Jump to content

Nicolae Ceaușescu: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
A CRIMINAL THAT KILLED THOUSANDS OF INNOCENT PEOPLE. KEEP THIS HERE
m Reverting possible vandalism by 216.58.125.73 to version by Widr. False positive? Report it. Thanks, ClueBot NG. (1365373) (Bot)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Redirect|Ceaușescu|other people|Ceaușescu (surname)}}
A CRIMINAL THAT KILLED THOUSANDS OF INNOCENT PEOPLE. KEEP THIS HERE
{{Infobox officeholder
| name = Nicolae Ceaușescu
| image = Nicolae Ceausescu.jpg
| nationality = [[Romanians|Romanian]]
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1918|01|26}}
| birth_place = [[Scorniceşti]], [[Olt County|Olt]], [[Romania]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1989|12|25|1918|01|26}}
| death_place = [[Târgovişte]], [[Dâmbovița County|Dâmbovița]], Romania
| spouse = [[Elena Ceaușescu]] (m. 1946–1989)
| children = {{plainlist}}
* [[Valentin Ceaușescu]]
* [[Zoia Ceaușescu]]
* [[Nicu Ceaușescu]]
{{endplainlist}}
| order = [[General Secretary]] of the [[Romanian Communist Party]]
| term_start = 22 March 1965
| term_end = 22 December 1989
| predecessor = [[Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej]]
| successor = ''party abolished''
| party = [[Romanian Communist Party]]
| order2 = 1st [[President of Romania|President of the State Council]]
| term_start2 = 9 December 1967
| term_end2 = 28 March 1974
| predecessor2 = [[Chivu Stoica]]
| successor2 = Himself as [[President of Romania]]
| order3 = '''1st''' [[President of Romania]] ([[Conducător]])
| term_start3 = 28 March 1974
| term_end3 = 22 December 1989
| predecessor3 = Himself as President of the State Council
| successor3 = [[Ion Iliescu]]
| religion = [[Atheism]] (formerly [[Romanian Orthodox Church|Romanian Orthodoxy]])
| signature = Nicolae Ceauşescu Signature.svg
| allegiance = {{flag|Romania}}
| branch = [[Romanian Army]]
| serviceyears = 1948–''unknown''
| rank = [[File:RO-Army-OF8.png|25px]] [[Lieutenant General]]
| religion = None ([[Atheism|Atheist]]) <small>(formerly [[Romanian Orthodox Church|Romanian Orthodoxy]])<small>
}}

'''Nicolae Ceaușescu''' ({{IPA-ro|nikoˈla.e t͡ʃe̯a.uˈʃesku}}; 26 January 1918<ref>http://ceausescunicolae.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/ascrisceausescudosaruldcadresemnat.jpg</ref>&nbsp;– 25 December 1989) was a [[Romania]]n [[Communism|Communist]] politician. He was [[General Secretary]] of the [[Romanian Communist Party]] from 1965 to 1989, and as such was the country's last Communist leader. He was also the country's head of state from 1967 to 1989.

His rule was marked in the first decade by an open policy towards Western Europe and the United States, which deviated from that of the other [[Warsaw Pact]] states during the [[Cold War]]. He continued a trend first established by his predecessor, [[Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej]], who had tactfully coaxed the Soviet Union into withdrawing its troops from Romania in 1958.<ref>Johanna Granville, [http://www.scribd.com/doc/17679545/DejAVu-Early-Roots-of-Romanias-Independence-by-Johanna-Granville "''Dej''-a-Vu: Early Roots of Romania's Independence,"] ''East European Quarterly'', vol. XLII, no. 4 (Winter 2008), pp. 365-404.</ref>

Ceaușescu's second decade was characterized by an increasingly brutal and repressive regime—by some accounts, the most [[Stalinism|Stalinist]] regime in the Soviet bloc. It was also marked by a ubiquitous [[cult of personality|personality cult]], nationalism and a deterioration in foreign relations with the Soviet Union. Ceaușescu's government was overthrown in the [[Romanian Revolution of 1989|December 1989 revolution]], and he and his wife were executed following a televised and hastily organised two-hour court session.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6967099.ece | location=London | work=[[The Times]] | first=Roger | last=Boyes | title=Ceausescu looked in my eyes and he knew that he was going to die | date=24 December 2009}}</ref>

==Early life and career==
[[Image:008.Portret Nicolae Ceausescu. (1936).jpg|thumb|left|upright|Captured in 1936 when he was 18 years old, and imprisoned for two years at [[Doftana Prison]] for anti-fascist activities.]]

Born in the village of [[Scorniceşti]], [[Olt County]], Ceaușescu moved to [[Bucharest]] at the age of 11 to work in factories. He was the son of a peasant (see [[Ceaușescu family]] for descriptions of his parents and siblings). He joined the then-illegal [[Communist Party of Romania]] in early 1932 and was first arrested, in 1933, for street fighting during a strike. He was arrested again, in 1934, first for collecting signatures on a petition protesting the trial of railway workers and twice more for other similar activities. These arrests earned him the description "dangerous communist agitator" and "active distributor of communist and anti-fascist propaganda" on his police record. He then went underground, but was captured and imprisoned in 1936 for two years at [[Doftana Prison]] for anti-fascist activities.<ref name="autogenerated3">[http://www.ceausescu.org/ceausescu_texts/ceausescu_chronology.htm Ceausescu.org]</ref>

While out of jail in 1940, he met [[Elena Ceaușescu|Elena Petrescu]], whom he married in 1946 and who would play an increasing role in his political life over the years. He was arrested and imprisoned again in 1940. In 1943, he was transferred to [[Târgu Jiu]] [[Internment|internment camp]] where he shared a cell with [[Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej]], becoming his protégé. After [[World War II]], when Romania was beginning to fall under [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] influence, he served as secretary of the [[Union of Communist Youth]] (1944&ndash;1945).<ref name="autogenerated3" />

After the Communists seized power in Romania in 1947, he headed the Ministry of Agriculture, then served as Deputy Minister of the Armed Forces under Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, becoming a Major General. In 1952, Gheorghiu-Dej brought him onto the [[Central Committee]] months after the party's "Muscovite faction" led by [[Ana Pauker]] had been purged. In 1954, he became a full member of the Politburo and eventually rose to occupy the second-highest position in the party hierarchy.<ref name="autogenerated3" />

==Leadership of Romania==

[[File:Ceausescu and Nixon 3.jpg|left|thumb|Meeting between US president [[Richard Nixon]] and vice president [[Gerald Ford]] and Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1973]]
[[File:1975 Ceausescu J. Chirac Neptun.jpg|thumb|right|Ceaușescu spending time with [[Jacques Chirac]] at the Romanian seaside in [[Neptun, Romania|Neptun]] (1975)]]
[[File:1975 Ceausescus Tokio Hirohito.jpg|thumb|220px|Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife with [[Emperor Hirohito]] during a visit in Tokyo in 1975]]
[[File:Ceausescu - Queen Elisabeth II - 1978.jpg|thumb|The presidential couple is received by [[Queen Elizabeth II]] at Buckingham Palace in June 1978]]
[[File:Nicolae Ceauşescu with Pol Pot.jpg|thumb|Ceaușescu with [[Pol Pot]], 1978]]
[[Image:Nicolae e Juan Carlos.jpg|thumb|Ceaușescu is greeted by King [[Juan Carlos I of Spain]] in Madrid, 1979]]

Ceaușescu was not the obvious successor to [[Gheorghiu-Dej]] when he died on 19 March 1965, despite his closeness to the longtime leader, but amid widespread infighting among older and more connected officials the Politburo turned to Ceaușescu as a compromise candidate.<ref name=Revolution1989/> He was elected general secretary on March 22, three days after Gheorghiu-Dej's death. One of his first acts was to change the name of the party from the Romanian Workers' Party back to the [[Communist Party of Romania]], and declare the country the [[Communist Romania|Socialist Republic of Romania]] rather than a [[People's Republic]]. In 1967, he consolidated his power by becoming president of the State Council (head of state).

Initially, Ceaușescu became a popular figure in Romania and also in the Western World, due to his independent foreign policy, challenging the authority of the [[Soviet Union]]. In the 1960s, he eased press censorship and ended Romania's active participation in the Warsaw Pact (though Romania formally remained a member). He not only refused to take part in the [[Prague Spring|1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia]] by Warsaw Pact forces, but actively and openly condemned that action. He even traveled to [[Prague]] a week before the invasion to offer moral support to his Czechoslovak counterpart, [[Alexander Dubček]]. Although the Soviet Union largely tolerated Ceaușescu's recalcitrance, his seeming independence from Moscow earned Romania maverick status within the [[Eastern Bloc]].<ref name=Revolution1989/>

During the following years Ceaușescu pursued an open policy towards the [[United States]] and [[Western Europe]]. Romania was the first Communist country to recognize [[West Germany]], the first to join the [[International Monetary Fund]], and the first to receive a US President, [[Richard Nixon]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,907041-1,00.html|title=Rumania: Enfant Terrible|work=Time |date=Monday, 2 April 1973 | accessdate=20 May 2010}}</ref> In 1971, Romania became a member of the [[General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade]] (GATT). Romania and [[Yugoslavia]] were also the only [[Eastern Europe]]an countries that entered into trade agreements with the [[European Economic Community]] before the fall of the Communist bloc.<ref>{{cite book|title=European Union enlargement: background, developments, facts|authors=Martin Sajdik, Michaël Schwarzinger|publisher=Transaction Publishers | location=New Jersey, USA | year=2008|page=10|ISBN=978-1-4128-0667-1}}</ref>

A series of official visits to Western countries (including the US, [[France]], [[United Kingdom]], [[Spain]]) helped Ceaușescu to present himself as a reforming Communist, pursuing an independent foreign policy within the Soviet Bloc. Also he became eager to be seen as an enlightened international statesman, able to mediate in international conflicts and to gain international respect for Romania.<ref>{{cite book|title=The EU and Romania: accession and beyond|author=David Phinnemore|publisher=Federal Trust for Education and Research |location=London, UK, |year=2006|ISBN=1-903403-79-0|page=13}}</ref> Ceaușescu negotiated in international affairs, such as the opening of US relations with China in 1969 and the visit of [[Egypt]]ian president [[Anwar Sadat]] to Israel in 1977. Also Romania was the only country in the world to maintain normal diplomatic relations with both [[Israel]] and the [[Palestine Liberation Organization|PLO]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Romania versus the United States: diplomacy of the absurd, 1985&ndash;1989|authors=Roger Kirk, Mircea Răceanu|publisher=Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University, 1994|ISBN=0-312-12059-1|page=81}}</ref>

===The 1966 decree===

In 1966, the Ceaușescu regime, in an attempt to boost the country's population, made [[abortion]] illegal, and introduced other policies to reverse the very low birth rate and fertility rate. Mothers of at least five children would be entitled to significant benefits, while mothers of at least ten children were declared ''heroine mothers'' by the [[Communist Romania|Romanian state]]. Few women ever sought this status; instead, the average Romanian family during the time had two to three children (see [[Demographics of Romania]]).<ref>[http://www.country-studies.com/romania/demographic-policy.html Communist Romania's Demographic Policy, U.S. Library of Congress country study] for details see Gail Kligman. 1998. ''The Politics of Duplicity. Controlling Reproduction in Ceausescu's Romania.'' Berkeley: University of California Press.</ref> Furthermore, a considerable number of women either died or were maimed during clandestine abortions.<ref>[http://www.sustainabilityinstitute.org/dhm_archive/index.php?display_article=vn318cohort_of67ed Ceausescu's Longest-Lasting Legacy - the Cohort of '67<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

The government also targeted rising [[divorce]] rates and made divorce much more difficult - it was decreed that a marriage could be dissolved only in exceptional cases. By the late 1960s, the population began to swell. In turn, a new problem was created by child abandonment, which swelled the orphanage population (see [[Cighid]]). Transfusions of untested blood led to Romania accounting for many of Europe's paediatric [[HIV/AIDS]] cases at the turn of the 21st century despite having a population that only makes up around 3% of Europe's total population.<ref>Karen Dente and Jamie Hess, [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1785216/ Pediatric AIDS in Romania – A Country Faces Its Epidemic and Serves as a Model of Success], MedGenMed. 2006; 8(2): 11. Published online 2006 April 6.</ref><ref>See, for instance, Bohlen, Celestine,
Measures to encourage reproduction included financial motivations for families who bear children, guaranteed maternity leave, and childcare support for mothers returning to work, work protection for women, and extensive access to medical control in all stages of pregnancy, as well as after. Medical control is seen as one of the most productive effects of the law, since all women who became pregnant were under the care of a qualified medical practitioner, even in rural areas. In some cases, if the women was unable to attend a medical office, the doctor would make visits to her home.
[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9C0CE5DA103AF93BA35751C0A966958260 "Upheaval in the East: Romania's AIDS Babies: A Legacy of Neglect,"] 8 February 1990, in ''The New York Times''.</ref>

===July Theses===
{{Main|July Theses}}

Ceaușescu visited the [[People's Republic of China]], [[North Korea]], [[Mongolia]] and [[North Vietnam]] in 1971. He took great interest in the idea of total national transformation as embodied in the programs of North Korea's [[Juche]] and China's [[Cultural Revolution]]. He was also inspired by the [[personality cults]] of North Korea's [[Kim Il-sung]] and China's [[Mao Zedong]]. Shortly after returning home, he began to emulate North Korea's system. North Korean books on Juche were translated into Romanian and widely distributed in the country.

