Ionut Florin Biliuta Sowing The Seeds of PDF
Ionut Florin Biliuta Sowing The Seeds of PDF
Abstract
The present article is focused on the antisemitic mindset of several prominent Orthodox
clergymen and theologians associated with the Romanian Iron Guard and the radicalisation
of Orthodox nationalism under the impact of fascism. During a wave of right-wing ideo-
logical radicalisation, Orthodox clergymen and theologians shifted from understanding the
Jew according to the patristic theology and canon law to a more confessional, exclusivist
trend of theology. It also discusses the Romanian Orthodox Church’s position towards the
development of an antisemitic theology and the implementation of this theology during the
Holocaust by the Orthodox priests affiliated with the Romanian Orthodox Exarchate in
Transnistria.
1 The word sobornost meant in the 19th century Russian Slavophile philosophy both the fact that any decision in
the Orthodox Church was taken by a synod of bishops (sobor) but also it was a synonym for the Greek word
katholon, describing the universal, the ability to reassume in Christ’s love all aspects of humanity. For further
details, see William Leatherbarrow, Conservatism in the Age of Alexander I and Nicholas I, in: William
Leatherbarrow/Derek Offord, A History of Russian Thought, Cambridge 2010, 110; G. M. Hamburg/Randall
ARTICLE
A. Poole, A History of Russian Philosophy, 1830–1930. Faith, Reason and the Defense of Human Dignity,
Cambridge 20132, 46-48. For an Orthodox Christian understanding of the term, see Fr. Alexander Schme-
mann, The Historical Road of Eastern Orthodoxy, New York 1963, 8-18.
Departing from the initial patristic tenet of “deicide”, which was attributed exclu-
sively to the Jewish Orthodox theology from the early 1920s to the early 1940s, har-
boured the belief that even the Jews would eventually be reassumed in God’s infinite
love and that God’s universality should function as an Orthodox blueprint for a con-
tinuous search for peaceful coexistence with other religions.2
Painfully aware of the Orthodox Church’s millennial patristic tradition empha-
sising the peaceful separation from the Jews, the interwar Orthodox theologians en-
dorsed a vilification of their Jewish neighbours based on antisemitic prejudices (the
Jew as the intestine economic exploiter, as the moral corrupter of the masses, etc.).
From Late Antiquity to the dawn of modernity, the exchange between Christians
and Jews had involved seminal theological discussions regarding the biblical exe
gesis and unrestricted and mutually beneficial economic contacts.3 Despite anti
semitic innuendos and the millennial prescriptions of the Orthodox canon law pro-
hibiting intermarriage and the sharing of liturgical spaces in Romanian territories
from the late Byzantine to the late 19th century, the Jewish-Christian relations were
devoid of pogroms.4
Another branch of research discusses the lines of argument in historiographical
approaches to the present topic. By assuming uncritically the Byzantine political
theology of symphony between the Church and the State, scholars in the field of
Romanian antisemitism studies like Leon Volovici, Carol Iancu, Vladimir Solonari,
Marius Turda, or Jean Ancel claim that only the secular realm, through its intellectu-
als, developed an anti-Jewish mindset.5 By disregarding the antisemitic position of
the Orthodox Church, which has always been expected to follow that of the state or
intellectual elite, they fail to grasp the Orthodox Church’s own millennial tradition
of antisemitism and its interwar development.6
I argue that the Romanian Orthodox Church has developed its own form of anti-
semitism and that the radicalisation of the theological environment can be linked to
a specific educational milieu: Orthodox theologians associated with antisemitic
views maintained close ties with Austria and/or Germany, the breeding ground of
2 Andrew Louth, The Neo-patristic Revival and Its Protagonists, in: Mary B. Cunningham/Elizabeth Theokrit-
off (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Orthodox Christian Theology, Cambridge 2008, 188-202; Aidan
Nichols, Theology in Russian Diaspora. Church, Fathers, Eucharist, in: Nikolai Afanas’ev (1893–1966), Cam-
bridge 2008, 83-93; Andrew Louth, Introducing Eastern Orthodox Theology, Downers Grove 2013, 92-95.
