Location | Pitești, Romania |
---|---|
Coordinates | 44°51′54″N 24°51′50″E / 44.8648791°N 24.8638569°E |
Status | defunct |
Population | Political prisoners |
Opened | 1942 |
Closed | 1952 |
Director | Alexandru Dumitrescu |
Street address | Strada Carpați 4 |
Website | pitestiprison |
Notable prisoners | |
Aristide Blank, Sorin Bottez, Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa, Radu Ciuceanu, Corneliu Coposu, Valeriu Gafencu, Iuliu Hirțea, Ion Ioanid, Gheorghe Mihail, Elisabeta Rizea, Alexandru Todea, Eugen Țurcanu, A. L. Zissu |
Pitești Prison (Romanian: Închisoarea Pitești) was a penal facility in Pitești, Romania, best remembered for the reeducation experiment (also known as Experimentul Pitești – the "Pitești Experiment" or Fenomenul Pitești – the "Pitești Phenomenon") which was carried out between December 1949 and September 1951, during Communist party rule. The experiment, which was implemented by a group of prisoners under the guidance of the prison administration, was designed as an attempt to violently "reeducate" the mostly young political prisoners, who were primarily supporters of the fascist Iron Guard, as well as Zionist members of the Romanian Jewish community.[1] The Romanian People's Republic adhered to a doctrine of state atheism and the inmates who were held at Pitești Prison included religious believers, such as Christian seminarians.[2][3] According to writer Romulus Rusan, the experiment's goal was to re-educate prisoners to discard past religious convictions and ideology, and, eventually, to alter their personalities to the point of absolute obedience.[4] Estimates for the total number of people who passed through the experiment range from at least 780[5] to up to 1,000,[4] to 2,000,[6] to 5,000.[7] Journalist Laurențiu Dologa estimates almost 200 inmates died at Pitești,[6] while historian Mircea Stănescu accounts for 22 deaths during the period, 16 of them with documented participation in the "re-education".[8]
After the purging of Romanian Communist Party leader Ana Pauker, the experiment was halted because the Romanian communist regime was sidelining its hardline Stalinist leaders.[9] The overseers were put on trial; while twenty of the participating prisoners were sentenced to death, prison officials were given light sentences.[4]
Journalist and anti-communist activist Virgil Ierunca referred to the "reeducation experiment" as the largest and most intensive brainwashing torture program in the Eastern Bloc.[10] In even stronger terms, Nobel Laureate and Gulag survivor Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn called it "the most terrible act of barbarism in the contemporary world".[11] Ex-detainee Gheorghe Boldur-Lățescu has described the Pitești Experiment as being "unique in the history of crimes against humanity".[12]
Researcher Monica Ciobanu noted that, as part of the Romanian post-communist politics and the trend to reincorporate a nationalist ideology within anti-communist rhetoric, the conservative right wing has attempted to reconstruct the recent past by transforming the victims in Pitești into martyrs and heroes, enlisting towards this end various quasi-religious organisations, the Romanian Orthodox Church and some former dissidents and civic organisations. Opposition to this trend has come primarily from the Elie Wiesel National Institute and others involved in the study of the Holocaust in Romania.[13]
History
Beginnings
The prison itself was built at an earlier stage. Work on it had begun in 1937, under King Carol II, and was completed in 1941, during Ion Antonescu's rule. At the time, it was the most modern detention facility in Romania. Located at the northern edge of Pitești, the building was structured on four levels: basement, ground floor, and two upper floors, arranged in a T-shaped design.[14] The first political prisoners it housed arrived in 1942; these were high school students suspected of having taken part in the Legionnaires' rebellion.[15][14] For a while after the proclamation of the Romanian People's Republic in December 1947, it continued to house primarily those found guilty of misdemeanors. Shortly after the establishment of the Securitate in August 1948, the Pitești Prison became a detention center for university students.[14] By April 1949, the director of Pitești Prison was Alexandru Dumitrescu.[16]