On 6 July 1971, he delivered a speech before the Executive Committee of the PCR. This quasi-[[Maoism|Maoist]] speech, which came to be known as the [[July Theses]], contained seventeen proposals. Among these were: continuous growth in the "leading role" of the Party; improvement of Party education and of mass political action; youth participation on large construction projects as part of their "patriotic work"; an intensification of political-ideological education in schools and universities, as well as in children's, youth and student organizations; and an expansion of political propaganda, orienting radio and television shows to this end, as well as publishing houses, theatres and cinemas, opera, ballet, artists' unions, promoting a "militant, revolutionary" character in artistic productions. The liberalisation of 1965 was condemned and an index of banned books and authors was re-established.

The Theses heralded the beginning of a "mini cultural revolution" in Romania, launching a [[Neo-Stalinism|Neo-Stalinist]] offensive against cultural autonomy, reaffirming an ideological basis for literature that, in theory, the Party had hardly abandoned. Although presented in terms of "Socialist Humanism", the Theses in fact marked a return to the strict guidelines of [[Socialist Realism]], and attacks on non-compliant intellectuals. Strict ideological conformity in the humanities and social sciences was demanded. Competence and aesthetics were to be replaced by ideology; professionals were to be replaced by [[Agitprop|agitators]]; and culture was once again to become an instrument for political-ideological propaganda and hardline measures.

In 1974, Ceaușescu became President of the Socialist Republic of Romania, further consolidating his power. He continued to follow an independent policy in foreign relations—for example, in 1984, Romania was one of only three communist states (the others being the People's Republic of China, and [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]]) to take part in the American-organized [[1984 Summer Olympics]] in Los Angeles.

Also, the Socialist Republic of Romania was the first of the [[Eastern bloc]] nations to have official relations with the [[Western bloc]] and the [[European Community]]: an agreement including Romania in the Community's Generalised System of Preferences was signed in 1974 and an Agreement on Industrial Products was signed in 1980. On 4 April 1975, Ceaușescu visited [[Japan]] and met with [[Hirohito|Emperor Hirohito]].

===Pacepa defection===

In 1978, [[Ion Mihai Pacepa]], a senior member of the Romanian political police ([[Securitate]]), defected to the United States. A 2-star general, he was the highest ranking defector from the [[Eastern Bloc]] during the [[Cold War]]. His defection was a powerful blow against the regime, forcing Ceaușescu to overhaul the architecture of the Securitate. Pacepa's 1986 book, ''Red Horizons: Chronicles of a Communist Spy Chief'' (ISBN 0-89526-570-2), claims to expose details of Ceaușescu's regime, such as massive spying on American industry and elaborate efforts to rally Western political support.

===Foreign debt===
{{main|1980s austerity policy in Romania}}
Ceaușescu's political independence from the Soviet Union and his protest against the invasion of [[Czechoslovakia]] in 1968 drew the interest of Western powers, whose governments briefly believed that he was an anti-Soviet maverick and hoped to create a schism in the Warsaw Pact by funding him. Ceaușescu did not realise that the funding was not always favorable. Ceaușescu was able to borrow heavily (more than $13&nbsp;billion) from the West to finance economic development programs, but these loans ultimately devastated the country's finances. In an attempt to correct this, Ceaușescu decided to repay Romania's [[foreign debt]]s. He organised a referendum and managed to change the constitution, adding a clause that barred Romania from taking foreign loans in the future. The referendum yielded a nearly unanimous "yes" vote.

In the 1980s, Ceaușescu ordered the export of much of the country's agricultural and industrial production in order to repay its debts. The resulting domestic shortages made the everyday life of Romanians a fight for survival as food rationing was introduced and heating, gas and electricity blackouts became the rule. During the 1980s, there was a steady decrease in the Romanian population's standard of living, especially in the availability and quality of food and general goods in stores. During this time, Ceaușescu shut down all radio stations outside of the capital, and limited television to one channel broadcasting only two hours a day. The official explanation was that the country was paying its debts and people accepted the suffering, believing it to be for a short time only and for the ultimate good.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}}

The debt was fully paid in the summer of 1989, shortly before Ceaușescu was overthrown, but heavy exports continued until the revolution in December.<ref>http://www.irisheconomy.ie/index.php/2011/01/27/debt-repayment-and-ceausescu/</ref><ref>http://www.dittatori.it/ceausescu-eng.htm</ref>

===Tensions===
[[Image:TimbruNicolaeCeausescu.png|thumb|Stamp commemorating the 70th birthday (and 55 years of political activity) of Nicolae Ceaușescu, 1988]]

By early 1989, Ceaușescu was showing signs of complete denial of reality. While the country was going through extremely difficult times with long bread queues in front of empty food shops, he was often shown on state television entering stores filled with food supplies, visiting large food and arts festivals, while praising the "high living standard" achieved under his rule.

Special contingents of food deliveries would fill stores before his visits, and well-fed cows would even be transported across the country in anticipation of his visits to farms. In at least one emergency, he inspected (and approved) a display of Hungarian produce, which apart from some corn and several melons, was largely constructed of painted plastic and/or polystyrene. Meanwhile, staples such as flour, eggs, butter and milk were difficult to find and most people started to depend on small gardens grown either in small city alleys or out in the country. In late 1989, daily TV broadcasts showed lists of CAPs ([[kolkhoz]]es, collective farms) with alleged record harvests, in blatant contradiction of the shortages experienced by the average Romanian at the time.

Some Romanians, believing that Ceaușescu was not aware of what was going on in the country outside of Bucharest, attempted to hand him petitions and complaint letters during his many visits around the country. Each time he got a letter, he would immediately pass it on to members of his security. It is not known whether Ceaușescu read any of these letters. It is alleged that severe penalties would result from any anti-state actions, including such letters. People lived in fear of the regime and of each other. Secrecy had become a way of life, due to people being reluctantly recruited as spies for the political system. Sometimes those reluctant spies came from the same family, eventually forced to inform on their own.

==Revolution==
{{Main|Romanian Revolution of 1989}}
In November 1989, the XIVth Congress of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR) saw Ceaușescu, then aged 71, re-elected for another five years as leader of the PCR. During the Congress, Ceaușescu made a speech denouncing the anti-Communist revolutions happening throughout the rest of Eastern Europe. But the following month, Ceaușescu's regime itself collapsed after a series of violent events in [[Timişoara]] and [[Bucharest]] in December 1989.

===Timişoara===
Demonstrations in the city of Timişoara were triggered by the government-sponsored attempt to evict [[László Tőkés]], an ethnic Hungarian pastor, accused by the government of inciting [[ethnic hatred]]. Members of his ethnic Hungarian [[Wiktionary:congregation|congregation]] surrounded his apartment in a show of support.

Romanian students spontaneously joined the demonstration, which soon lost nearly all connection to its initial cause and became a more general anti-government demonstration. Regular military forces, police and Securitate fired on demonstrators on 17 December 1989. There was more, than one thousand killing and many wounding men, women and children.

On 18 December 1989, Ceaușescu departed for a state visit to Iran, leaving the duty of crushing the Timişoara revolt to his subordinates and his wife. Upon his return to Romania on the evening of 20 December, the situation became even more tense, and he gave a televised speech from the TV studio inside Central Committee Building (CC Building), in which he spoke about the events at Timişoara in terms of an "interference of foreign forces in Romania's internal affairs" and an "external aggression on Romania's sovereignty".

The country, which had little or no information of the Timişoara events from the national media, learned about the Timişoara revolt from western radio stations such as [[Voice of America]] and [[Radio Free Europe]], and by word of mouth. On the next day, 21 December, a mass meeting was staged. Official media presented it as a "spontaneous movement of support for Ceaușescu", emulating the 1968 meeting in which Ceaușescu had spoken against the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw Pact forces.

===Overthrow===
[[Image:Romanian Revlution 1989 3.jpg|thumb|upright|Nicolae Ceaușescu flees Bucharest by helicopter on 22 December 1989]]
The mass meeting of 21 December, held in what is now [[Revolution Square, Bucharest|Revolution Square]], began like many of Ceaușescu's speeches over the years. With the usual "[[wooden language]]", Ceaușescu delivered a litany of the achievements of the "socialist revolution" and Romanian "multi-laterally developed socialist society".

He had seriously misjudged the crowd's mood, and several people began jeering, booing and whistling at him; as the speech wore on, more and more people did the same. Others began chanting "[[Timișoara|Ti-mi-șoa-ra]]! Ti-mi-șoa-ra!" Ceaușescu's uncomprehending facial expression as the crowd began to boo and heckle him remains one of the defining moments of the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe. He tried to silence them by raising his right hand, and when that did not work, he announced that they would receive a raise of 100 [[Romanian lei|lei]] per month.<ref name=Revolution1989>{{cite book|last=Sebetsyen|first=Victor|title=Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire|publisher=[[Pantheon Books]]|location=New York City|year=2009|isbn=0-375-42532-2}}</ref> Failing to control the crowds, the Ceaușescus finally took cover inside the building, where they remained until the next day. The rest of the day saw an open revolt of the Bucharest population, which had assembled in University Square and confronted the police and army at barricades. The unarmed rioters were no match for the military apparatus concentrated in Bucharest, which cleared the streets by midnight and arrested hundreds of people in the process.

Although the television broadcasts of the "support meeting" and subsequent events had been interrupted, Ceaușescu's reaction to the events had already been imprinted on the country's collective memory. By the morning of 22 December, the [[rebellion]] had already spread to all major cities across the country. The suspicious death of [[Vasile Milea]], the [[defense minister]] (later confirmed as a suicide), was announced by the media. Immediately thereafter, Ceaușescu presided over the CPEx (Political Executive Committee) meeting and assumed the leadership of the army.

Believing that Milea had been murdered, the rank-and-file soldiers went over virtually ''en masse'' to the revolution, while the commanders wrote off Ceaușescu as a lost cause. Ceaușescu made a last desperate attempt to address the crowd gathered in front of the Central Committee building, but the people in the square began throwing stones and other projectiles at him, forcing him to take refuge in the building once more. One group of protesters forced open the doors of the building, by now left unprotected. They managed to overpower Ceaușescu's bodyguards and rushed through his office and onto the balcony. Although they did not know it, they were only a few meters from Ceaușescu, who was trapped in an elevator. He, Elena and four others managed to get to the roof and escaped by [[helicopter]], only seconds ahead of a group of demonstrators who had followed them there.<ref name=Revolution1989/> The PCR disappeared soon afterward—a testament to how much it had become subordinated to Ceaușescu's whims. Unlike its kindred parties in the former Soviet bloc, it has never been revived, and no present-day Romanian party claims to be its successor.