3 Isabella Sandwell, Religious Identity, in: Late Antiquity. Greeks, Jews and Christians in Antioch, Cambridge
2007, 245-277; Dmitrij F. Bumazhnov, Adam Alone in Paradise. A Jewish-Christian Exegesis and Its Implica-
tion for the History of Asceticism, in: Emmanouela Grypeou/Hilary Spurling (eds.), The Exegetical Encounter
Between Jews and Christians in Late Antiquity, Leiden 2009, 31-43; Guy H. Stroumsa, The Making of Abra-
hamic Religions in Late Antiquity, Oxford 2015, 161-197.
4 Yossy Soffer, The View of Byzantine Jews in Islamic and Eastern Christian Sources, in: Robert Bonfil/Oded
Irshai/Guy G. Stroumsa/Rina Talgam (eds.), Jews in Byzantium. Dialectics of Minority and Majority Cul-
tures, Leiden 2012, 845-871; Andrei Oișteanu, Inventing the Jew. Antisemitic stereotypes in Romania and
other Central-East European Cultures, Lincoln 2009, 378-440.
5 Vladimir Solonari, Purifying the Nation. Population Exchange and Ethnic Cleansing in Nazi-Allied Roma-
nia, Baltimore 2010, 62-80; Vladimir Solonari, Patterns of Violence. The Local Population and Mass Murder
of Jews in Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina July-August 1943, in: Michael David-Fox/Peter Holquist/Alex-
ander M. Martin (eds.), The Holocaust in the East. Local Perpetrators and Soviet Responses, Pittsburgh 2014,
51-82; Marius Turda, Rasă’, eugenie și naționalism în România anilor ’40 ai secolului al XX-lea [Race, Eugenics
and Nationalism in Romania in the 1940s], in: Wolfgang Benz/Brigitte Mihok (eds.), Holocaustul la periferie.
Persecutarea și nimicirea evreilor în România și Transnistria în 1940–1944 [Holocaust in the Periphery. The
Persecution and Annihilation of the Jews in Romania and Transnistria 1940–1944], Chișinău 2010, 258-262;
Radu Ioanid, The Holocaust in Romania. The Destruction of Jews and Gipsies under Antonescu Regime,
1940–1944, Chicago 2000; Jean Ancel, The Image of the Jew in the View of the Romanian Antisemitic Move-
ments: Continuity and Change, in: Shevut 16 (1993), 47-51; William I. Brunstein, Roots of Hate. Antisemitism,
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Theoretical Underpinnings
7 Bruce Pauley, From Prejudice to Persecution. A History of Austrian Antisemitism, Chapel Hill 1992, 89-101;
Wolfgang Maderthaner/Lisa Silverman, Wiener Kreise: Jewishness, Politics and Culture in Interwar Vienna,
in: Deborah Holmes/Lisa Silverman (eds.), Interwar Vienna. Culture between Tradition and Modernity, New
York 2009, 59-80; Lisa Silverman, Becoming Austrians. Jews and Culture between the World Wars, Oxford
2012; Janek Wasserman, Black Vienna. The Radical Right in the Red City, 1918–1938, Ithaca 2014, 15-46, 74-
105. For Hungary, see Attila Pók, The Politics of Hatred: Scapegoating in Interwar Hungary, in: Paul Wein-
dling/Marius Turda (eds.), Blood and Homeland. Eugenics and Racial Nationalism in Central and Southeast
Europe, 1900–1940, Budapest 2007, 375-388. As an example, for the newly acquired province of Bukovina, see
Ion Nistor, Bucovina sub dominațiunea românească. La 20 de ani dela Unire [Bukovina under Romanian
Rule. Twenty Years from Unification], Cernăuți 1938, 49-51; Dragoș Vitencu, Când dai nas lui Ivan … Mic
tratat despre ucrainomanie [When You Indulge Ivan … Small Treaty on Ukraino-mania], Cernăuți, 1934, 6,
65-78; Irina Livezeanu, Cultural Politics, 60-78; Radu Florian Bruja, Extrema dreaptă în Bucovina [The Ex-
ARTICLE
treme Right in Bukowina], Târgoviște 2012, 46-47; Victoria Camelia Cotos, Populația Bucovinei în perioada
interbelică [Bukovina’s Population in the Interwar Period], Iași 2009, 155-174.
