Petru Groza

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Petru Groza
Prime Minister of Romania
In office
March 6, 1945  June 2, 1952
Monarch Michael
President Constantin Ion Parhon
Preceded by Nicolae Rădescu
Succeeded by Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej
President of the Presidium of the Great National Assembly
In office
June 12, 1952  January 7, 1958
Preceded by Constantin Ion Parhon
Succeeded by Ion Gheorghe Maurer
Personal details
Born (1884-12-07)December 7, 1884
Băcia, Romania
Died January 7, 1958(1958-01-07) (aged 73)
Bucharest, Romania
Nationality Romanian
Political party Ploughmen's Front (1933-1953)
Independent (1953-1958)
Profession lawyer
Religion Romanian Orthodox [citation needed]

Petru Groza (December 7, 1884 - January 7, 1958) was a Romanian politician, best known as the Prime Minister of the first Communist Party-dominated governments under Soviet occupation during the early stages of the Communist regime in Romania.

Groza emerged as a public figure at the end of World War I as a notable member of the Romanian National Party (PNR), preeminent layman of the Romanian Orthodox Church, and then member of the Directory Council of Transylvania. In 1933, Groza founded a left-wing Agrarian organization known as the Ploughmen's Front (Frontul Plugarilor). The left-wing ideas he supported earned him the nickname The Red Bourgeois.

Groza became Premier in 1945 when Nicolae Rădescu, a leading Romanian Army general who assumed power briefly following the conclusion of World War II, was forced to resign by the Soviet Union's deputy People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs, Andrei Y. Vishinsky.[1] Under Groza's term as premier until 1952, Romania's King, Michael I, was forced to abdicate as the nation officially became a "People's Republic". Although his authority and power as Premier was compromised by his reliance upon the Soviet Union for support, Groza presided over the consolidation of Communist rule in Romania before eventually being succeeded by Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej in 1952.[1]

Early life and career

Born as one of the three sons of a wealthy couple in Băcia, a village near Deva in Transylvania (part of Austria-Hungary at the time), Groza was afforded a variety of opportunities in his youth and early career to establish connections and a degree of notoriety which would later prove essential in his political career.[2] After graduating from the Reformed Church College in Orăștie, he began his Law training in Hungary, studying at the University of Budapest before attending both the University of Leipzig and the University of Berlin.[1][2]

By the eve of World War I, Groza had completed his studies and returned to Deva to work as a lawyer. In 1918, he emerged on the political scene as a member of the Romanian National Party (PNR) and obtained a position on the Directory Council of Transylvania, convened by ethnic Romanian politicians who had voted in favour of union with Romania; he maintained his office over the course of the following two years.[2]

Throughout this period of his life, Groza established a variety of political connections, working in various Transylvanian political and religious organizations. From 1919 to 1927, for example, Groza obtained a position as a deputy in Synod and Congress of the Romanian Orthodox Church. In the early 1920s, Groza, who had left the PNR after a conflict with Iuliu Maniu and had joined the People's Party,[2] began to serve as the Minister for Transylvania and Minister of Public Works and Communications in the Alexandru Averescu cabinet.[1][2]

During this period in his life, Groza was able to amass a personal fortune as a wealthy landowner[3] and establish a notable reputation as a prominent layman within the Romanian Orthodox Church, a position which would later make him invaluable to a Romanian Communist Party (PCR) that was campaigning to attract the support of Eastern Orthodox Christians who constituted the nation's most numerous religious group in 1945.[1][3]

Rise to power

Despite having briefly retired from public life in 1928 after holding a series of political posts, Groza reemerged on the political scene in 1933, founding a peasant-based political organization, the Ploughmen's Front.[2]

Although the movement originally began in order to oppose the increasing burden of debt carried by Romania's peasants during the Great Depression and because the National Peasants' Party's couldn't help the poorest peasants, by 1944 the organization was essentiually under Communist control.[2][4] The Communist Party wished to seize power but was too weak to seize it alone—in 1944 it had only about a thousand members. Accordingly, the Romanian communist leaders had no choice but to have the party join a broad coalition of political organizations.