According to Rusan, early attempts at "reeducation" had occurred at the prison in Suceava, continuing in a violent manner in Pitești and, less violently, at the Gherla Prison.[4] The group of overseers had been formed from people who had themselves been arrested and found guilty of political crimes. Their leader, Eugen Țurcanu, a prisoner and former member of the Iron Guard, who had also shortly joined the Communist Party before being purged, dissatisfied with the progress in Suceava, proposed using violent means in order to enhance the process, obtaining the agreement of the Pitești prison administration.[17] Țurcanu, who was probably acting on the orders of Securitate deputy chief Alexandru Nikolski,[18] selected a tight unit of reeducation survivors as his assistants in carrying out political tasks. This group was called the Organizația Deținuților cu Convingeri Comuniste (ODCC, "Organisation of Detainees with Communist Beliefs"),[18] and included the future Orthodox priest and dissident Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa and the Jewish detainee Petrică Fux.[19]
Stages of "reeducation"
According to writers Ruxandra Cesereanu and Romulus Rusan the process begun in 1949 involved psychological punishment (mainly through humiliation) and physical torture.[20] Initially the director of the prison, Dumitrescu, was not in favor of reeducation; he changed course, however, after Ion Marina, the local representative of the Securitate, applied pressure on him. Marina was closely coordinating with the leadership of the Directorate for Penitentiaries, particularly with Iosif Nemeș, the chief of the Operations Service, and with Tudor Sepeanu, the head of Inspection Services.[13]
Detainees, who were subject to regular and severe beatings, were required to engage in torturing each other, with the goal of discouraging past loyalties.[21] Guards would force them to attend scheduled or ad-hoc political instruction sessions, on topics such as dialectical materialism and Joseph Stalin's History of the CPSU(B) Short Course, usually accompanied by random violence and encouraged delation (demascare, lit. "unmasking") for various real or invented misdemeanors.[22] According to a former participant in the "reeducation", on occasion, the director of the prison, Dumitrescu, would personally engage in those beatings.[23]
First stage
Each subject of the experiment was initially thoroughly interrogated, with torture applied as a mean to expose intimate details of his life ("external unmasking").[22] Hence, they were required to reveal everything they were thought to have hidden from previous interrogations; hoping to escape torture, many prisoners would confess to imaginary misdeeds.[18]
Second stage
The second phase, "internal unmasking," required the tortured to reveal the names of those who had behaved less brutally or with relative indulgence to them in detention.[22]
Third stage
Public humiliation was also enforced, usually at the third stage ("public moral unmasking"),[22] inmates were forced to denounce all their personal beliefs, loyalties, and values. Notably, religious inmates had to blaspheme religious symbols and sacred texts.[18]
Torture methods
According to Virgil Ierunca (an anti-communist activist and member of the Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania), Christian baptism was gruesomely mocked. Guards chanted baptismal rites as buckets of urine and fecal matter were brought to inmates. The inmate's head was pushed into the raw sewage; their head would remain submerged almost to the point of death. The head was then raised, the inmate allowed to breathe, only to have his or her head pushed back into the sewage.[3]
Ierunca further states that the prisoners' whole bodies were burned with cigarettes; their buttocks would begin to rot, and their skin fell off as though they suffered from leprosy. Others were forced to swallow spoons of excrement, and when they threw it back up, they were forced to eat their own vomit.[3][24] The inmates were required to accept the notion that their own family members had various criminal and grotesque features; they were required to author false autobiographies, comprising accounts of deviant behavior.[22] Any prisoner who refused to become a perpetrator or who did not beat a former friend mercilessly was crushed by Țurcanu’s most brutal assistants — Steiner, Gherman, Pătrășcanu, Roșca, and Oprea.[5]
In addition to physical violence, inmates subject to "reeducation" were supposed to work for exhausting periods doing humiliating chores – for instance, cleaning the floor with a rag clenched between the teeth. Inmates were malnourished and kept in degrading and unsanitary conditions.[25]
Not able to resist the physical and psychological violence, some prisoners tried to commit suicide by severing their veins.[26]: 164 Two of the inmates, Gheorghe Șerban and Gheorghe Vătășoiu, ended their lives by throwing themselves through the opening between the stairways, before safety nets were installed.[26]: 169–173 [27][6] Many died from injuries sustained during beatings and torture. Alexandru Bogdanovici, one of the initiators of the reeducation process at Suceava, was repeatedly tortured until his death in April 1950.[26]: 208 [28]
Origin