8 Peter Herriot, Religious Fundamentalism. Global, Local and Personal, London 2008, 211-242.
9 I took the terms and the conceptual framework from Brian Porter-Szücs, Faith and Fatherland. Catholicism,
Modernity and Poland, Oxford 2011, 4-15, 167. For Austrian Conservative thinking which seem to share a
common ground with some ideas of the traditionalists, see Stefan Jonsson, Crowds and Democracy. The Idea
and Image of the Masses from Revolution to Fascism, New York 2013, 1-50.
10 Keith Hitchins, Gîndirea: Nationalism in Spiritual Guise, in: Kenneth Jowitt (ed.), Social Change in Romania,
1860–1940, Berkeley 1978, 140-173.
11 Roger Griffin, Modernity, Modernism and Fascism. A ‘Mazeway Resynthesis’, in: Modernism/modernity 15
(January 2008) 1, 9-24; Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism. The Sense of a Beginning under Mussolini and
Hitler, Houndmills 2007, 106-108.
12 The term has been coined by Peter Berger, The Sacred Canopy. Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion,
London 1967. I understand here this term as in the reading of Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism, 74-80.
13 Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism, 74.
14 For the tension between city and village in Prussian Germany, please see Hans Otte, ‘More Churches More
Church Goers’. The Lutheran Church in Hanover between 1850–1914, in: Hugh McLeod (ed.), European Reli-
gion in the Age of Great Cities, 1830–1930, London 1995, 89-116; Shelley Baranowski, The Sanctity of Human
Life. Nobility, Protestantism & Nazism in Weimar Germany, New York/Oxford 1995, 102-116.
15 For the impact of Hungarian revolution from 1919 see Leonard Paukerow, Experimente bolșevice. Ce am
văzut în Ungaria Comunistă. Bilanțul Regimului Bolșevic în Ungaria [Bolshevik Experiments. What I Saw in
Communist Hungary. A Balance of the Bolshevik Regime in Hungary], Cluj 1920. For Bolshevik Russia’s im-
ARTICLE
pact on Romania, Maxim Gorki, Un an de revoluție rusească [One Year Russian Revolution], București 1919.
For the aftermath of the Hungarian Bolshevik Revolution, see Thomas Lorman, Counter-Revolutionary Hun-
gary, 1920–1925. István Bethlen and the Politics of Consolidation, Boulder 2006, 5-42.
16 Fr. Georges Florovsky, The Ways of Russian Theology, in: Fr. Georges Florovsky, Aspects of the Church. Vol-
ume Four in the Collected Works of Georges Florovsky, Belmost 1975, 183-213. For Fr. George Florovsky’s
theology see Peter E. Chamberas, Some Aspects of the Ecclesiology of Father Georges Vasilievich Florovsky,
in: D. Neiman/D. Schatkin (eds.), The Heritage of the Early Church. Essays in Honor of Rev. George V.
Florovsky, Rome 1973, 421-436; Paul Gavrilyuk, Florovsky’s Neo-Patristic Synthesis and the Future Ways of
Orthodox Theology, in: George Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou (eds.), Orthodox Constructions
of the West, New York 2013, 102-124.
17 Elizabeth Harvey, Emissaries of Nazism: German Student Travellers in Romania in the 1930’s, in: Österrei-
chische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften 22 (2002) 1, 135-160. For a complete overview of the German
expansion in the Balkans see Stephen G. Gross, Export Empire. German Soft Power in Southeastern Europe,
1890–1945, Cambridge 2016, 68-107.
18 John Connelly, From Enemy to Brother. The Revolution in Catholic Teaching on the Jews, 1933–1965, Cam-
bridge 2012, 13-16.