This coalition was composed of four major front organizations: the Romanian Society for Friendship with the Soviet Union, the Union of Patriots, the Patriotic Defense (a paramilitary wing of the PCR), and, by far the most widely backed by the Romanian populace, Groza's Ploughmen's Front. From his position as the chief political actor in the largest of the Communist front organizations, Groza was able to assert himself in a position of eminence within the Romanian political sphere as the Ploughmen's Front joined the Communist Party to create the National Democratic Front in October 1944[5][6] (it also included Mihai Ralea's Socialist Peasants' Party and the Hungarian People's Union, being briefly joined by the Social Democrats, and other minor groups). He was first considered by the Communist Lucreţiu Pătrăşcanu for the post of Premier in October 1944.[5]

Groza's prominent position within the National Democratic Front afforded him the opportunity to succeed Gen. Nicolae Rădescu as premier when, in January,1945, top Romanian communists, namely Ana Pauker and Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej rebuked Rădescu with allegedly failing to combat "fascist sympathizers".[5] With the help of Soviet authorities,[5] the Communists soon mobilized workers to hold a series of demonstrations against Rădescu, and by February many had died because the demonstrations often led to violence. While the communists claimed on tenuous grounds that the Romanian Army was responsible for the deaths of innocent civilians,[5] Rădescu weakened his own popular support by stating that the communists were "godless foreigners with no homeland".[6] In response, Andrei Y. Vishinsky, the Soviet vice commissar of foreign affairs, traveled to Bucharest and gave Michael an ultimatum--unless he sacked Rădescu and replaced him with Groza, Romania's independence would be at risk. With no other choice, Michael complied, and Groza became prime minister March 6, 1945.[5][6][7]

The Groza cabinets

To confirm Groza's installment as the Romanian premier, elections were held on November 19, 1946 (see Romanian general election, 1946). Although the Communist-dominated front to which the Ploughmen's Front belonged failed to win a majority in the Grand National Assembly, the communists arranged for a fraudulent count of the votes cast in the elections that gave the Communist-dominated bloc a large majority, thereby "confirming" Groza as premier. This came despite protests by the United States and the United Kingdom who held that, pursuant to the agreements reached at the Yalta Conference in 1945, only "interim governmental authorities broadly representative of the population", should be supported by the major powers.[8] As a result, Groza's government was permanently estranged from the United States and Great Britain, who nominally supported the waning influence of the monarchist forces under King Michael I.

Despite the annoyance of the two powers, the Communists constituted only a minority in Groza's cabinet. The leading figures in the Romanian Communist Party, Pauker and Gheorghiu-Dej, wanted the Groza government to preserve the façade of a coalition government and thus enable the communist party to win the confidence of the masses, since right after the Second World War the communists enjoyed very little political support. For this reason top communist figures like Pauker and Gheorghiu-Dej did not join Groza's cabinet. They planned to impose a communist regime under the veil of the existing coalition government. [9] To that end, the ministers who nominally represented the National Liberals and National Peasants were actually handpicked by the Communists.[10]By conflating the successes of the regime with their Party, Pauker and Gheorghiu-Dej hoped to win support for the party and lay the foundations for an overtly communist regime, a goal they accomplished in 1947. Accordingly Groza maintained the illusion of a coalition government, appointing members of diverse political organizations to his cabinet and formulating his government's short-term goals in broad, non-ideological terms. He stated at a cabinet meeting on March 7, 1945, for example, that the government sought to guarantee safety and order for the population, implement desired land reform policies, and focus on a "swift cleanup" of the state bureaucracy and immediate prosecution of war criminals, i.e. officials of the Fascist wartime regime of Ion Antonescu (see Romania during World War II and Romanian People's Tribunals).[11]

As Premier

Fallen statue of Petru Groza next to the Mogoșoaia Palace (Romania, 2010)

