Onisifor Ghibu

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Onisifor Ghibu (May 31, 1883October 3, 1972) was a Romanian teacher of pedagogy, member of the Romanian Academy, and politician.

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[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Born into a peasant family in Sălişte, near Sibiu, Transylvania (then known as Hermannstadt, and part of Austria-Hungary), he attended the Hungarian language high school in Sibiu and then the Romanian language gymnasium in Braşov (Kronstadt). Afterwards, he continued his studies at the Romanian Orthodox Seminary in Sibiu, where he received stipends for study at the University of Bucharest and the University of Budapest.

[edit] World War I and interwar

In 1914, after the outbreak of World War I, Ghibu fled to the Old Kingdom, and, in 1916, after Romania joined the Entente side, he moved to Bessarabia, which was part of the Russian Empire. Throughout the Romanian Campaign and the Russian Revolution, Ghibu was active in the national Romanian movement which eventually led to the creation of a Moldavian Democratic Republic, which joined Greater Romania.

Between 1919 and 1940, he was a professor at the University of Cluj (now Babeş-Bolyai University).

[edit] Life under communism

Upon the close of World War II, with the outbreak of Soviet occupation, Ghibu was arrested on March 22, 1945, and subsequently imprisoned in the internment camp at Caracal, where he spent 222 days.

After the establishment of the communist regime in Romania, he was again arrested (December 10, 1956), and initially sentenced to 5 years in prison for organizing a rally of students at the seminary, which was inspired by the Hungarian Revolution and deemed an "action against the democratic people's regime of the People's Republic of Romania". Incarcerated successively in the prisons of Văcăreşti, Sibiu and Făgăraş, he was released after 2 years, on January 13, 1958.

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