19 Geoffrey J. Giles, Students and National Socialism in Germany, New Haven 1985, 250-265; Steven Remy, The
Heidelberg Myth. The Nazification and Denazification of a German University, Cambridge 2002, 12-49;
Susannah Heschel, For ‘Volk, Blood, and God’: The Theological Faculty at the University of Jena during the
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Third Reich, in: Anson Rabinbach/Wolfgang Bialas (eds.), Nazi Germany and the Humanities, Oxford 2006,
365-394. For Göttingen’s Faculty of Theology, see Robert Ericksen, Complicity in the Holocaust. Churches
and Universities in Nazi Germany, Cambridge 2012, 61-93.
concept of sobornost and preached by the Russian theology, as well as to the rediscov-
ery of the Fathers of the Church known as the neo-patristic renaissance.20 Paradoxi-
cally, the views of young theologians were determined by the association of opposing
aesthetic and philosophical categories in the same narrative. In the vortex of moder-
nity, Christian theologians now found their love for the neighbour tainted with hate,
and expanded their Christology grounded on Christ’s commandment of love for
humankind by a downright ecumenical theological justification of racial hatred
directed against the Jews, Roma or other ethnic minorities. Like in Nazi Germany, in
addition to social and economic reasons the fascination of theologians and Chris-
tian clergymen with the ‘science of antisemitism’ was related to the innovative,
‘avant-garde’, irrational nature of the synthesis between Christian theology and the
narrative of racial hate. This new theological approach was a challenging and pro-
vocative research methodology, offering young scholars a scientific foundation for
their theological racist idiom.
After a secular, antisemitic 19th century with a secular intellectual elite that denied
religion a role in building the national community and perceived nationalism as a
secular ideology, a new approach to antisemitism spread across Europe. As different
scholars have pointed out (George L. Mosse, Jay Winter, Christopher Clark), the end of
WWI also meant a return to religion as a therapeutic way to deal with the horrors of
the Eastern and Western fronts and the feeling of social anomie that dominated Euro-
pean societies. In the Romanian case, this return to religion and the millennial values
exhibited by the Orthodox Church was coupled with a growing, almost apocalyptical
fear of social unrest and “godless Bolshevism” as “products” of the world Jewry.21
In targeting the Jew as a pathogenic source of social decomposition and spread of
socialist and communist ideas, Alexandru C. Cuza, the leading patriarch of the
Romanian antisemites, joined forces with the physiologist professor Dr. Nicolae
Paulescu. They exposed what they believed was a Masonic/Bolshevik/Capitalist con-
spiracy threatening the Romanian nation’s very existence. At the beginning of 1920s,
with a Jewish minority of five per cent of the population, these two Romanian intel-
lectuals gave vent to their rabid, radically antisemitic views to energise the student
youth in adopting their political ideas. As for religion, the self-declared atheist Cuza
criticised the Romanian Orthodoxy in a book from 1925 programmatically entitled
Învățătura lui Isus. Judaismul si Teologia creștină (The Teachings of Jesus. Judaism
and Christian Theology) for not doing its national duty of resisting the Jewish flood,
20 One of the most striking examples of coexistence of the theological openness towards sobornost and national
Orthodoxy can be found in the pages of Nicolae Terchilă, Metafizica lui Vladimir Solovieff. Introducere: Viața
lui Vladimir Solovieff [Vladimir Solovioff’s Metaphysics. Introduction: The Life of Vladimir Solovioff], in:
Nicolae Colan (ed.), Anuarul Academiei Teologice Andreiene [Yearbook of the ‘Andrei Şaguna’ Theological
Academy] XI (1934–1935), 5-39. In the same volume there was an article signed by the student Ioan Faur,
Creștinismul și Naționalismul [Christianity and Nationalism], in: ibid., 65-71. For a theological reading of the
concept of sobornost by a fascist theologian, see Hierodeacon Nicodem Ioniță, Natura și sensul termenului
‘sobornicesc’ [Nature and Meaning of the Term ‚Sobornost’], in: Revista Teologică [Theological Review]
XXVI (January-February 1936) 1-2, 32-34. For one of his fascist texts supporting the Iron Guard, see Hiero-
deacon Nicodem Ioniță, Problema iubirii lui Dumnezeu și a omului [The Issue of God’s Love and of Man’s
love], in: Gândul Neamului [The Nation’s Thought] II (December 1935) 1, 6.
