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Coping With Ceausescu's Legacy


Article # : 17864 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 3 / 1990  3,146 Words
Author : Robert R. King
Robert R. King, the author of Minorities Under Communism: Nationalities as a Source of Tension Among Balkan Communist States (Harvard University Press, 1973), worked in East European affairs at the National Security Council in the Carter White House. He is former assistant director of research at Radio Free Europe in Munich, West Germany, and currently works on Capital Hill.

       The symbol of the collapse of communism in East Germany is hordes of Germans standing on the Berlin Wall in front of the Brandenburg Gate. In Czechoslovakia, the symbol is masses protesting in Wenceslas Square. In Romania, it is the body of the executed dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.
       
       Last year the citizens of Poland, Hungary, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia cheered the end of the Communist Party's monopoly of power and the end of the communist political and economic system. Romania was the only East European state to suffer the violent overthrow of its ancient regime, and the cost was high - an estimated 10,000 people lost their lives. Not only was Romania's revolution brutal and vicious, the change was expressed in very different terms. Unlike the other countries of Eastern Europe, Romania’s revolution was personal - it was the toppling of a tyrant, the overthrow of Nicolae Ceausescu.
       
       Ceausescu is dead, but Romania's new leaders are now grappling with his legacy. Their tasks is formidable: to create genuine democratic political institutions. Rebuild the country's economy, restore its international reputation, and cope with expectations heightened by the exhilaration of the Romanian revolution. The task is difficult because of the legacy of Ceausescu's quarter-century of misrule and malfeasance.
       
       While Romania's Communist Party and political institutions were similar to those of its Warsaw Pact allies, there were important differences as well. Power was concentrated in the hands of the party chief; he was all powerful, not the first among equals in the Politburo. In many respects, Ceausescu's regime was much more like the totalitarian ... (1993 of 20021 Characters)
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