During the course of the revolution, the western press published estimates of the number of people killed by the Securitate in attempting to support Ceaușescu and quell the rebellion. The count increased rapidly until an estimated 64,000 fatalities were widely reported across front pages. The Hungarian military attaché expressed doubt regarding these figures, pointing out the unfeasible logistics of killing such a large number of people in such a short period of time. After Ceaușescu's death, hospitals across the country reported a death toll of less than 1,000, and probably much lower than that.<ref>{{cite book|last=Aubin|first=Stephen P|title=Distorting defense: network news and national security|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|year=1998|pages=158|isbn=978-0-275-96303-3|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=5YH5rPgWvzUC&pg=PA158&dq=revolution+romania+1989+death+toll&lr=&as_drrb_is=q&as_minm_is=0&as_miny_is=&as_maxm_is=0&as_maxy_is=&as_brr=3|accessdate=28/June/2008}}</ref>

===Death===
[[File:Grave of Nicolae Ceausescu - Ghencea Civil Cemetery - Bucharest - Romania.jpg|thumb|Grave of Nicolae Ceaușescu, Ghencea Civil Cemetery ([[Bucharest]])]]
Ceaușescu and his wife Elena fled the capital with Emil Bobu and [[Manea Mănescu]] and headed, by helicopter, for Ceaușescu's [[Snagov]] residence, from where they fled again, this time for [[Târgovişte]]. Near Târgovişte they abandoned the helicopter, having been ordered to land by the army, which by that time had restricted flying in Romania's airspace. The Ceaușescus were held by the police while the policemen listened to the radio. They were eventually turned over to the army. On Christmas Day, 25 December, the two were tried in a brief show trial and sentenced to death by a military court on charges ranging from illegal gathering of wealth to [[genocide]], and were executed in Târgovişte. During the trial, Ceaușescu repeatedly denied the court's authority to try him, and asserted he was still legally president of Romania. The video of the trial shows that, after sentencing, they had their hands tied behind their backs and were led outside the building to be killed.

The Ceaușescus were killed by a firing squad consisting of elite [[paratroop]] regiment soldiers: Captain Ionel Boeru, Sergeant-Major Georghin Octavian and Dorin-Marian Cirlan,<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6967099.ece | work=The Times | location=London | title=Ceausescu looked in my eyes and he knew that he was going to die | first=Roger | last=Boyes | date=24 December 2009 | accessdate=20 May 2010}}</ref> while reportedly hundreds of others also volunteered. The firing squad began shooting as soon as the two were in position against a wall. The firing happened too soon for the film crew covering the events to record it.<ref>[[George Galloway]] and Bob Wylie, ''Downfall: The Ceausescus and the Romanian Revolution'' p. 198-199. Futura Publications, 1991</ref> Before his sentence was carried out, Nicolae Ceaușescu sang "[[The Internationale]]" while being led up against the wall. After the shooting, the bodies were covered with canvas. The hasty show trial and the images of the dead Ceaușescus were videotaped and the footage promptly released in numerous western countries. Later that day, it was also shown on Romanian television.<ref>[http://danielsimpson.blogspot.com/2001_12_01_danielsimpson_archive.html Daniel Simpson, "Ghosts of Christmas past still haunt Romanians"]</ref><ref>[http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.stern.de%2Fpolitik%2Fausland%2F%3ACeausescus-Scharfrichter-Der-Diktator-Henker%2F547930.html&hl=en&ie=UTF8&sl=de&tl=en The dictator and his henchman]</ref>

The Ceaușescus were the last people to be executed in Romania before the abolition of [[Capital punishment in Romania|capital punishment]] on 7 January 1990.<ref>[http://www.cdep.ro/pls/legis/legis_pck.htp_act_text?idt=11033 Cdep.ro]</ref>

Their graves are located in [[Ghencea Cemetery]] in Bucharest. They are buried on opposite sides of a path. The graves themselves are unassuming, but they tend to be covered in flowers and symbols of the regime. In April 2007, their son [[Valentin Ceaușescu]] lost an appeal for an investigation into whether the graves were genuine. Upon his death in 1996, the elder son, [[Nicu Ceaușescu|Nicu]], was buried nearby in the same cemetery. According to ''[[Jurnalul Național]]'',<ref name="ReferenceA">''[[Jurnalul Național]]'', 25 January 2005</ref> requests were made by the Ceaușescus' daughter [[Zoia Ceaușescu|Zoia]] and by supporters of their political views to move their remains to mausoleums or to purpose-built churches. These have been denied by the government. On 21 July 2010, forensic scientists [[exhumation|exhumed]] the bodies of the Ceaușescus to perform DNA tests.<ref>[http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100721/ap_on_re_eu/eu_romania_ceausescu_exhumed Yahoo! News]</ref><ref>[http://www.newsofap.com/newsofap-20590-26-romanian-dictator-nicolae-ceausescus-remains-found-newsofap.html Nicolae Ceaușescu's remains exhumed]</ref> It was determined that they were indeed the remains of the Ceaușescus.<ref>[http://www.rferl.org/content/Reports_DNA_Tests_Confirm_Ceausescus_Remains/2209569.html Referl.org]</ref>

==Personality cult and authoritarianism==
{{main|Nicolae Ceaușescu's cult of personality}}
Ceaușescu created a pervasive [[personality cult]], giving himself such titles as "[[Conducător]]" ("Leader") and "Geniul din Carpați" ("The Genius of the Carpathians"), with help from [[Proletarian Culture]] ([[Proletkult]]), and even had a [[Kings of Romania|king]]-like sceptre made for himself.

The most important day of the year during Ceaușescu's rule was his birthday, 26 January—a day which saw Romanian media saturated with praise for him. According to historian Victor Sebestyen, it was one of the few days of the year when the average Romanian put on a happy face, since appearing miserable on this day was too risky to contemplate.<ref name=Revolution1989/>

Such excesses prompted the painter [[Salvador Dalí]] to send a congratulatory telegram to the "Conducător", in which he sarcastically congratulated Ceaușescu on his "introducing the presidential sceptre". The Communist Party daily ''[[Scînteia]]'' published the message, unaware that it was a work of satire. To avoid new treason after Pacepa's defection, Ceaușescu also invested his wife [[Elena Ceaușescu|Elena]] and other members of his family with important positions in the government, leading Romanians to joke that Ceaușescu was creating "socialism in one family".

Not surprisingly, Ceaușescu was greatly concerned about his public image. Nearly all pictures of him showed him in his early 40s. Romanian state television was under strict orders to portray him in the best possible light. Additionally, producers had to take great care to make sure that Ceaușescu's height — he was 1.65m (5 foot 5 inches) tall — was never emphasized on screen. Consequences for breaking these rules were severe; one producer showed footage of Ceaușescu blinking and stuttering, and was banned for three months.<ref name=Revolution1989/>

===Statesmanship===
[[Image:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1987-0529-029, Berlin, Tagung Warschauer Pakt, Gruppenfoto.jpg|thumb|With [[Warsaw Pact]] leaders, 1987 (from left): [[Gustáv Husák|Husák]] of [[Czechoslovakia]], [[Todor Zhivkov|Zhivkov]] of [[Bulgaria]], [[Erich Honecker|Honecker]] of [[East Germany]], [[Mikhail Gorbachev|Gorbachev]] of the USSR, Ceaușescu, [[Wojciech Jaruzelski|Jaruzelski]] of [[Poland]], and [[János Kádár|Kádár]] of Hungary]]
Ceaușescu's Romania was the only Communist country that retained diplomatic relations with Israel and did not sever diplomatic relations after Israel's launch of the [[Six-Day War]] in 1967 against [[Egypt]], [[Jordan]], and [[Syria]]. Ceaușescu made efforts to act as a mediator between the [[PLO]] and [[Israel]]. Similarly, Romania was the only Soviet-bloc country to attend the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

He organised a successful referendum for reducing the size of the [[Romanian Army]] by 5% and held large rallies for peace.

Ceaușescu tried to play a role of influence and guidance in African countries.{{Citation needed|date=January 2012}} He was a close ally and personal friend of dictator [[President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo|President]] [[Mobutu Sese Seko]] of [[Zaïre]]. Relations were in fact not just state-to-state, but party-to-party between the [[Popular Movement of the Revolution|MPR]] and the [[Romanian Communist Party]]. Many believe that Ceaușescu's death played a role in influencing Mobutu to "democratise" Zaïre in 1990.<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+zr0173) Relations with the Communist World] [[Library of Congress Country Study]] on Zaire (Former), Library of Congress Call Number DT644 .Z3425 1994. ([http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/zrtoc.html#zr0173 TOC].) Data as of December 1993. Accessed online 15 October 2006.</ref>

France granted Ceaușescu the [[Legion of Honour]] and in 1978 he became an Honorary British Knight<ref>[[List of honorary British Knights]]</ref> ([[Order of the Bath|GCB]], stripped in 1989) in the UK, Elena Ceaușescu was arranged to be "elected" to membership of a Science Academy in the USA; all of these, and more, were arranged by the Ceaușescus as a propaganda ploy through the consular cultural attachés of Romanian embassies in the countries involved.

Ceaușescu's Romania was the only [[Warsaw Pact]] country that did not sever diplomatic relations with [[Chile]] after [[1973 Chilean coup d'état|Augusto Pinochet's coup]].<ref>Valenzuela, J. Samuel and Arturo Valenzuela (eds.), ''Military Rule in Chile: Dictatorship and Oppositions'', p. 321</ref>

In August 1976, Nicolae Ceaușescu was the first high-level Romanian visitor to [[Bessarabia]] since World War II. In December 1976, at one of his meetings in Bucharest, [[Ivan Bodiul]] said that "the good [[Moldovan–Romanian relations|relationship]] was initiated by Ceaușescu's visit to [[Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic|Soviet Moldavia]]."<ref>[http://www.osaarchivum.org/files/holdings/300/8/3/text/53-1-68.shtml Romanian-Moldavian SSR relations, by Patrick Moore and the Romanian Section]</ref>

==Legacy==
[[Image:019.Vacanta-pentrecuta-in-Moldova-1976 (1).jpg|thumb|His successor, [[Ion Iliescu]], and Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1976]]

Nicolae and [[Elena Ceaușescu] had three children, [[Valentin Ceaușescu]] (born 1948) a nuclear physicist, [[Nicu Ceaușescu]] (1951–1996) also a physicist, and a daughter [[Zoia Ceaușescu]] (1949–2006), who was a mathematician. After the death of his parents, Nicu Ceaușescu ordered the construction of an [[Romanian Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] church, the walls of which are decorated with portraits of his parents.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

Praising the crimes of so-called totalitarian regimes and denigrating their victims is forbidden by law in Romania; this includes the Ceaușescu regime. Dinel Staicu was fined 25,000 [[Romanian leu|lei]] (approx. 9,000 United States dollars) for praising Ceaușescu and displaying his pictures on his private television channel (''3TV Oltenia'').<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20071220071037/http://www.cna.ro/comunicare/comunic/2006/c0207.html Official communique of the National Board of the Audio-Visual], originally at [http://www.cna.ro/comunicare/comunic/2006/c0207.html cna.org] but now removed, accessible through web.archive.org</ref> Nevertheless, according to opinion polls held in 2010, 41% of Romanians would vote for Ceaușescu<ref>http://www.heise.de/tp/artikel/33/33094/1.html</ref><ref>http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2011/12/27/in-romania-opinion-polls-show-nostalgia-for-communism/</ref> and 63% think that their lives were better before 1989.<ref>http://www.adevarul.ro/actualitate/eveniment/Noul_Partid_Comunist_Roman-_Pionierii_0_367163711.html</ref><ref>http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2011/12/27/in-romania-opinion-polls-show-nostalgia-for-communism/</ref>

Ceaușescu's last days in power were dramatized in a stage musical, ''The Fall of Ceaușescu'', written and composed by [[Ron Conner]]. It premiered at the Los Angeles Theater Center in September 1995 and was attended by [[Ion Iliescu]], the then president of Romania who had been visiting Los Angeles at the time.