Within days of becoming premier, Groza delivered his first major success. On March 10, 1945, the Soviet Union agreed to hand over Northern Transylvania, over 45,000 km2 (17,000 sq mi) of territory which had been handed to Hungary through the 1940 Second Vienna Arbitration. Groza promised that the rights of each ethnic group within the newly acquired territory would be protected (mainly, as a reference to the Hungarian minority in Romania), while Joseph Stalin declared that the previous government under Rădescu had permitted such a large degree of sabotage and terrorism in the region that it would have been impossible to deliver the territory to the Romanians. As a result, only after Groza's guarantee of ethnic minority rights did the Soviet government decide to satisfy the petition of the Romanian government. The acquisition of this territory, nearly fifty-eight percent Romanian in 1945, was hailed as a major accomplishment within the formative stages of the Groza regime.[12]

Groza continued to improve the image of his own government while strengthening the position of the Communist Party with a series of political reforms. He proceeded to eliminate any antagonistic elements in the government bureaucracy and, in the newly acquired Transylvanian territory, removed three city prefects, including that of the region's capital, Cluj. The prefects removed were immediately replaced by government officials directly appointed by Groza, so as to strengthen loyalist elements in local government in the region. Groza also promised a series of land reform programs to benefit military personnel which would confiscate and subsequently redistribute all properties in excess of one hundred and twenty five acres in addition to all the property of traitors, absentees, and all who collaborated with the wartime Romanian government, the Hungarian occupiers during Miklós Horthy and Ferenc Szálasi's régimes, and Nazi Germany.[13]

Despite giving the appearance of liberal democracy by granting women's suffrage, Groza pursued a series of reforms attempting to clamp down on the prominence of politically dissident media outlets in the nation. During the first month of his premiership, Groza acted to close down Romania Nouă, a popular newspaper published by sources close to Iuliu Maniu, leader of the traditional National Peasants' Party who disagreed widely with Groza's attempted reforms. Within a month of his assumption of the premiership, Groza shut down over nine provincial newspapers and a series of periodicals which, Groza declared, were products of those, "who served Fascism and Hitlerism".[14] Groza soon continued this repression by limiting the number of political parties allowed within the state. Although Groza had promised to purge only individuals from the government bureaucracy and diplomatic corps immediately after assuming power, in June 1947 he began to prosecute entire political organizations, as, after the Tămădău Affair, he arrested key members of the National Peasants' Party and sentenced Maniu to life in prison "for political crimes against the Romanian people".[9] By August of that year, both the National Peasants' Party and the National Liberal Party had been dissolved and in 1948, the government coalition incorporated the Romanian Workers' Party (the forced union of communists and Romanian Social Democrats) and the Hungarian People's Union, effectively minimizing all political opposition within the state.[6]

During his term as premier, Groza also clashed with the nation's remaining monarchist forces under King Michael. Although his powers were minimal within Groza's regime, King Michael symbolized the remnants of the traditional Romanian monarchy and, in late 1945, the King urged Groza to resign. The King maintained that Romania must abide by the Yalta accords, allowing the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union to each have a hand in post-war government reconstruction and the incorporation of a broader coalition force he had already organized. Groza flatly rejected the request, and relations between the two figures remained tense over the next few years, with Groza and the King differing on the persecution of war criminals and in the awarding of honorary citizenship of Romania to Stalin, in August 1947.[15]

Early on the morning of 30 December, Groza summoned Michael back to Bucharest, ostensibly "to discuss important matters"; the king had been preparing for a New Year's party at his palace in Sinaia. When Michael arrived, Groza presented the king with a pretyped instrument of abdication and demanded that Michael sign it. When Michael refused, Groza threatened to launch a bloodbath and arrest thousands of people. [16] According to Michael, Groza then pulled a gun on him and threatened to have 1,000 imprisoned students shot unless he gave up the throne.[17][18][19][20][21][22] Michael eventually signed the document, and a few hours later parliament abolished the monarchy and declared Romania a republic--marking the onset of undisguised Communist rule in the country.[16]