Historian Adrian Cioroianu argued that techniques used by the ODCC could have been ultimately derived from Anton Makarenko's controversial pedagogy and penology principles in respect to rehabilitation.[18] Such connection was however disputed by historian Mihai Demetriade, who noted that similar cases of extreme violence within imprisoned Iron Guard groups existed before the advent of the communist regime.[29] Literary critic Arleen Ionescu argues that, "although Makarenko's and Țurcanu's projects of engineering a New Man show structural analogies, the texture of the experience was very different."[30]
Selection for labor camps
The prison also ensured a preliminary selection for the labor camps at the Danube–Black Sea Canal, Ocnele Mari, and other sites, where squads of former inmates were supposed to extend the experiment.[18]
Ending and legacy
In 1952, as Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej successfully maneuvered against the Minister of the Interior Teohari Georgescu, the process was stopped by the authorities themselves.[4] The ODCC secretly faced trial for abuse, and over twenty death sentences were handed out on 10 November 1954. Țurcanu was held responsible for the murder of 30 prisoners, and the abuse exercised on 780 others.[25] He and sixteen accomplices were executed by firing squad on 17 December at Jilava Prison. Securitate officials who had overseen the experiment were tried the following year; all were given light sentences, and were freed soon after.[31] Colonel Sepeanu was arrested in March 1953 and sentenced to 8 years on 16 April 1957, but was pardoned and set free on 13 November of that year.[32] Responding to new ideological guidelines, the court concluded that the experiment had been the result of successful infiltration of American and Horia Sima's Iron Guard agents into the Securitate, with the goal of discrediting Romanian law enforcement.[33]
Abandoned and partially in ruin, the building was sold to a construction firm in 1991, after the Revolution of 1989; several of the facilities have either been torn down or underwent major changes.[7] A memorial was built in front of the prison's entrance.[7]
According to the Romanian historian Mircea Stănescu, tens of people died in the "Pitești experiment"; its aim was not to kill the inmates, but to "reeducate" them.[26] For a 2017 art exhibit at the former Pitești Prison, artist Cătălin Bădărău sculpted contorted figures lying in the hallways or in the cells; one figure stood awkwardly on his head, others had their hands tied behind their backs or were covering their faces. According to Bădărău, "They were strong people when they went into prison but they came out physical wrecks. But conversely, they became spiritual giants."[34]
Inmates
See also
Notes
- ↑ Cesereanu; Cioroianu, pp. 316–317; Rusan; Wexler
- ↑ Stan, Lavinia (2013). Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Romania: The Politics of Memory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-02053-5.
- 1 2 3 Bartošek, Karel (1999). "The Other Europe: Central and Southeastern Europe". In Courtois, Stéphane (ed.). The Black Book of Communism. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 421. ISBN 978-0-674-07608-2.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Rusan
- 1 2 Ionescu, Arleen (2019-03-29). "Witnessing Horrorism: The Pitești Experiment" (PDF). Slovo. 32 (1): 53–74. doi:10.14324/111.0954-6839.086. S2CID 167035395.
- 1 2 3 Dologa, Laurențiu (August 15, 2010). "Să ne amintim: Experimentul Pitești – spălarea creierului prin tortură" [Let's remember: The Pitești experiment – brainwashing through torture]. ziare.com (in Romanian). Retrieved August 24, 2021.
- 1 2 3 Popa
- ↑ Stănescu, Mircea (2008). "Asupra numărului morților din reeducarea "de tip Pitești" (1949-1951). O reevaluare". Experimentul Pitești – reeducarea prin tortură. Simpozion internațional. Pitești: Fundația Culturală "Memoria". 7: 115–140. ISSN 1843-4746. OCLC 935614981.
- ↑ Guides, Rough (4 August 2016). The Rough Guide to Romania. Rough Guides UK. p. 87. ISBN 9780241291610.
The experiment was abandoned in 1952, when the Stalinist leader Ana Pauker was purged
- ↑ Ierunca, p. 41
- ↑ "10th edition of international symposium on the Pitești experiment, re-education through torture". Agerpres. October 1, 2010. Archived from the original on 2017-02-14. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
- ↑ Boldur-Lățescu, Gheorghe (2005). The communist genocide in Romania. New York: Nova Science Publishers. p. 22. ISBN 1-59454-251-1. OCLC 57002619.
- 1 2 Ciobanu, Monica (2015). "Pitești: a project in reeducation and its post-1989 interpretation in Romania". Nationalities Papers. Cambridge University Press. 43 (4): 615–633. doi:10.1080/00905992.2014.984288. ISSN 0090-5992. S2CID 145186064.
- 1 2 3 Grigorescu, Denis (July 8, 2017). "Pe urmele durerii: fosta închisoare Pitești, locul unde tortura a ajuns obiect de studiu" [In search of the pain: The former Pitești prison, the place where torture became an object of study]. Adevărul (in Romanian). Retrieved August 25, 2021.