One unresolved mystery that followed the death of Nicolae Ceaușescu pertains to Romania's Apollo 17 Goodwill [[Moon rock]] which was in Ceaușescu's possession at the time of his death, but has since disappeared. This moon rock was presented by the Nixon Administration to Romania and is said to be worth 5&nbsp;million dollars on the black market.<ref>[http://www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=10910 "Every Nation Received a Moon Rock, Some of them Can’t Find It"] ''Houston Chronicle'', Mike Tolson, 13 May 2010 (Reprint).</ref>

=="Ceauşism"==
While the term ''Ceauşism'' became widely used inside Romania, usually as a pejorative, it never achieved status in [[academia]]. This can be explained by the largely crude and syncretic character of the dogma. Ceaușescu attempted to [[Revisionism (Marxism)|include his views]] in mainstream [[Marxism|Marxist]] theory, to which he added his belief in a "multilaterally developed socialist society" as a necessary stage between the Marxist concepts of Socialist and Communist societies (a critical view reveals that the main reason for the interval is the disappearance of the State and Party structures in Communism). A Romanian Encyclopedic Dictionary entry in 1978 underlines the concept as "a new, superior, stage in the socialist development of Romania [...] begun by the 1971&ndash;1975 Five-Year Plan, prolonged over several [succeeding and projected] Five-Year Plans".<ref>''Mic Dicționar Enciclopedic''</ref>

Ceauşism's main trait was a form of Romanian [[nationalism]],<ref>Geran Pilon, Chapter III, ''Communism with a Nationalist Face'', p.60-66; Tănase, p.24</ref> one which arguably propelled Ceaușescu to power in 1965, and probably accounted for the Party leadership gathered around [[Ion Gheorghe Maurer]] choosing him over the more orthodox [[Gheorghe Apostol]]. Although he had previously been a careful supporter of the official lines, Ceaușescu came to embody Romanian society's wish for independence after what many considered years of Soviet directives and purges, during and after the [[SovRom]] fiasco. He carried this nationalist option inside the Party, manipulating it against the nominated successor Apostol. This nationalist policy had more timid precedents:<ref name="autogenerated1">Geran Pilon, p.60</ref> for example, the Gheorghiu-Dej regime had overseen the withdrawal of the [[Red Army]] in 1958.

It had also engineered the publishing of several works that subverted the Russian and Soviet image, such as the final volumes of the official ''History of Romania'', no longer glossing over traditional points of tension with Russia and the Soviet Union (even alluding to an unlawful Soviet presence in Bessarabia). In the final years of Gheorghiu-Dej's rule more problems were openly discussed, with the publication of a collection of [[Karl Marx]] texts that dealt with Romanian topics, showing Marx's previously censored, politically uncomfortable views of Russia.

Ceaușescu was prepared to take a more decisive step in questioning Soviet policies. In the early years of his rule, he generally relaxed political pressures inside Romanian society,<ref>Tănase, p.23</ref> which led to the late 1960s and early 1970s being the most liberal decade in Communist Romania. Gaining the public's confidence, Ceaușescu took a clear stand against the 1968 crushing of the [[Prague Spring]] by [[Leonid Brezhnev]]. After a visit from [[Charles de Gaulle]] earlier in the same year (during which the French President gave recognition to the incipient maverick), Ceaușescu's public speech in August deeply impressed the population, not only through its themes, but also because, uniquely, it was unscripted. He immediately attracted Western sympathies and backing, which lasted well beyond the 'liberal' phase of his regime; at the same time, the period brought forward the threat of armed Soviet invasion: significantly, many young men inside Romania joined the ''[[Patriotic Guards (Romania)|Patriotic Guards]]'' created on the spur of the moment, in order to meet the perceived threat.<ref>Geran Pilon, p.62</ref> President Richard Nixon was invited to Bucharest in 1969, which was the first visit of a United States president to a Communist country.

[[Alexander Dubček]]'s version of ''[[Socialism with a human face]]'' was never suited to Romanian communist goals. Ceaușescu found himself briefly aligned with Dubček's [[Czechoslovakia]] and [[Josip Broz Tito]]'s [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]]. The latter friendship was to last well into the 1980s, with Ceaușescu adapting the [[Titoism|Titoist]] doctrine of "independent socialist development" to suit his own objectives. Romania proclaimed itself a "Socialist" (in place of "People's") Republic to show that it was fulfilling Marxist goals without Moscow's overseeing.

The system's nationalist traits grew and progressively blended with [[Juche]] and Maoist ideals. In 1971, the Party, which had already been completely purged of internal opposition (with the possible exception of [[Gheorghe Gaston Marin]]),<ref name="autogenerated1" /> approved the ''[[July Theses]]'', expressing Ceaușescu's disdain of Western models as a whole, and the reevaluation of the recent liberalisation as ''[[Bourgeoisie|bourgeois]]''. The 1974 11th Congress tightened the Party's grip on Romanian culture, guiding it towards Ceaușescu's nationalist principles:.<ref name="autogenerated2">Geran Pilon, p.61</ref> Notably, it demanded that Romanian historians refer to [[Dacians]] as having "an unorganised State", part of a political continuum that culminated in the Socialist Republic.<ref name="autogenerated2" /> The regime continued its cultural dialogue with ancient forms, with Ceaușescu connecting his cult of personality to figures such as [[Mircea cel Bătrân]] (whom he styled ''Mircea the Great'') and [[Mihai Viteazul]]. It also started adding Dacian or [[Imperial Rome|Roman]] versions to the names of cities and towns (''Drobeta'' to [[Turnu Severin]], ''Napoca'' to [[Cluj-Napoca|Cluj]]).<ref>Geran Pilon, p.61-63</ref>

A new generation of committed supporters on the outside confirmed the regime's character. Ceaușescu probably never emphasized that his policies constituted a paradigm for theorists of [[National Bolshevism]] such as [[Jean-François Thiriart]], but there was a publicised connection between him and [[Iosif Constantin Drăgan]], an [[Iron Guard]]ist Romanian-Italian émigré millionaire (Drăgan was already committed to a Dacian [[Protochronism]] that largely echoed the official cultural policy).

Nicolae Ceaușescu had a major influence on modern-day Romanian populist rhetoric. In his final years, he had begun to rehabilitate the image of pro-[[Nazi Germany|Nazi]] dictator [[Ion Antonescu]]. Although Antonescu's was never a fully official myth in Ceaușescu's time, today's politicians such as [[Corneliu Vadim Tudor]] have coupled the images of the two leaders into their versions of a national Pantheon. The conflict with Hungary over the treatment of the [[Hungarian minority in Romania|Magyar minority]] in Romania had several unusual aspects: not only was it a vitriolic argument between two officially [[Socialist state]]s (as Hungary had not yet officially embarked on the course to a [[free market]] economy), it also marked the moment when Hungary, a state behind the [[Iron Curtain]], appealed to the [[Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe]] for sanctions to be taken against Romania. This meant that the later 1980s were marked by a pronounced anti-Hungarian discourse, which owed more to nationalist tradition than to Marxism,<ref>Geran Pilon, p.63</ref> and the ultimate isolation of Romania on the world stage.

The strong opposition of his regime to all forms of ''[[perestroika]]'' and ''[[glasnost]]'' placed Ceaușescu at odds with [[Mikhail Gorbachev]]. He was very displeased when other Warsaw Pact countries decided to try their own versions of Gorbachev's reforms. In particular, he was incensed when [[People's Republic of Poland|Poland]]'s leaders opted for a power-sharing arrangement with the [[Solidarity (Polish trade union)|Solidarity]] trade union. He even went as far as to call for a Warsaw Pact invasion of Poland—a significant reversal, considering how violently he opposed the invasion of Czechoslovakia 20 years earlier. For his part, Gorbachev made no secret of his distaste for Ceaușescu, whom he called "the Romanian [[führer]]".<ref name=Revolution1989/>

In November 1989, at the XIVth and last congress of the PCR, Ceaușescu condemned the [[Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact]] and asked for the annulment of its consequences. In effect, this amounted to a demand for the return of Bessarabia (most of which was then a Soviet republic and since 1991 has been independent [[Moldova]]) and northern [[Bukovina]], both of which had been [[Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|occupied by the Soviet Union]] in 1940 and again at the end of World War II.

==Honours and awards==
Ceaușescu received the Danish [[Order of the Elephant]], but this award was revoked on 23 December 1989 by the queen of Denmark, [[Margrethe II of Denmark|Margrethe II]].

Ceaușescu was likewise stripped of his honorary [[Order of the Bath|GCB]] (Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath) by Queen [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom]] on the day before his execution. Queen Elizabeth also returned the Romanian Order Ceaușescu had bestowed upon her.<ref>The Official Website of the British Monarchy: [http://www.royal.gov.uk/MonarchUK/Honours/Honours.aspx "Queen and Honours"], retrieved on 13 October 2010.</ref>

On his 70th birthday in 1988 Ceaușescu was decorated with the [[Karl-Marx-Orden]] by then [[Socialist Unity Party of Germany]] (SED) chief [[Erich Honecker]]; through this he was honoured for his rejection of [[Mikhail Gorbachev]]'s reforms.

{{Italian|Nicolae Ceaușescu}}
;Romanian decorations
* [[Hero of Romania]], three times (1971, 1978 and 1988)
* [[Hero of Socialist Labour (Romania)|Hero of Socialist Labour]] (1964)
* [[Order of the Victory of Socialism]] (accompanied each Hero of Romania)
* [[Order of Labour]]
* [[Order of Homeland Defence]]
* [[Order of the Star of the Republic of Romania]]
* [[Military Merit Medal (Romania)|Military Merit Medal]]
* Commemorative Medal of the 5th Anniversary of the Republic of Romania
* Commemorative Medal of the 35th Anniversary of the Liberation of Romania

;Foreign decorations
Several foreign decorations were revoked at the time of the collapse of the Ceausescu regime.
* [[Legion of Honour]] (France)
* [[Decoration for Services to the Republic of Austria|Great Star of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria]] (1969)<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.parlament.gv.at/PAKT/VHG/XXIV/AB/AB_10542/imfname_251156.pdf | title = Reply to a parliamentary question | language = German | page=277 | trans_title = | format = pdf | accessdate = 13 October 2012 }}</ref>
* Knight Grand Cross decorated with Grand Cordon of the [[Order of Merit of the Italian Republic]] (21 May 1973)
* Special class of the Grand Cross of the [[Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany]] ([[West Germany]], 17 May 1971)
* [[Order of José Martí]] (Cuba, 1973)
* [[Order of Lenin]], twice (Soviet Union, 1973 and 1988; all Soviet decorations were revoked in 1990)
* Collar of the [[Order of the Liberator San Martin]] (Argentina, 1974)
* [[Order of the Southern Cross]] (Brazil, 1975)
* [[Jubilee Medal "Thirty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945"]] (Soviet Union, 1975)
* Collar of the [[Order of Saint James of the Sword]] (Portugal, 14 October 1975)
* Athens Gold Medal (1976)
* Twentieth Anniversary Commemorative Medal of the Assault on the Moncada Barracks (Cuba, 1976)
* Knight Grand Cross of the [[Order of the Bath]] (United Kingdom, 1978; expelled 24 December 1989)
* Gold Medal Plate ([[International Relations Institute of Rome]], 1979)
* Knight of the [[Royal Order of the Seraphim]] (Sweden, 4 November 1980)
* Knight of the [[Order of the Elephant]] (Denmark, 1980; subsequently expelled 23 December 1989)
* [[Order of Stara Planina]] (Bulgaria, 1983)
* [[Order of the October Revolution]] (Soviet Union, 1983)
* Gold Collar of the [[Olympic Order]] ([[International Olympic Committee]], 1984) - for decision not to participate in the boycott of the [[1984 Summer Olympics|Los Angeles Olympics]]
* [[Order of Karl Marx]] ([[German Democratic Republic]], 1988]] - for his defence of Marxism by rejecting Gorbachev's reforms
* Grand Cross of the [[Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olaf]] (expelled 1989)

Honorary degrees from the [[University of Bucharest]] (1973), [[Lebanese University]] (1974), [[University of Buenos Aires]] (1974), [[Autonomous University of Yucatan]] (1975), [[University of Nice Sophia Antipolis]] (1975), [[University of Liberia]] (1988) and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (1988).