Legacy

Groza stepped down as premier in 1952, succeeded by Gheorghiu-Dej. He occupied the position of president of the Presidium of the Great National Assembly (de facto president of Romania) for the next six years until 1958, when he died from complications following a stomach operation.[1] Although never a Communist Party member, Groza had permitted the gradual introduction of a Communist regime in Romania. By pretending a limited independence from the Soviets and Communist Party leaders, Groza allowed the Communist Party to develop a more substantial backing and, through his repression of both the media and political organizations, limited any form of opposition or dissent within the state. After ousting the king and declaring the nation a "People's Republic", Groza served to ease the transition towards the later communist regime under Gheorghiu-Dej.

The mining town of Ștei was named Dr. Petru Groza after him, a name it kept until after the Romanian Revolution of 1989.

References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 "Petru Groza of Rumania Dies; Chief of State of Red Regime, 72", in The New York Times, January 8, 1958; ProQuest Historical Newspapers - The New York Times (1851-2002), p.47
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Cioroianu, 6.1.1 (p.149-150)
  3. 3.0 3.1 Cioroianu, 6.1.2 (p.150-152)
  4. Liliana Saiu, The Great Powers and Rumania, 1944-1946, Columbia University Press, New York City, 1992, p.39
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Cioroianu, 6.1.3 (p.152-159)
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 R. J. Crampton, Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century - And After, Routledge, New York City, 1997, p.229, 231
  7. Charles Sudetic. "Postwar Romania, 1944-85".  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  8. Paul Winkler, "Interim Government", in The Washington Post, March 22, 1945; ProQuest Historical Newspapers, The Washington Post (1877-1989), p.6
  9. 9.0 9.1 Stephen Fischer-Galaţi, The New Rumania: From People's Democracy to Socialist Republic, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, Cambridge, 1967, p. 29-30, 35
  10. Sudetic, Charles. Petru Groza's Premiership. Romania: Country Studies.<--Pertinent quote: "The government included no legitimate members of the National Peasant Party or National Liberal Party; rather, the Communists drafted opportunistic dissidents from these parties, heralded them as the parties' legitimate representatives, and ignored or harassed genuine party leaders."-->
  11. "Groza Pledges Order", in The New York Times, March 8, 1945; ProQuest Historical Newspapers, The New York Times (1851-2002), p.4
  12. "Transylvanian Area Restored to Romanians", in The Chicago Daily Tribune, March 11, 1945; ProQuest Historical Newspapers, Chicago Tribune (1849–1985), p.8
  13. "Sweeping Reform Begins in Rumania", in The New York Times, March 12, 1945; ProQuest Historical Newspapers, The New York Times (1851-2002), p.5
  14. C. L. Sulzberger, "2 Moves by Groza Spurring Reforms", in The New York Times, March 25, 1945; ProQuest Historical Newspapers, The New York Times (1851-2002), p.16
  15. W. H. Lawrence, "Chamber Ratifies Rumanian Treaty", in The New York Times, August 24, 1947; ProQuest Historical Newspapers, The New York Times (1851-2002), p.43
  16. 16.0 16.1 "Compression", Time, 12 January 1948
  17. "The Rescue of the Bulgarian Jews", as retrieved on 21 January 2008
  18. (Romanian)"The Republic was installed with a pistol", Ziua, May 1996
  19. (Romanian) Timeline, semi-official site dedicated to HM King Michael I, as retrieved on 21 January 2008
  20. (Romanian)"Princess Margareta, designated dynastic successor", Antena 3, 30 December 2007
  21. "A king and his coup", The Daily Telegraph, 12 June 2005
  22. Craig S. Smith, "Romania’s King Without a Throne Outlives Foes and Setbacks", The New York Times, 27 January 2007

Literature

  • Adrian Cioroianu, Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc ("On the Shoulders of Marx. An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism"), Editura Curtea Veche, Bucharest, 2005
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