- ↑ Ungureanu, Laurențiu (March 17, 2013). "Nicolae Purcărea, supraviețuitor al 'Fenomenului Pitești'". Adevărul (in Romanian). Retrieved March 31, 2013.
- ↑ "Eugen Țurcanu". pitestiprison.org (in Romanian). Retrieved May 25, 2020.
- ↑ Cioroianu, pp. 316–317
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Cioroianu, p. 317
- ↑ Wexler
- ↑ Cesereanu; Rusan
- ↑ Cesereanu; Cioroianu, p. 317; Rusan
- 1 2 3 4 5 Cesereanu; Cioroianu, p. 317
- ↑ "Directorul Alexandru Dumitrescu – apărătorul torționarilor". /www.fericiticeiprigoniti.net (in Romanian). Retrieved 25 May 2020.
- ↑ Curtifan, Tudor. "Fenomenul Pitești, pandemoniul închisorilor comuniste. Tortură și teroare la Pitești!" [The Pitești phenomenon, the pandemonium of communist prisons. Torture and terror in Pitești!]. Historia (in Romanian). Retrieved May 24, 2020.
- 1 2 Cioroianu, p. 318
- 1 2 3 4 Stănescu, Mircea (2010). Reeducarea în România comunistă (1945–1952) [Reeducation in communist Romania (1945–1952)] (in Romanian). Vol. I. Iași: Polirom. ISBN 978-973-46-1626-8. OCLC 639579904.
- ↑ Mureșan, Alin (2010). Pitești. Cronica unei sinucideri asistate [Pitești. Chronicle of an assisted suicide] (in Romanian) (Second ed.). Iași: Polirom. p. 61. ISBN 978-973-46-0798-3. OCLC 778314155.
- ↑ "Alexandru "Șura" Bogdanovici". pitestiprison.org (in Romanian). Retrieved August 24, 2021.
- ↑ Totok, William (28 October 2019). "Ororile de la Pitești. Interviu cu cercetătorul CNSAS, Mihai Demetriade". RFI România: Actualitate, informaţii, știri în direct (in Romanian). RFI România. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
- ↑ Ionescu, Arleen (January 2022). "Makarenko's and Țurcanu's Re-Education Projects: Debunking a Myth in Romanian Historiography". Partial Answers: Journal of Literature and the History of Ideas. 20 (1): 1–26. doi:10.1353/pan.2022.0004. S2CID 245849120.
- ↑ Rusan; Wexler
- ↑ Ioniță, Nicolae (2014), "Șefii unităților centrale și teritoriale de Securitate 1948–1989" [The Leaders of the Central and Regional Divisions of the Securitate] (PDF), cnsas.ro (in Romanian), retrieved May 25, 2020
- ↑ Cioroianu, p. 318; Rusan
- ↑ Mutler, Alison (July 21, 2017). "Romania: Art exhibit at ex-prison show horrors of communism". Associated Press. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
References
- Cesereanu, Ruxandra (21 April 2003). "Contra-spălarea creierului ori contrareeducarea ca posibil concept" [Counter-brainwashing or Counter-reeducation as a Possible Concept"]. Revista 22 (in Romanian). Retrieved 25 May 2020.
- Cioroianu, Adrian (2005). Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc [On the Shoulders of Marx. An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism] (in Romanian). Bucharest: Editura Curtea Veche. OCLC 1074083928.
- Ierunca, Virgil (1981). Pitești. Madrid: Editura Limite. ISBN 9788494844126.
- Popa, Ilie. "Memoria în prezent" [Memoria at Present]. Memoria (in Romanian). Archived from the original on 2004-07-16. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
- Rusan, Romulus (31 May 2009). "Geografia și cronologia Gulagului românesc" [The Geography and Chronology of the Romanian Gulag]. www.memorialsighet.ro (in Romanian). Sighet Memorial Museum.
- Spiridon, Cassian Maria (September 2003). "Tragedia Pitești" [The Pitești Tragedy]. Convorbiri Literare (in Romanian). Archived from the original on 2017-11-10.
- Wexler, Teodor (2020), "Procesul sioniștilor" [Trial of the Zionists], Memoria (in Romanian), 31 (2): 118–122
Further reading
- Beyond Invisible Walls: The Psychological Legacy of Soviet Trauma, East European Therapists and Their Patients. Robert Jay Lifton, Jacob D. Lindy (2001), Edwards Brothers. ISBN 1-58391-318-1.
External links
- (in Romanian) Pitești Hall at the Sighet Memorial