==Selected published works==
* ''Report during the joint solemn session of the CC of the Romanian Communist Party, the National Council of the Socialist Unity Front and the Grand National Assembly: Marking the 60th anniversary of the creation of a Unitary Romanian National State'', 1978
* ''Major problems of our time: Eliminating underdevelopment, bridging gaps between states, building a new international economic order'', 1980
* ''The solving of the national question in Romania (Socio-political thought of Romania's President)'', 1980
* ''Ceauşescu: Builder of Modern Romania and International Statesman'', 1983
* ''The nation and co-habiting nationalities in the contemporary epoch (Philosophical thought of Romania's president)'', 1983
* ''Istoria poporului Român în concepția preşedintelui'', 1988

==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:011.Portret Nicolae Ceauescu in 1939.jpg|Portrait (1939)
File:Ceausescu receiving the presidential sceptre 1974.jpg|Ceaușescu receiving the presidential sceptre from the Chairman of the Great National Assembly
File:IICCR A273 Communist party leaders Gheorgheni.jpg|Ceaușescu's visit to [[Gheorgheni]] (1966)
File:IICCR G156 Ceausescu in Sibiu.jpg|Ceaușescu's visit to [[Sibiu]] (1967)
File:059. Tito and Ceausescu at the Romanian-Yougoslav friendship meeting.jpg|Ceaușescu and [[Josip Broz Tito]] at the Romanian-Yugoslav friendship meeting in [[Bucharest]]
File:Franz Jonas în România.jpg|[[Franz Jonas]], the president of [[Austria]], in visit in [[Bucharest]], Romania (1969)
File:Indira Gandhi & Nicolae Ceauşescu.jpg|Ceaușescu and Indian Prime Minister [[Indira Gandhi]] (1969)
File:Bokassa with Ceausescu.jpg|[[Jean-Bédel Bokassa]] with Nicolae Ceaușescu during Bokassa's state visit to Romania (July 1970)
File:CeausescuKim1971.jpg|Ceaușescu and [[Kim Il-sung]] during the party and state visit to the [[DPR Korea]] (1971)
File:1972 Fidel Castro visiting Romania.jpg|[[Fidel Castro]] visiting Ceaușescu in Romania (1972)
File:1974 Ceausescu Yasser Araffat in Bucharest.JPG|[[Yasser Arafat]] with Nicolae Ceaușescu during Arafat's visit to [[Bucharest]] (1974)
File:The Ceasescs and Peróns on a common photo - B.jpg|The Romanian presidential couple and Juan Perón and his wife in [[Buenos Aires]] in 1974
File:Nicolae Ceaucescu 1978.jpg|Ceaușescu with US President [[Jimmy Carter]] during a state visit to the USA (1978)
File:Ceausescu - Queen Elisabeth II - 1978.jpg| The Ceaușescu couple received by the British Monarch Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in 1978
File:Dr. Rudolf Kirchschläger in Romania.jpg|Ceaușescu with Doctor [[Rudolf Kirchschläger]], president of [[Austria]], during his visit to Romania (1978)
File:Ceausescu Anul Nou.jpg|Addressing his [[New Year's Eve]] message on television and radio (1978)
File:1982 Ceausescu la Moscova la 60 de ani de la formarea URSS.JPG|Ceaușescu's speech in [[Moscow]] in 1982 on the 60th anniversary of the Formation of the Soviet Union

File:Ceausescu & Gorbachev 1985.jpg|Ceaușescu and [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] of the Soviet Union (1985)
File:Steaua Cupa Campionilor Europeni.jpg|With the [[1985–86 European Cup|1986 European Champion's Cup]] winner team [[FC Steaua Bucharest|Steaua Bucharest]]
[[Image:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1985-0530-026, Berlin, Ceausescu-Besuch.jpg|thumb|Ceaușescu with East German Leader [[Erich Honecker]] in [[East Berlin]] (1988)]]

</gallery>

==Notes==
{{Reflist|2}}

==References==
*''Mic Dicționar Enciclopedic'' ("Small encyclopedic dictionary"), 1978
* Edward Behr, ''Kiss the Hand you Cannot Bite'', ISBN 0-679-40128-8
* [[Dumitru Burlan]], ''Dupa 14 ani - Sosia lui Ceauşescu se destăinuie'' ("After 14 Years - The Double of Ceauşescu confesses"). Editura Ergorom. 31 July 2003 (in [[Romanian language|Romanian]]).
* [[Juliana Geran Pilon]], ''The Bloody Flag. Post-Communist Nationalism in Eastern Europe. Spotlight on Romania'', ISBN 1-56000-062-7; ISBN 1-56000-620-X
* Marian Oprea, "Au trecut 15 ani -- Conspirația Securității" ("After 15 years -- the conspiracy of Securitate"), in [http://www.lumeam.ro/nr10_2004/index.html ''Lumea Magazin'' Nr 10, 2004]: (in Romanian; link leads to table of contents, verifying that the article exists, but the article itself is not online).
* Viorel Patrichi, "[http://www.lumeam.ro/nr12_2001/politica_si_servicii_secrete.html Eu am fost sosia lui Nicolae Ceauşescu]" ("I was Ceauşescu's double"), ''[[Lumea Magazin]]'' Nr 12, 2001 (in Romanian)
* Stevens W. Sowards, [http://www.lib.msu.edu/sowards/balkan/ ''Twenty-Five Lectures on Modern Balkan History (The Balkans in the Age of Nationalism)''], 1996, in particular [http://www.lib.msu.edu/sowards/balkan/lect24.htm Lecture 24: The failure of Balkan Communism and the causes of the Revolutions of 1989]
* Victor Stănculescu, [http://www.jurnalul.ro/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=14985 "Nu vă fie milă, au 2 miliarde de lei în cont"] ("Do not have mercy, they hold 2&nbsp;billion lei [33&nbsp;million dollars] in their account[s]"), in ''Jurnalul Național'', 22 Nov 2004
* John Sweeney, ''The Life and Evil Times of Nicolae Ceauşescu'', ISBN 0-09-174672-8
* [[Stelian Tănase]], "Societatea civilă românească şi violența" ("Romanian Civil Society and Violence"), in ''Agora'', issue 3/IV, July–September 1991
* Filip Teodorescu, et al., [[s:Stenograma sedintei de audiere din 14 decembrie 1994|Extracts from the minutes of a Romanian senate hearing, 14 December 1994]], featuring the remarks of Filip Teodorescu.

==External links==
{{commons|Nicolae Ceauşescu}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikisource|Transcript of the closed trial of Nicolae and Elena Ceauşescu}}
{{Portal|Biography|Communism|Romania|Politics}}
* [http://www.ceausescu.org/ Ceauşescu, Nicolae - Romania under Communism]
** [http://www.ceausescu.org/ceausescu_media/ultima-video.html Nicolae Ceaușescu's last speech in public]
** [http://www.ceausescu.org/ceausescu_texts/revolution/trial-eng.htm Ceaușescu's trial transcripts (in English)]
** [http://www.ceausescu.org/ceausescu_texts/revolution/trial-ro.htm Ceaușescu's trial transcripts (in Romanian)]
*[http://www.country-studies.com/romania/demographic-policy.html Communist Romania's Demographic Policy]
* [http://www.timisoara.com/newmioc/Politic.htm The Politicians and the revolution of 1989 (in Romanian)]
* Gheorghe Brătescu, [http://www.clipa.com/pagpolitica638.htm ''Clipa'' 638: Un complot ratat] ("A failed scheme"). On how Milea died, probably killed by Stănculescu according to this writer, and the life of the Ceaușescu family. (In Romanian)
*[http://cidc.library.cornell.edu/dof/romania/romania.htm Death of the Father: Nicolae Ceaușescu] Focuses on his death, but also discusses other matters. Many photos.
*[http://www.moreorless.au.com/killers/ceausescu.html "Killer File" entry on Nicolae Andruța Ceaușescu ] Chronological overview of important events in his life and rule.
*{{YouTube|2pk2rxHTrsQ}}, Video of the trial and execution of Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu.

{{S-start}}
{{s-ppo}}
{{Succession box|
before=[[Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej]]|
title=General secretary
of the [[Romanian Communist Party]]|
years=1965–1989|
after=Party dissolved
}}
{{S-end}}
{{PCRGenSecs}}
{{Presidents of Romania}}
{{Fall of Communism}}
{{Cold War}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2010}}

{{Authority control|VIAF=54160037}}
<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME=Ceaușescu, Nicolae
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=Romanian politician, General Secretary of the [[Romanian Communist Party]]
|DATE OF BIRTH=26 January 1918
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[Scorniceşti]], [[Olt County|Olt]], Romania
|DATE OF DEATH=25 December 1989
|PLACE OF DEATH=[[Târgovişte]], [[Dâmbovița County|Dâmbovița]], Romania
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ceausescu, Nicolae}}
[[Category:1918 births]]
[[Category:1989 deaths]]
[[Category:Anti-fascists]]
[[Category:Ceauşescu family]]
[[Category:Cold War leaders]]
[[Category:Communist rulers]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Romania]]
[[Category:Executed politicians]]
[[Category:Executed presidents]]
[[Category:Executed Romanian people]]
[[Category:Filmed executions]]
[[Category:Former Eastern Orthodox Christians]]
[[Category:General Secretaries of the Romanian Communist Party]]
[[Category:People executed by firing squad]]
[[Category:People executed by Romania]]
[[Category:People of the Romanian Revolution of 1989]]
[[Category:Members of the Great National Assembly]]
[[Category:Members of the Chamber of Deputies of Romania]]
[[Category:People from Scorniceşti]]
[[Category:Presidents of Romania]]
[[Category:Inmates of Târgu Jiu camp]]
[[Category:Natalism]]
[[Category:Annulled Honorary Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath]]
[[Category:Grand Crosses Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany]]
[[Category:Légion d'honneur recipients]]
[[Category:Knights Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav]]
[[Category:Knights of the Elephant]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Karl Marx]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of the October Revolution]]
[[Category:Collars of the Order of the Liberator General San Martin]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of José Marti]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Grand Star of the Decoration for Services to the Republic of Austria‎]]
[[Category:Knights Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Lenin, twice]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of the Southern Cross]]
[[Category:Grand Collars of the Order of Saint James of the Sword]]
[[Category:Knights of the Royal Order of the Seraphim]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Stara Planina]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of the October Revolution]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Olympic Order]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Karl Marx]]
[[Category:Romanian atheists]]
[[Category:Leaders ousted by a coup]]

{{Link FA|bg}}
{{Link FA|ro}}
{{Link GA|id}}

[[ar:نيكولاي تشاوتشيسكو]]
[[an:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[az:Nikolae Çauşesku]]
[[be:Нікалае Чаўшэску]]
[[be-x-old:Нікалае Чаўшэску]]
[[bg:Николае Чаушеску]]
[[bs:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[ca:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[ceb:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[cs:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[cy:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[da:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[de:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[et:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[el:Νικολάε Τσαουσέσκου]]
[[es:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[eo:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[ext:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[eu:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[fa:نیکلای چائوشسکو]]
[[fr:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[ga:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[gl:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[ko:니콜라에 차우셰스쿠]]
[[hr:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[io:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[id:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[it:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[he:ניקולאה צ'אושסקו]]
[[ka:ნიკოლაე ჩაუშესკუ]]
[[la:Nicolaus Ceauşescu]]
[[lv:Nikolaje Čaušesku]]
[[lt:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[hu:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[mk:Николае Чаушеску]]
[[mr:निकोलाइ चाउसेस्कु]]
[[xmf:ნიკოლაუ ჩაუშესკუ]]
[[arz:نيكولاى تشاوشيسكو]]
[[nl:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[ja:ニコラエ・チャウシェスク]]
[[no:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[nn:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[oc:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[pl:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[pt:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[ro:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[ru:Чаушеску, Николае]]
[[simple:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[sk:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[sl:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[sr:Николаје Чаушеску]]
[[sh:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[fi:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[sv:Nicolae Ceaușescu]]
[[tt:Николай Чаушеску]]
[[th:นิโคไล เชาเชสกู]]
[[tg:Николае Чеаушеску]]
[[tr:Nikolay Çavuşesku]]
[[uk:Ніколае Чаушеску]]
[[vi:Nicolae Ceauşescu]]
[[zh:尼古拉·齐奥塞斯库]]

Revision as of 23:47, 28 November 2012

Nicolae Ceaușescu
General Secretary of the Romanian Communist Party
In office
22 March 1965 – 22 December 1989
Preceded byGheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej
Succeeded byparty abolished
1st President of the State Council
In office
9 December 1967 – 28 March 1974
Preceded byChivu Stoica
Succeeded byHimself as President of Romania
1st President of Romania (Conducător)
In office
28 March 1974 – 22 December 1989
Preceded byHimself as President of the State Council
Succeeded byIon Iliescu
Personal details
Born(1918-01-26)26 January 1918
Scorniceşti, Olt, Romania
Died25 December 1989(1989-12-25) (aged 71)
Târgovişte, Dâmbovița, Romania
Political partyRomanian Communist Party
SpouseElena Ceaușescu (m. 1946–1989)
Children
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Romania
Branch/serviceRomanian Army
Years of service1948–unknown
Rank Lieutenant General

Nicolae Ceaușescu (Romanian pronunciation: [nikoˈla.e t͡ʃe̯a.uˈʃesku]; 26 January 1918[1] – 25 December 1989) was a Romanian Communist politician. He was General Secretary of the Romanian Communist Party from 1965 to 1989, and as such was the country's last Communist leader. He was also the country's head of state from 1967 to 1989.

