayback Machine in Evenimentul Zilei, February 15, 2002
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Template:Ro icon Vladimir Tismăneanu, "Dubioasa convertire a lui Silviu Brucan" ("Silviu Brucan's Dubious Conversion") Archived 2007-03-09 at the Wayback Machine, in 22, September–October 2006
  20. ^ a b Victor Frunză, Istoria stalinismului în România ("The History of Stalinism in Romania"), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990, p.227, 302, 471
  21. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.212, 304
  22. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.263, 309
  23. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.309-310
  24. ^ a b Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.310
  25. ^ Cioroianu, p.487
  26. ^ Cioroianu, p.487; Neumann, p.183
  27. ^ a b Deletant, p.278
  28. ^ a b Template:Ro icon D. Tănăsescu, "Dosare de cadre. Fişete desferecate" ("Personnel Files. Unfettered Lockers") Archived 2009-03-25 at the Wayback Machine, in Magazin Istoric, no. 40, 1998
  29. ^ Cioroianu, p.487; Neumann, p.180; Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.262-263, 310
  30. ^ Neumann, p.180; Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.262-263
  31. ^ a b c Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.263
  32. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.292
  33. ^ a b c "Upheaval in the East: Romania; A Veteran Leader Resigns in Bucharest", New York Times, February 5, 1990
  34. ^ a b c Deletant, p.371
  35. ^ Upheaval in the East: Bucharest; New ruling group in Rumania to vie in April elections, New York Times, January 2, 1990
  36. ^ a b "Romania's Front to fight elections", Guardian, January 24, 1990, Page 24
  37. ^ Silviu Brucan and George Soros (1990). "Silviu Brucan, gazda lui George Soros la GDS". napocanews.ro. Retrieved 2 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  38. ^ a b "Romania revolution 'not against communism'", Guardian, May 19, 1990, Page 24
  39. ^ Brucan, Silviu. "Geopolitics and Strategy" (PDF). sferapoliticii.ro. Sfera Politicii. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  40. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.52
  41. ^ Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, p.46, 52
  42. ^ Neumann, p.180
  43. ^ Neumann, p.184-185, 189
  44. ^ Brucan, in Neumann, p.185
  45. ^ Neumann, p.189
  46. ^ Neumann, p.183, 189
  47. ^ Neumann, p.183

References

  • Adrian Cioroianu, Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc ("On the Shoulders of Marx. An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism"), Editura Curtea Veche, Bucharest, 2005
  • Victor Neumann, "Schimbările politice din România anului 1989" ("Political Changes in 1989 Romania"), in Ideologie şi fantasmagorie. Perspective comparative asupra istoriei gîndirii politice în Europa Est-Centrală ("Ideology and Phantasmagoria. Comparative Perspectives on the History of Political Thought in East-Central Europe"), Polirom, Iaşi, 2001
  • Vladimir Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate, Polirom, Iaşi, 2005 ISBN 973-681-899-3 (translation of Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2003, ISBN 0-520-23747-1)
  • Silviu Brucan, The Wasted Generation: Memoirs of the Romanian Journey from Capitalism to Socialism and Back, Westview Press, 1993, Accessed through Questia
  • Dennis Deletant, Ceauşescu and the Securitate: Coercion and Dissent in Romania, 1965-1989, M.E. Sharpe, London, 1995, ISBN 1-56324-633-3.