Communism and Anti-Communist Dissent in Romania as Reflected in Contemporary Textbooks
Abstract
:“History makes fools of those who do not know it, by repeating itself.”Nicolae Iorga(Romanian Historian, 1871–1940)
1. Introduction
2. Literature
3. Conceptual Framework
4. Methodology
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. The Suppression of Public Rights and Freedoms, Censorship and Repression or … “It Used to Be Worse”
5.2. Communism as a Motor Factor of Economic and Social Development or … “It Used to Be Better”. From Information in Textbooks to the Emotional Stories of Nostalgic Parents and Grandparents
5.2.1. Industrialization and Urbanization as a “Response” to the Valev Plan. Nationalist Communism and Its Social Consequences
5.2.2. Romanian Society under Communist Totalitarianism. Repression Versus Obedience and Adaptation
5.3. The Young Generation’s Perception of Communism between “It Used to Be Worse” and “It Used to Be Better”
5.3.1. The Quality of Education in Romania. How We Begin the Analysis
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- A lack of adapting to changes in society. In the current technological conditions and the influx of information through various media sources, learning is no longer limited to how much one can assimilate, but to what one assimilates, to how one extracts knowledge from the multitude of information one can obtain. A. Schleicher, director of education of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, believed, in this regard, that “in the 20th century, democracy had to do with the right of being equal to others; in the 21st century, democracy has to do with the right of being different. We must understand that students need to learn differently” (Schleicher, quoted by [52]);
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- A lack of equity in Romanian schools. There are very big differences in how students perform in different schools, which stems from unequal development (rural–urban, disadvantaged regions and social environments, areas of endemic poverty, etc.);
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- A lack of satisfaction with the educational process, both in the case of students, as well as teachers. Students learn strictly in order to achieve good grades, and teachers teach strictly related to their subject. Romania needs high-calibre teachers, leaders who also constantly learn and collaborate with students. The Romanian educational system, developed in the 1960s and 1970s, under the thumb of communist totalitarianism, has made not enough progress in this regard.
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- Chronic underfunding. An analysis at the European level highlights the fact that the Romanian education system is the least funded in the EU, benefitting from just 3.1% of GDP in 2020, a percentage that decreased in 2021 to only 2.5% of GDP, compared to 7.8% of GDP in Denmark or 7.6% in Sweden. In comparison, Bulgaria assigns 4.1% of GDP to education, and Hungary 4.7% [53].
5.3.2. The Young Generation’s Perception of Communism as Reflected in Several Polls
- What are, in your opinion, the three main characteristics of communism?
- How do you appreciate the influence of communism on contemporary Romanian society?
- What do you think about communism?
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Year of Reference | The Perception on Communism in Romania (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Good Idea, Correctly Implemented | Good Idea, Poorly Implemented | Bad Idea | |
2009 | 12 | 41 | 34 |
2013 | 14 | 47 | 27 |
Subject Data | Answers to Questions | General Opinion | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
M/W | Age | Occupation | A:Q1 | A:Q2 | A:Q3 | A:Q4 | |
M | 22 | Sociology Student | The parents’ experience | The Police, restrictions in place | The international context | Repressive, stupid, but reformative | Unfavourable |
W | 22 | Manager’s Assistant | Hard times, queuing, rationing | The lack of access to information | For fear of the authorities, the citizen’s resignation | He rationed food, developed the economy and infrastructure | Unfavourable |
W | 18 | Highschool Student | Queuing, shortages | The outlawing of abortions | The people’s mentality | He changed the educational system, he passed harsh laws | Unfavourable |
W | 19 | Law Student | Pain, repression | The perversion of values | The lack of unity to effect change | The main representation of all horrors | Unfavourable |
M | 19 | Economics Student | Dark times which impact present-day mentalities | The mentality born during that time | The lack of international involvement | He did both good and bad things | Neutral |
W | 19 | Highschool Graduate | Repression | Unquestionable obedience | The fear | Was not a good president, because he acted against the citizens | Unfavourable |
M | 19 | Sociology Student | Food and electricity shortages | Censorship and the repressive system | In the beginning, the system worked | He was inspired by the cult of personality, he exported everything the country produced | Unfavourable |
Subject Data | The Main Characteristics of Communism and of Nicolae Ceauşescu according to the Interviewed Subject | General Opinion | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
M/W | Age | Occupation | ||
M | 20 | Law Student | There are no reasons for communism nostalgia. It was a difficult time, of lies and shortcomings. The cities were demolished, history was distorted. The urban physiognomy was destroyed. | Unfavourable |
W | 19 | Psychology Student | The communist regime wished to promote freedom, but the opposite happened. Everything worked on the basis of who-knows-who, which still has consequences in the population’s way of thinking. | Unfavourable |
M | 21 | Geography Student | Romania was governed by the Russians, Ceauşescu was a puppet. Young intellectuals were imprisoned and beaten, even imprisoned, and killed in camps. Man must be free, think freely and express himself freely. | Unfavourable |
W | 23 | Coventry University Graduate | They are not nostalgic for communism. There was censorship, TV broadcast was limited and propaganda-based. There were frequent power outages. Everyone had a job, work was mandatory. There were food shortages, queues were a common occurrence. | Unfavourable |
M | 21 | Psychology Student | Ceauşescu was a typical example of the average Romanian: mediocre intellectual abilities, displayed a tendency to assert himself, had ambitions, pride, megalomania, was easily influenced. The communist regime was based on an oversized economy, a chaotic use of resources, fear, all sorts of shortages, stable employment, and services. | Unfavourable |
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Săgeată, R.; Damian, N.; Mitrică, B. Communism and Anti-Communist Dissent in Romania as Reflected in Contemporary Textbooks. Societies 2021, 11, 140. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11040140
Săgeată R, Damian N, Mitrică B. Communism and Anti-Communist Dissent in Romania as Reflected in Contemporary Textbooks. Societies. 2021; 11(4):140. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11040140
Chicago/Turabian StyleSăgeată, Radu, Nicoleta Damian, and Bianca Mitrică. 2021. "Communism and Anti-Communist Dissent in Romania as Reflected in Contemporary Textbooks" Societies 11, no. 4: 140. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11040140
APA StyleSăgeată, R., Damian, N., & Mitrică, B. (2021). Communism and Anti-Communist Dissent in Romania as Reflected in Contemporary Textbooks. Societies, 11(4), 140. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11040140