His rule was marked in the first decade by an open policy towards Western Europe and the United States, which deviated from that of the other Warsaw Pact states during the Cold War. He continued a trend first established by his predecessor, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who had tactfully coaxed the Soviet Union into withdrawing its troops from Romania in 1958.[2]

Ceaușescu's second decade was characterized by an increasingly brutal and repressive regime—by some accounts, the most Stalinist regime in the Soviet bloc. It was also marked by a ubiquitous personality cult, nationalism and a deterioration in foreign relations with the Soviet Union. Ceaușescu's government was overthrown in the December 1989 revolution, and he and his wife were executed following a televised and hastily organised two-hour court session.[3]

Early life and career

Captured in 1936 when he was 18 years old, and imprisoned for two years at Doftana Prison for anti-fascist activities.

Born in the village of Scorniceşti, Olt County, Ceaușescu moved to Bucharest at the age of 11 to work in factories. He was the son of a peasant (see Ceaușescu family for descriptions of his parents and siblings). He joined the then-illegal Communist Party of Romania in early 1932 and was first arrested, in 1933, for street fighting during a strike. He was arrested again, in 1934, first for collecting signatures on a petition protesting the trial of railway workers and twice more for other similar activities. These arrests earned him the description "dangerous communist agitator" and "active distributor of communist and anti-fascist propaganda" on his police record. He then went underground, but was captured and imprisoned in 1936 for two years at Doftana Prison for anti-fascist activities.[4]

While out of jail in 1940, he met Elena Petrescu, whom he married in 1946 and who would play an increasing role in his political life over the years. He was arrested and imprisoned again in 1940. In 1943, he was transferred to Târgu Jiu internment camp where he shared a cell with Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, becoming his protégé. After World War II, when Romania was beginning to fall under Soviet influence, he served as secretary of the Union of Communist Youth (1944–1945).[4]

After the Communists seized power in Romania in 1947, he headed the Ministry of Agriculture, then served as Deputy Minister of the Armed Forces under Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, becoming a Major General. In 1952, Gheorghiu-Dej brought him onto the Central Committee months after the party's "Muscovite faction" led by Ana Pauker had been purged. In 1954, he became a full member of the Politburo and eventually rose to occupy the second-highest position in the party hierarchy.[4]

Leadership of Romania

Meeting between US president Richard Nixon and vice president Gerald Ford and Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1973
Ceaușescu spending time with Jacques Chirac at the Romanian seaside in Neptun (1975)
Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife with Emperor Hirohito during a visit in Tokyo in 1975
The presidential couple is received by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in June 1978
Ceaușescu with Pol Pot, 1978
Ceaușescu is greeted by King Juan Carlos I of Spain in Madrid, 1979

Ceaușescu was not the obvious successor to Gheorghiu-Dej when he died on 19 March 1965, despite his closeness to the longtime leader, but amid widespread infighting among older and more connected officials the Politburo turned to Ceaușescu as a compromise candidate.[5] He was elected general secretary on March 22, three days after Gheorghiu-Dej's death. One of his first acts was to change the name of the party from the Romanian Workers' Party back to the Communist Party of Romania, and declare the country the Socialist Republic of Romania rather than a People's Republic. In 1967, he consolidated his power by becoming president of the State Council (head of state).

Initially, Ceaușescu became a popular figure in Romania and also in the Western World, due to his independent foreign policy, challenging the authority of the Soviet Union. In the 1960s, he eased press censorship and ended Romania's active participation in the Warsaw Pact (though Romania formally remained a member). He not only refused to take part in the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw Pact forces, but actively and openly condemned that action. He even traveled to Prague a week before the invasion to offer moral support to his Czechoslovak counterpart, Alexander Dubček. Although the Soviet Union largely tolerated Ceaușescu's recalcitrance, his seeming independence from Moscow earned Romania maverick status within the Eastern Bloc.[5]

During the following years Ceaușescu pursued an open policy towards the United States and Western Europe. Romania was the first Communist country to recognize West Germany, the first to join the International Monetary Fund, and the first to receive a US President, Richard Nixon.[6] In 1971, Romania became a member of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Romania and Yugoslavia were also the only Eastern European countries that entered into trade agreements with the European Economic Community before the fall of the Communist bloc.[7]

A series of official visits to Western countries (including the US, France, United Kingdom, Spain) helped Ceaușescu to present himself as a reforming Communist, pursuing an independent foreign policy within the Soviet Bloc. Also he became eager to be seen as an enlightened international statesman, able to mediate in international conflicts and to gain international respect for Romania.[8] Ceaușescu negotiated in international affairs, such as the opening of US relations with China in 1969 and the visit of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat to Israel in 1977. Also Romania was the only country in the world to maintain normal diplomatic relations with both Israel and the PLO.[9]

The 1966 decree

In 1966, the Ceaușescu regime, in an attempt to boost the country's population, made abortion illegal, and introduced other policies to reverse the very low birth rate and fertility rate. Mothers of at least five children would be entitled to significant benefits, while mothers of at least ten children were declared heroine mothers by the Romanian state. Few women ever sought this status; instead, the average Romanian family during the time had two to three children (see Demographics of Romania).[10] Furthermore, a considerable number of women either died or were maimed during clandestine abortions.[11]

The government also targeted rising divorce rates and made divorce much more difficult - it was decreed that a marriage could be dissolved only in exceptional cases. By the late 1960s, the population began to swell. In turn, a new problem was created by child abandonment, which swelled the orphanage population (see Cighid). Transfusions of untested blood led to Romania accounting for many of Europe's paediatric HIV/AIDS cases at the turn of the 21st century despite having a population that only makes up around 3% of Europe's total population.[12][13]

July Theses

Ceaușescu visited the People's Republic of China, North Korea, Mongolia and North Vietnam in 1971. He took great interest in the idea of total national transformation as embodied in the programs of North Korea's Juche and China's Cultural Revolution. He was also inspired by the personality cults of North Korea's Kim Il-sung and China's Mao Zedong. Shortly after returning home, he began to emulate North Korea's system. North Korean books on Juche were translated into Romanian and widely distributed in the country.

On 6 July 1971, he delivered a speech before the Executive Committee of the PCR. This quasi-Maoist speech, which came to be known as the July Theses, contained seventeen proposals. Among these were: continuous growth in the "leading role" of the Party; improvement of Party education and of mass political action; youth participation on large construction projects as part of their "patriotic work"; an intensification of political-ideological education in schools and universities, as well as in children's, youth and student organizations; and an expansion of political propaganda, orienting radio and television shows to this end, as well as publishing houses, theatres and cinemas, opera, ballet, artists' unions, promoting a "militant, revolutionary" character in artistic productions. The liberalisation of 1965 was condemned and an index of banned books and authors was re-established.

The Theses heralded the beginning of a "mini cultural revolution" in Romania, launching a Neo-Stalinist offensive against cultural autonomy, reaffirming an ideological basis for literature that, in theory, the Party had hardly abandoned. Although presented in terms of "Socialist Humanism", the Theses in fact marked a return to the strict guidelines of Socialist Realism, and attacks on non-compliant intellectuals. Strict ideological conformity in the humanities and social sciences was demanded. Competence and aesthetics were to be replaced by ideology; professionals were to be replaced by agitators; and culture was once again to become an instrument for political-ideological propaganda and hardline measures.

In 1974, Ceaușescu became President of the Socialist Republic of Romania, further consolidating his power. He continued to follow an independent policy in foreign relations—for example, in 1984, Romania was one of only three communist states (the others being the People's Republic of China, and Yugoslavia) to take part in the American-organized 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

Also, the Socialist Republic of Romania was the first of the Eastern bloc nations to have official relations with the Western bloc and the European Community: an agreement including Romania in the Community's Generalised System of Preferences was signed in 1974 and an Agreement on Industrial Products was signed in 1980. On 4 April 1975, Ceaușescu visited Japan and met with Emperor Hirohito.

Pacepa defection

In 1978, Ion Mihai Pacepa, a senior member of the Romanian political police (Securitate), defected to the United States. A 2-star general, he was the highest ranking defector from the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War. His defection was a powerful blow against the regime, forcing Ceaușescu to overhaul the architecture of the Securitate. Pacepa's 1986 book, Red Horizons: Chronicles of a Communist Spy Chief (ISBN 0-89526-570-2), claims to expose details of Ceaușescu's regime, such as massive spying on American industry and elaborate efforts to rally Western political support.

Foreign debt

Ceaușescu's political independence from the Soviet Union and his protest against the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 drew the interest of Western powers, whose governments briefly believed that he was an anti-Soviet maverick and hoped to create a schism in the Warsaw Pact by funding him. Ceaușescu did not realise that the funding was not always favorable. Ceaușescu was able to borrow heavily (more than $13 billion) from the West to finance economic development programs, but these loans ultimately devastated the country's finances. In an attempt to correct this, Ceaușescu decided to repay Romania's foreign debts. He organised a referendum and managed to change the constitution, adding a clause that barred Romania from taking foreign loans in the future. The referendum yielded a nearly unanimous "yes" vote.

In the 1980s, Ceaușescu ordered the export of much of the country's agricultural and industrial production in order to repay its debts. The resulting domestic shortages made the everyday life of Romanians a fight for survival as food rationing was introduced and heating, gas and electricity blackouts became the rule. During the 1980s, there was a steady decrease in the Romanian population's standard of living, especially in the availability and quality of food and general goods in stores. During this time, Ceaușescu shut down all radio stations outside of the capital, and limited television to one channel broadcasting only two hours a day. The official explanation was that the country was paying its debts and people accepted the suffering, believing it to be for a short time only and for the ultimate good.[citation needed]

The debt was fully paid in the summer of 1989, shortly before Ceaușescu was overthrown, but heavy exports continued until the revolution in December.[14][15]

Tensions

Stamp commemorating the 70th birthday (and 55 years of political activity) of Nicolae Ceaușescu, 1988

By early 1989, Ceaușescu was showing signs of complete denial of reality. While the country was going through extremely difficult times with long bread queues in front of empty food shops, he was often shown on state television entering stores filled with food supplies, visiting large food and arts festivals, while praising the "high living standard" achieved under his rule.

Special contingents of food deliveries would fill stores before his visits, and well-fed cows would even be transported across the country in anticipation of his visits to farms. In at least one emergency, he inspected (and approved) a display of Hungarian produce, which apart from some corn and several melons, was largely constructed of painted plastic and/or polystyrene. Meanwhile, staples such as flour, eggs, butter and milk were difficult to find and most people started to depend on small gardens grown either in small city alleys or out in the country. In late 1989, daily TV broadcasts showed lists of CAPs (kolkhozes, collective farms) with alleged record harvests, in blatant contradiction of the shortages experienced by the average Romanian at the time.

Some Romanians, believing that Ceaușescu was not aware of what was going on in the country outside of Bucharest, attempted to hand him petitions and complaint letters during his many visits around the country. Each time he got a letter, he would immediately pass it on to members of his security. It is not known whether Ceaușescu read any of these letters. It is alleged that severe penalties would result from any anti-state actions, including such letters. People lived in fear of the regime and of each other. Secrecy had become a way of life, due to people being reluctantly recruited as spies for the political system. Sometimes those reluctant spies came from the same family, eventually forced to inform on their own.

Revolution

In November 1989, the XIVth Congress of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR) saw Ceaușescu, then aged 71, re-elected for another five years as leader of the PCR. During the Congress, Ceaușescu made a speech denouncing the anti-Communist revolutions happening throughout the rest of Eastern Europe. But the following month, Ceaușescu's regime itself collapsed after a series of violent events in Timişoara and Bucharest in December 1989.