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21 William I. Brunstein, Roots of Hate, 177-264; William I. Brustein/Ryan D. King, Balkan Antisemitism: The
Cases of Bulgaria and Romania before the Holocaust, in: East European Politics and Societies 18 (2004) 3, 422-
423.
which, according to him, was invading Romania and stripping its population of its
rights and fortune. In the 19th century, the Jewish minority started to engage in lib-
eral professions the Romanians were not interested in. They were also part of a pro-
cess of rapid urbanisation, which made them stand out in university centres, where
they interacted with Romanian students, most of whom came from villages to com-
plete their education.
Arguing that the Romanian Orthodox Church had been bought by the Jewish
finance in order to keep a quiet distance from the Jewish problem, Cuza recom-
mended to Orthodox theologians that they adopt a new Christology in line with his
antisemitic views. He ‘cleansed’ Jesus of His Jewishness and proclaimed the end of
the ‘Judaic religion’; the main messianic attribute of Christ was that of being an as-
siduous fighter against the Jews. Accordingly, he lambasted the Church for its ineffi-
ciency and lenience towards the Jews, and of course the Jews themselves, whom he
perceived as sons of the devil:
“Christianity is a mystery. It has a meaning. The meaning of this mystery is
in the being of Jesus and is summarised in a word. This word, decipherer of
the mystery, is not what the Christian theology imagines it to be. It is not the
mercy, the forgiveness, the passive acceptance, but exactly their opposite –
the fight! The fight of the truth against the lie. The fight of the good against
the evil. The fight of the light against the darkness. The truth, the good and
the light are from the loving God. The lie, the evil and the darkness are from
the devil, the one that kills people. Therefore in an abstract and symbolic
way Jesus is the Son of God and the Jews he is fighting against are the people
of Satan.”22
Following Claudia Koonz, I argue that Cuza’s tirades against the Orthodox
Church’s commandment to love thy neighbour provided the necessary moral anaes-
thesia for the Christian conscience regarding the Jews.23 The clergy fully embraced
this biased perspective, asking for a more involved Orthodox Church in the struggle
against the internal enemy, the Jew. Shortly after Cuza’s book came out, the same
argument related to the Jewish economic superiority and their overwhelming pre
sence in the cities could be found in the most prestigious Romanian theological
journal, Revista Teologică (Theological Review), published in Sibiu. In describing his
impressions of a pilgrimage to the Monasteries of Bukovina, the young priest Pom-
poniu Morușca, a professor and spiritual confessor at the Sibiu Theological Acade-
my, represented the residual antisemitism present in the Transylvanian academic
milieu from the former Austro-Hungarian context:
“The sea of Jews that crowds the streets of our town proves our statements
that our poor Bukovina is flooded by this herd drying out its seed and strip-
ing its inhabitants of their energy, thus ripping off their incomes. Regardless
of how much humanitarian largesse our soul of Christian believers and
priests has, it was troubling to see how the daily work of the Romanian peas-
ant and the goods that he accumulated go into the pockets of the foreigner;
it is because of our incapacity and weakness obviously since we don’t have
the sharpness that it takes to get them out of commerce, move them from the
booths and send them to the hard labour in the fields.”24
22 A. C. Cuza, Invățătura lui Isus. Judaismul si Teologia creștină [The Teachings of Jesus. Judaism and Christian
Theology], Iași 1925), 7.
ARTICLE
25 Nae Ionescu, Introducere, in: Mihail Sebastian, De două mii de ani [For Two Thousand Years], București 1934,
8 and 9.
26 See Mircea Eliade, Judaism și antisemitism [Judaism and Antisemitism], in: II Vremea (22 July 1934) 347, 2;
Constantin Noica, Creștini, marxiști și teologi [Christians, Marxists and Theologists], in: Credința [Faith] II
(9 September 1934) 231, 4. For a complete scholarly overview of the polemic see Leon Volovici, Nationalist
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Ideology and Antisemitism. The Case of the Romanian Intellectuals in the 1930s, Oxford 1990, 101-105. See
also Zigu Ornea, Anii treizeci. Extrema dreaptă românească [The Thirties. The Romanian Far Right], Iași
2015, 148-178.