Timişoara

Demonstrations in the city of Timişoara were triggered by the government-sponsored attempt to evict László Tőkés, an ethnic Hungarian pastor, accused by the government of inciting ethnic hatred. Members of his ethnic Hungarian congregation surrounded his apartment in a show of support.

Romanian students spontaneously joined the demonstration, which soon lost nearly all connection to its initial cause and became a more general anti-government demonstration. Regular military forces, police and Securitate fired on demonstrators on 17 December 1989. There was more, than one thousand killing and many wounding men, women and children.

On 18 December 1989, Ceaușescu departed for a state visit to Iran, leaving the duty of crushing the Timişoara revolt to his subordinates and his wife. Upon his return to Romania on the evening of 20 December, the situation became even more tense, and he gave a televised speech from the TV studio inside Central Committee Building (CC Building), in which he spoke about the events at Timişoara in terms of an "interference of foreign forces in Romania's internal affairs" and an "external aggression on Romania's sovereignty".

The country, which had little or no information of the Timişoara events from the national media, learned about the Timişoara revolt from western radio stations such as Voice of America and Radio Free Europe, and by word of mouth. On the next day, 21 December, a mass meeting was staged. Official media presented it as a "spontaneous movement of support for Ceaușescu", emulating the 1968 meeting in which Ceaușescu had spoken against the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw Pact forces.

Overthrow

File:Romanian Revlution 1989 3.jpg
Nicolae Ceaușescu flees Bucharest by helicopter on 22 December 1989

The mass meeting of 21 December, held in what is now Revolution Square, began like many of Ceaușescu's speeches over the years. With the usual "wooden language", Ceaușescu delivered a litany of the achievements of the "socialist revolution" and Romanian "multi-laterally developed socialist society".

He had seriously misjudged the crowd's mood, and several people began jeering, booing and whistling at him; as the speech wore on, more and more people did the same. Others began chanting "Ti-mi-șoa-ra! Ti-mi-șoa-ra!" Ceaușescu's uncomprehending facial expression as the crowd began to boo and heckle him remains one of the defining moments of the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe. He tried to silence them by raising his right hand, and when that did not work, he announced that they would receive a raise of 100 lei per month.[5] Failing to control the crowds, the Ceaușescus finally took cover inside the building, where they remained until the next day. The rest of the day saw an open revolt of the Bucharest population, which had assembled in University Square and confronted the police and army at barricades. The unarmed rioters were no match for the military apparatus concentrated in Bucharest, which cleared the streets by midnight and arrested hundreds of people in the process.

Although the television broadcasts of the "support meeting" and subsequent events had been interrupted, Ceaușescu's reaction to the events had already been imprinted on the country's collective memory. By the morning of 22 December, the rebellion had already spread to all major cities across the country. The suspicious death of Vasile Milea, the defense minister (later confirmed as a suicide), was announced by the media. Immediately thereafter, Ceaușescu presided over the CPEx (Political Executive Committee) meeting and assumed the leadership of the army.

Believing that Milea had been murdered, the rank-and-file soldiers went over virtually en masse to the revolution, while the commanders wrote off Ceaușescu as a lost cause. Ceaușescu made a last desperate attempt to address the crowd gathered in front of the Central Committee building, but the people in the square began throwing stones and other projectiles at him, forcing him to take refuge in the building once more. One group of protesters forced open the doors of the building, by now left unprotected. They managed to overpower Ceaușescu's bodyguards and rushed through his office and onto the balcony. Although they did not know it, they were only a few meters from Ceaușescu, who was trapped in an elevator. He, Elena and four others managed to get to the roof and escaped by helicopter, only seconds ahead of a group of demonstrators who had followed them there.[5] The PCR disappeared soon afterward—a testament to how much it had become subordinated to Ceaușescu's whims. Unlike its kindred parties in the former Soviet bloc, it has never been revived, and no present-day Romanian party claims to be its successor.

During the course of the revolution, the western press published estimates of the number of people killed by the Securitate in attempting to support Ceaușescu and quell the rebellion. The count increased rapidly until an estimated 64,000 fatalities were widely reported across front pages. The Hungarian military attaché expressed doubt regarding these figures, pointing out the unfeasible logistics of killing such a large number of people in such a short period of time. After Ceaușescu's death, hospitals across the country reported a death toll of less than 1,000, and probably much lower than that.[16]

Death

Grave of Nicolae Ceaușescu, Ghencea Civil Cemetery (Bucharest)

Ceaușescu and his wife Elena fled the capital with Emil Bobu and Manea Mănescu and headed, by helicopter, for Ceaușescu's Snagov residence, from where they fled again, this time for Târgovişte. Near Târgovişte they abandoned the helicopter, having been ordered to land by the army, which by that time had restricted flying in Romania's airspace. The Ceaușescus were held by the police while the policemen listened to the radio. They were eventually turned over to the army. On Christmas Day, 25 December, the two were tried in a brief show trial and sentenced to death by a military court on charges ranging from illegal gathering of wealth to genocide, and were executed in Târgovişte. During the trial, Ceaușescu repeatedly denied the court's authority to try him, and asserted he was still legally president of Romania. The video of the trial shows that, after sentencing, they had their hands tied behind their backs and were led outside the building to be killed.

The Ceaușescus were killed by a firing squad consisting of elite paratroop regiment soldiers: Captain Ionel Boeru, Sergeant-Major Georghin Octavian and Dorin-Marian Cirlan,[17] while reportedly hundreds of others also volunteered. The firing squad began shooting as soon as the two were in position against a wall. The firing happened too soon for the film crew covering the events to record it.[18] Before his sentence was carried out, Nicolae Ceaușescu sang "The Internationale" while being led up against the wall. After the shooting, the bodies were covered with canvas. The hasty show trial and the images of the dead Ceaușescus were videotaped and the footage promptly released in numerous western countries. Later that day, it was also shown on Romanian television.[19][20]

The Ceaușescus were the last people to be executed in Romania before the abolition of capital punishment on 7 January 1990.[21]

Their graves are located in Ghencea Cemetery in Bucharest. They are buried on opposite sides of a path. The graves themselves are unassuming, but they tend to be covered in flowers and symbols of the regime. In April 2007, their son Valentin Ceaușescu lost an appeal for an investigation into whether the graves were genuine. Upon his death in 1996, the elder son, Nicu, was buried nearby in the same cemetery. According to Jurnalul Național,[22] requests were made by the Ceaușescus' daughter Zoia and by supporters of their political views to move their remains to mausoleums or to purpose-built churches. These have been denied by the government. On 21 July 2010, forensic scientists exhumed the bodies of the Ceaușescus to perform DNA tests.[23][24] It was determined that they were indeed the remains of the Ceaușescus.[25]

Personality cult and authoritarianism

Ceaușescu created a pervasive personality cult, giving himself such titles as "Conducător" ("Leader") and "Geniul din Carpați" ("The Genius of the Carpathians"), with help from Proletarian Culture (Proletkult), and even had a king-like sceptre made for himself.

The most important day of the year during Ceaușescu's rule was his birthday, 26 January—a day which saw Romanian media saturated with praise for him. According to historian Victor Sebestyen, it was one of the few days of the year when the average Romanian put on a happy face, since appearing miserable on this day was too risky to contemplate.[5]

Such excesses prompted the painter Salvador Dalí to send a congratulatory telegram to the "Conducător", in which he sarcastically congratulated Ceaușescu on his "introducing the presidential sceptre". The Communist Party daily Scînteia published the message, unaware that it was a work of satire. To avoid new treason after Pacepa's defection, Ceaușescu also invested his wife Elena and other members of his family with important positions in the government, leading Romanians to joke that Ceaușescu was creating "socialism in one family".

Not surprisingly, Ceaușescu was greatly concerned about his public image. Nearly all pictures of him showed him in his early 40s. Romanian state television was under strict orders to portray him in the best possible light. Additionally, producers had to take great care to make sure that Ceaușescu's height — he was 1.65m (5 foot 5 inches) tall — was never emphasized on screen. Consequences for breaking these rules were severe; one producer showed footage of Ceaușescu blinking and stuttering, and was banned for three months.[5]

Statesmanship

With Warsaw Pact leaders, 1987 (from left): Husák of Czechoslovakia, Zhivkov of Bulgaria, Honecker of East Germany, Gorbachev of the USSR, Ceaușescu, Jaruzelski of Poland, and Kádár of Hungary

Ceaușescu's Romania was the only Communist country that retained diplomatic relations with Israel and did not sever diplomatic relations after Israel's launch of the Six-Day War in 1967 against Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. Ceaușescu made efforts to act as a mediator between the PLO and Israel. Similarly, Romania was the only Soviet-bloc country to attend the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

He organised a successful referendum for reducing the size of the Romanian Army by 5% and held large rallies for peace.

Ceaușescu tried to play a role of influence and guidance in African countries.[citation needed] He was a close ally and personal friend of dictator President Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaïre. Relations were in fact not just state-to-state, but party-to-party between the MPR and the Romanian Communist Party. Many believe that Ceaușescu's death played a role in influencing Mobutu to "democratise" Zaïre in 1990.[26]

France granted Ceaușescu the Legion of Honour and in 1978 he became an Honorary British Knight[27] (GCB, stripped in 1989) in the UK, Elena Ceaușescu was arranged to be "elected" to membership of a Science Academy in the USA; all of these, and more, were arranged by the Ceaușescus as a propaganda ploy through the consular cultural attachés of Romanian embassies in the countries involved.

Ceaușescu's Romania was the only Warsaw Pact country that did not sever diplomatic relations with Chile after Augusto Pinochet's coup.[28]

In August 1976, Nicolae Ceaușescu was the first high-level Romanian visitor to Bessarabia since World War II. In December 1976, at one of his meetings in Bucharest, Ivan Bodiul said that "the good relationship was initiated by Ceaușescu's visit to Soviet Moldavia."[29]

Legacy

His successor, Ion Iliescu, and Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1976

Nicolae and [[Elena Ceaușescu] had three children, Valentin Ceaușescu (born 1948) a nuclear physicist, Nicu Ceaușescu (1951–1996) also a physicist, and a daughter Zoia Ceaușescu (1949–2006), who was a mathematician. After the death of his parents, Nicu Ceaușescu ordered the construction of an Orthodox church, the walls of which are decorated with portraits of his parents.[22]

Praising the crimes of so-called totalitarian regimes and denigrating their victims is forbidden by law in Romania; this includes the Ceaușescu regime. Dinel Staicu was fined 25,000 lei (approx. 9,000 United States dollars) for praising Ceaușescu and displaying his pictures on his private television channel (3TV Oltenia).[30] Nevertheless, according to opinion polls held in 2010, 41% of Romanians would vote for Ceaușescu[31][32] and 63% think that their lives were better before 1989.[33][34]

Ceaușescu's last days in power were dramatized in a stage musical, The Fall of Ceaușescu, written and composed by Ron Conner. It premiered at the Los Angeles Theater Center in September 1995 and was attended by Ion Iliescu, the then president of Romania who had been visiting Los Angeles at the time.

One unresolved mystery that followed the death of Nicolae Ceaușescu pertains to Romania's Apollo 17 Goodwill Moon rock which was in Ceaușescu's possession at the time of his death, but has since disappeared. This moon rock was presented by the Nixon Administration to Romania and is said to be worth 5 million dollars on the black market.[35]

"Ceauşism"

While the term Ceauşism became widely used inside Romania, usually as a pejorative, it never achieved status in academia. This can be explained by the largely crude and syncretic character of the dogma. Ceaușescu attempted to include his views in mainstream Marxist theory, to which he added his belief in a "multilaterally developed socialist society" as a necessary stage between the Marxist concepts of Socialist and Communist societies (a critical view reveals that the main reason for the interval is the disappearance of the State and Party structures in Communism). A Romanian Encyclopedic Dictionary entry in 1978 underlines the concept as "a new, superior, stage in the socialist development of Romania [...] begun by the 1971–1975 Five-Year Plan, prolonged over several [succeeding and projected] Five-Year Plans".[36]

Ceauşism's main trait was a form of Romanian nationalism,[37] one which arguably propelled Ceaușescu to power in 1965, and probably accounted for the Party leadership gathered around Ion Gheorghe Maurer choosing him over the more orthodox Gheorghe Apostol. Although he had previously been a careful supporter of the official lines, Ceaușescu came to embody Romanian society's wish for independence after what many considered years of Soviet directives and purges, during and after the SovRom fiasco. He carried this nationalist option inside the Party, manipulating it against the nominated successor Apostol. This nationalist policy had more timid precedents:[38] for example, the Gheorghiu-Dej regime had overseen the withdrawal of the Red Army in 1958.

It had also engineered the publishing of several works that subverted the Russian and Soviet image, such as the final volumes of the official History of Romania, no longer glossing over traditional points of tension with Russia and the Soviet Union (even alluding to an unlawful Soviet presence in Bessarabia). In the final years of Gheorghiu-Dej's rule more problems were openly discussed, with the publication of a collection of Karl Marx texts that dealt with Romanian topics, showing Marx's previously censored, politically uncomfortable views of Russia.

Ceaușescu was prepared to take a more decisive step in questioning Soviet policies. In the early years of his rule, he generally relaxed political pressures inside Romanian society,[39] which led to the late 1960s and early 1970s being the most liberal decade in Communist Romania. Gaining the public's confidence, Ceaușescu took a clear stand against the 1968 crushing of the Prague Spring by Leonid Brezhnev. After a visit from Charles de Gaulle earlier in the same year (during which the French President gave recognition to the incipient maverick), Ceaușescu's public speech in August deeply impressed the population, not only through its themes, but also because, uniquely, it was unscripted. He immediately attracted Western sympathies and backing, which lasted well beyond the 'liberal' phase of his regime; at the same time, the period brought forward the threat of armed Soviet invasion: significantly, many young men inside Romania joined the Patriotic Guards created on the spur of the moment, in order to meet the perceived threat.[40] President Richard Nixon was invited to Bucharest in 1969, which was the first visit of a United States president to a Communist country.

Alexander Dubček's version of Socialism with a human face was never suited to Romanian communist goals. Ceaușescu found himself briefly aligned with Dubček's Czechoslovakia and Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavia. The latter friendship was to last well into the 1980s, with Ceaușescu adapting the Titoist doctrine of "independent socialist development" to suit his own objectives. Romania proclaimed itself a "Socialist" (in place of "People's") Republic to show that it was fulfilling Marxist goals without Moscow's overseeing.

The system's nationalist traits grew and progressively blended with Juche and Maoist ideals. In 1971, the Party, which had already been completely purged of internal opposition (with the possible exception of Gheorghe Gaston Marin),[38] approved the July Theses, expressing Ceaușescu's disdain of Western models as a whole, and the reevaluation of the recent liberalisation as bourgeois. The 1974 11th Congress tightened the Party's grip on Romanian culture, guiding it towards Ceaușescu's nationalist principles:.[41] Notably, it demanded that Romanian historians refer to Dacians as having "an unorganised State", part of a political continuum that culminated in the Socialist Republic.[41] The regime continued its cultural dialogue with ancient forms, with Ceaușescu connecting his cult of personality to figures such as Mircea cel Bătrân (whom he styled Mircea the Great) and Mihai Viteazul. It also started adding Dacian or Roman versions to the names of cities and towns (Drobeta to Turnu Severin, Napoca to Cluj).[42]

A new generation of committed supporters on the outside confirmed the regime's character. Ceaușescu probably never emphasized that his policies constituted a paradigm for theorists of National Bolshevism such as Jean-François Thiriart, but there was a publicised connection between him and Iosif Constantin Drăgan, an Iron Guardist Romanian-Italian émigré millionaire (Drăgan was already committed to a Dacian Protochronism that largely echoed the official cultural policy).

Nicolae Ceaușescu had a major influence on modern-day Romanian populist rhetoric. In his final years, he had begun to rehabilitate the image of pro-Nazi dictator Ion Antonescu. Although Antonescu's was never a fully official myth in Ceaușescu's time, today's politicians such as Corneliu Vadim Tudor have coupled the images of the two leaders into their versions of a national Pantheon. The conflict with Hungary over the treatment of the Magyar minority in Romania had several unusual aspects: not only was it a vitriolic argument between two officially Socialist states (as Hungary had not yet officially embarked on the course to a free market economy), it also marked the moment when Hungary, a state behind the Iron Curtain, appealed to the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe for sanctions to be taken against Romania. This meant that the later 1980s were marked by a pronounced anti-Hungarian discourse, which owed more to nationalist tradition than to Marxism,[43] and the ultimate isolation of Romania on the world stage.

The strong opposition of his regime to all forms of perestroika and glasnost placed Ceaușescu at odds with Mikhail Gorbachev. He was very displeased when other Warsaw Pact countries decided to try their own versions of Gorbachev's reforms. In particular, he was incensed when Poland's leaders opted for a power-sharing arrangement with the Solidarity trade union. He even went as far as to call for a Warsaw Pact invasion of Poland—a significant reversal, considering how violently he opposed the invasion of Czechoslovakia 20 years earlier. For his part, Gorbachev made no secret of his distaste for Ceaușescu, whom he called "the Romanian führer".[5]

In November 1989, at the XIVth and last congress of the PCR, Ceaușescu condemned the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and asked for the annulment of its consequences. In effect, this amounted to a demand for the return of Bessarabia (most of which was then a Soviet republic and since 1991 has been independent Moldova) and northern Bukovina, both of which had been occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940 and again at the end of World War II.

Honours and awards

Ceaușescu received the Danish Order of the Elephant, but this award was revoked on 23 December 1989 by the queen of Denmark, Margrethe II.

Ceaușescu was likewise stripped of his honorary GCB (Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath) by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom on the day before his execution. Queen Elizabeth also returned the Romanian Order Ceaușescu had bestowed upon her.[44]

On his 70th birthday in 1988 Ceaușescu was decorated with the Karl-Marx-Orden by then Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) chief Erich Honecker; through this he was honoured for his rejection of Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms.

Template:Italian

Romanian decorations
Foreign decorations

Several foreign decorations were revoked at the time of the collapse of the Ceausescu regime.

Honorary degrees from the University of Bucharest (1973), Lebanese University (1974), University of Buenos Aires (1974), Autonomous University of Yucatan (1975), University of Nice Sophia Antipolis (1975), University of Liberia (1988) and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (1988).

Selected published works

  • Report during the joint solemn session of the CC of the Romanian Communist Party, the National Council of the Socialist Unity Front and the Grand National Assembly: Marking the 60th anniversary of the creation of a Unitary Romanian National State, 1978
  • Major problems of our time: Eliminating underdevelopment, bridging gaps between states, building a new international economic order, 1980
  • The solving of the national question in Romania (Socio-political thought of Romania's President), 1980
  • Ceauşescu: Builder of Modern Romania and International Statesman, 1983
  • The nation and co-habiting nationalities in the contemporary epoch (Philosophical thought of Romania's president), 1983
  • Istoria poporului Român în concepția preşedintelui, 1988

Notes

  1. ^ http://ceausescunicolae.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/ascrisceausescudosaruldcadresemnat.jpg
  2. ^ Johanna Granville, "Dej-a-Vu: Early Roots of Romania's Independence," East European Quarterly, vol. XLII, no. 4 (Winter 2008), pp. 365-404.
  3. ^ Boyes, Roger (24 December 2009). "Ceausescu looked in my eyes and he knew that he was going to die". The Times. London.
  4. ^ a b c Ceausescu.org
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Sebetsyen, Victor (2009). Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. New York City: Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-375-42532-2.
  6. ^ "Rumania: Enfant Terrible". Time. Monday, 2 April 1973. Retrieved 20 May 2010. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ European Union enlargement: background, developments, facts. New Jersey, USA: Transaction Publishers. 2008. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-4128-0667-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  8. ^ David Phinnemore (2006). The EU and Romania: accession and beyond. London, UK,: Federal Trust for Education and Research. p. 13. ISBN 1-903403-79-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  9. ^ Romania versus the United States: diplomacy of the absurd, 1985–1989. Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University, 1994. p. 81. ISBN 0-312-12059-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Communist Romania's Demographic Policy, U.S. Library of Congress country study for details see Gail Kligman. 1998. The Politics of Duplicity. Controlling Reproduction in Ceausescu's Romania. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  11. ^ Ceausescu's Longest-Lasting Legacy - the Cohort of '67
  12. ^ Karen Dente and Jamie Hess, Pediatric AIDS in Romania – A Country Faces Its Epidemic and Serves as a Model of Success, MedGenMed. 2006; 8(2): 11. Published online 2006 April 6.
  13. ^ See, for instance, Bohlen, Celestine, Measures to encourage reproduction included financial motivations for families who bear children, guaranteed maternity leave, and childcare support for mothers returning to work, work protection for women, and extensive access to medical control in all stages of pregnancy, as well as after. Medical control is seen as one of the most productive effects of the law, since all women who became pregnant were under the care of a qualified medical practitioner, even in rural areas. In some cases, if the women was unable to attend a medical office, the doctor would make visits to her home. "Upheaval in the East: Romania's AIDS Babies: A Legacy of Neglect," 8 February 1990, in The New York Times.
  14. ^ http://www.irisheconomy.ie/index.php/2011/01/27/debt-repayment-and-ceausescu/
  15. ^ http://www.dittatori.it/ceausescu-eng.htm
  16. ^ Aubin, Stephen P (1998). Distorting defense: network news and national security. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-275-96303-3. Retrieved 28/June/2008. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  17. ^ Boyes, Roger (24 December 2009). "Ceausescu looked in my eyes and he knew that he was going to die". The Times. London. Retrieved 20 May 2010.
  18. ^ George Galloway and Bob Wylie, Downfall: The Ceausescus and the Romanian Revolution p. 198-199. Futura Publications, 1991
  19. ^ Daniel Simpson, "Ghosts of Christmas past still haunt Romanians"
  20. ^ The dictator and his henchman
  21. ^ Cdep.ro
  22. ^ a b Jurnalul Național, 25 January 2005
  23. ^ Yahoo! News
  24. ^ Nicolae Ceaușescu's remains exhumed
  25. ^ Referl.org
  26. ^ Relations with the Communist World Library of Congress Country Study on Zaire (Former), Library of Congress Call Number DT644 .Z3425 1994. (TOC.) Data as of December 1993. Accessed online 15 October 2006.
  27. ^ List of honorary British Knights
  28. ^ Valenzuela, J. Samuel and Arturo Valenzuela (eds.), Military Rule in Chile: Dictatorship and Oppositions, p. 321
  29. ^ Romanian-Moldavian SSR relations, by Patrick Moore and the Romanian Section
  30. ^ Official communique of the National Board of the Audio-Visual, originally at cna.org but now removed, accessible through web.archive.org
  31. ^ http://www.heise.de/tp/artikel/33/33094/1.html
  32. ^ http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2011/12/27/in-romania-opinion-polls-show-nostalgia-for-communism/
  33. ^ http://www.adevarul.ro/actualitate/eveniment/Noul_Partid_Comunist_Roman-_Pionierii_0_367163711.html
  34. ^ http://www.balkanalysis.com/romania/2011/12/27/in-romania-opinion-polls-show-nostalgia-for-communism/
  35. ^ "Every Nation Received a Moon Rock, Some of them Can’t Find It" Houston Chronicle, Mike Tolson, 13 May 2010 (Reprint).
  36. ^ Mic Dicționar Enciclopedic
  37. ^ Geran Pilon, Chapter III, Communism with a Nationalist Face, p.60-66; Tănase, p.24
  38. ^ a b Geran Pilon, p.60
  39. ^ Tănase, p.23
  40. ^ Geran Pilon, p.62
  41. ^ a b Geran Pilon, p.61
  42. ^ Geran Pilon, p.61-63
  43. ^ Geran Pilon, p.63
  44. ^ The Official Website of the British Monarchy: "Queen and Honours", retrieved on 13 October 2010.
  45. ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (pdf) (in German). p. 277. Retrieved 13 October 2012. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |trans_title= (help)

References

Party political offices
Preceded by General secretary

of the Romanian Communist Party
1965–1989

Succeeded by
Party dissolved

Template:Persondata

Template:Link FA Template:Link FA Template:Link GA