27 Mircea Vulcănescu, O problemă teologică eronat rezolvată? Sau ce nu a spus d. Gheorghe Racoveanu [A Theo-
logical Problem Erroneously Solved? Or What Mr. Gheorghe Racoveanu Did Not Say], in: Credința II (3 Sep-
tember 1934) 225, 4.
28 Gheorghe Racoveanu, O problemă teologică eronat rezolvată: sau ce n-a ințeles dl. Mircea Eliade [A Theologi-
cal Problem Erroneously Solved? Or What Mr. Mircea Eliade Did Not Understand], in: Credința II (29 July
1934) 195, 4.
ARTICLE
29 Gheorghe Racoveanu, Pentru lamurirea dl. Mircea Vulcănescu, Noul Bogoslov [XXX], in: Credința II (5 Sep-
tember 1934) 227, 4-6.
30 Ibid., 6.
and racism.31 This method was also extremely popular among Romanian theolo
gians such as Nichifor Crainic, Fr. Nicolae Neaga or Fr. Liviu Stan, especially after
1936.
That year, Nichifor Crainic wrote a seminal text entitled Rasă și religiune (Race
and Religion) in his cultural journal Gîndirea (The Thought). Crainic criticised the
German Nazis for emphasising the superiority of the Germanic race, condemned
the erroneous German spirit that engendered excesses like the sterilisation of the
unwanted, and repudiated the pseudo-Christian Germanic religion and the ex-
change of the Roman for a Germanic Law; in short: he seemed to embark on a com-
plete refutation of the Germanic antisemitic religion. And yet, he also preached the
inequality of races, the degeneracy of the Jewish race, and the Christian spiritual
factor as the leading argument for a fruitful development of the races:
“Almighty is but God. And the values of this world are more or less valuable
by how they report positively or not to the Almighty. A race for instance can
be inferior or superior based on how its genius accomplished more or less
from the essence of Christianity.”32
In order to refute the Nazi idea that Christianity was a Jewish religion and its
founder had been a Jew, Crainic envisaged Christ as a divine-human person in
whom there was no hint of Jewish blood, thus radicalising the German hypothesis of
an Aryan Jesus:
“Is Christianity a Judaic religion? It could have been in just one instance: if
its creator would have been nothing else but the son of the man from the
royal line of David. Then its doctrine wouldn’t have been but a Semitic myth
of a relative value as all the other religious myths of the people. However the
nature of Christianity is given by the divine and human nature of its creator.
In Jesus the divine nature and human nature without being combined are
actively and mysteriously united in the same person. What does the church
teach us regarding the man Jesus? That this man was born without sin, that
there is no sin in him and he cannot sin.”33
Nichifor Crainic denied Jews the moral right to use the books of the Old Testa-
ment in their religious practice, claiming that the Jewish Scriptures were already ful-
filled by the coming of Christ, who had abolished the Judaic religion and now only
belonged to Christians. Furthermore, he acknowledged the rightful character of the
Germanic racist religion only in what concerned the Jews, and claimed that Chris-
tians hated only the racial myth of Judaism based on the Talmud, whose historical
and racial essence was centred on the denial of Christ as Messiah and his resurrec-
tion from the dead:
“The Talmud is the obscurantist organisation of the most tremendous
hatred against the Savior Jesus Christ and against Christians. Its spirit is the
cruel spirit of Herod, the killer of 14 000 innocent babies and the spirit of
the crime on Golgotha. The Talmud is the total negation of Christianity on
the part of a people that has decreed that it is above all other peoples and that
does not recognise God’s salvation of any of them […] The Talmud is the
wellspring of the worldwide Masonic action to discredit Christianity and
31 Susannah Heschel, The Aryan Jesus. Christian Theologians and the Bible in Nazi Germany, Princeton 2009,
19. For the Romanian case see Paul Shapiro, Faith, Murder, Resurrection: The Iron Guard and the Romanian
Orthodox Church, in: Kevin Spicer (ed.), Antisemitism, Christian Ambivalence, and the Holocaust, Bloom-
ARTICLE
the Marxist action to transform through violent means people into atheists.
As long as the Jews continue to isolate themselves from all other peoples in
that fortress of diabolical hatred, there will be no peace between us and
them. Henceforward, this road will blindly lead to the implementation of
the prophetic words: Thou shall destroy thyself, O Israel!”34
The racist rants against the Jewish minority in Romania voiced by Nichifor Crain-
ic went hand in hand with an already existing antisemitic discourse within the struc-
tures of the Church. Continuing the late 19th century obsession with Judaism as
closely associated with the spread of freemasonry, the bishops, priests, and theolo
gians of the Romanian Orthodox Church rejected from the beginning these kind of
‘occult’ organisations, which they perceived as being openly anti-Christian and the
source of all malaise engulfing the Church’s initiatives to promote a Romanian
Orthodoxy. Seizing the momentum of the funeral of legionary leaders Ion Moța and
Vasile Marin’s, where three hierarchs of the Romanian Orthodox Church led a pro-
cession of 200 priests, openly demonstrating their support for the Iron Guard, the
Holy Synod took a historical decision: shortly after the funeral (on 11th March 1937),
freemasonry was condemned at the behest and inspiration of Metropolitan Nicolae
Bălan, who had attended the burial and drafted a memorandum approved by the
Holy Synod. This official step by the Orthodox Holy Synod in further isolating the
Jews can be looked upon as a natural progression in the relationship between the
Iron Guard and the Romanian Orthodox Church, since both the Synod and the
fascists saw freemasonry and the Jewish world finance as the evil forces behind the
Romanian political parties associated with the spread of communism and atheism.
The Patriarch vainly tried to use his influence and persuade the bishops to ban priests
from politics and stop them from decorating churches with political symbols or
contributing to political propaganda. In the same session, the Holy Synod refused
the request of the State to dissolve the newly created legionary working camps built
around its churches and monasteries. Moreover, influenced by Metropolitan Nicolae
Bălan, the Synod claimed to uphold “a Christian point of view” against “the spirit of
secularism” in politics, arguing that the Church could choose what party was worthy
of support according to its moral precepts.
The decision of the Holy Synod caused confusion in that part of society that was
not attached to the legionary cause and values: they perceived the step as a direct
attack against King Carol II’s intimates, namely his Jewish mistress Elena Lupescu
and his circle of influential cronies from the world of finance. The Iron Guard saw
them as the epitome of Jewish capital penetration through freemasonry and the
source of the nation’s moral corruption, and thus the decision of the Holy Synod was
perceived as a victory of the Iron Guard. Corneliu Codreanu saluted the decision
of the Holy Synod as “the beginning of greatness” for the Romanian people in its
struggle against the corroding influences from within. In his 64th circular, he urged
all legionaries to read the acts of the March Synod.
After being appointed as prime minister on 11 February 1938 by King Carol II
during his royal dictatorship, Patriarch Miron Cristea continued the racial initia-
tives of the previous government led by Octavian Goga and Alexandru C. Cuza. He
oversaw and patronised the implementation of antisemitic legislation, but also the
violent containment of the Iron Guard from the Romanian public sphere. Apart
from the anti-Jewish legislation that was passed and implemented, the puppet
government installed by King Carol II during his personal dictatorship and headed
ARTICLE
34 Ibid., 66.
35 Irineu Mihălcescu, Francmasoneria. Teologia luptătoare [Freemasonry. Theology’s Fighter], București 1941,
ARTICLE
5-6.
36 Nicolae Mladin, Doctrina despre viață a profesorului Nicolae Paulescu [Professor Nicolae Paulescu’s Life
Doctrine], in: Revista teologică (1942) 3-4, 200-201.
37 Ibid., 201.
ARTICLE
38 Ibid., 202.
39 Liviu Stan, Rasă și religiune [Race and Religion], Sibiu 1943, 92.
40 Ibid., 122.
Instead of conclusion
Quotation: Ionut Florin Biliuta, Sowing the Seeds of Hate. The Antisemitism of the Orthodox Church
in the Interwar Period, in: S:I.M.O.N. – Shoah: Intervention. Methods, Documentation 3 (2016) 1,
20-34.
http://simon.vwi.ac.at/images/Documents/Articles/2016-1/2016-1_ART_Biliuta/ART_
Biliuta01.pdf
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