Paul Niculescu-Mizil

Niculescu-Mizil in 1966

Paul Niculescu-Mizil (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈpa.ul nikuˈlesku miˈzil]; 25 November 1923 – 5 December 2008) was a Romanian communist politician. Joining the Romanian Communist Party due to his background and intellectual aspirations, he was prominent in the agitprop department during Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej's rule. Under Nicolae Ceauşescu, he went from handling foreign affairs in the late 1960s to holding ministerial posts in the 1970s to a marginal position in the 1980s. After the regime's collapse, he spent time in prison before emerging as a vocal defender of the system he had served.

Biography

Propaganda and international affairs

Born in Bucharest,[1] Niculescu-Mizil was raised in a left-wing milieu, with both his parents being activists of the Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSDR) and the Socialist Party of Romania (PS). His father, Gheorghe Niculescu-Mizil, was reportedly a shop assistant, trade unionist, and self-taught poet, known for contributing to PSDR and PS gazettes—from România Muncitoare to Socialismul—, and eventually joining the outlawed Communist Party (PCdR or PCR). He was kept under surveillance by the secret police (Siguranţa Statului), was prosecuted during the famous Dealul Spirii Trial, and stood as a pro-communist candidate during the 1922 election.[2] According to their official biographers, Gheorghe and his wife Eufrosina Cotor Niculescu-Mizil ran a PCdR meeting house during World War II, as opponents of the Ion Antonescu dictatorship.[3]

Paul Niculescu-Mizil was a student at the military officers' school in Ploieşti during the war, and right after the King Michael Coup, his unit was sent to help retake Northern Transylvania. Joining the Communist Party (later "Workers' Party", PMR) in 1945, that year he became head of the student association at the Commercial and Industrial Academy and editor of Tinereţea newspaper. In 1951, he joined the editorial board of the magazine Lupta de Clasă. He taught at the Ştefan Gheorghiu Academy from 1946 to 1950, and was deputy rector and rector there between 1950 and 1954. He entered the PMR's history institute in 1954, holding positions near the top. He was also on the faculty of the C. I. Parhon University, teaching Marxism–Leninism.[1] He joined the central committee of the PMR at the end of 1955, and would remain a member until 1989.[4] He headed the PMR's propaganda and agitation section between 1956 and 1965,[5] where, as Leonte Răutu's deputy, he was one of the few persons with access to the latter's house, and backed his strident attacks on Romanian culture. He played a key role in introducing national Stalinism to Romania and in ensuring the presence of a compliant intelligentsia.[6] While he and his colleague Pavel Ţugui promoted a less rigid view of the party's role in culture than their predecessors, who included Mihail Roller, they nonetheless touted a form of communism that was, in the view of political scientist Vladimir Tismăneanu, "arrogant, intransigent and suspicious of any revisionist heresy".[7]

Until the death of Gheorghiu-Dej in 1965, he was a consistent supporter, and helped distance Romania from the Soviet Union beginning in 1964.[8] That year, as part of this trend, he prepared a document on the problems of the global communist and workers' movement, officially adopted by the PMR.[7] Also in 1964, he received one of several awards the regime bestowed upon him, the Order of the Star of the Romanian Socialist Republic, second class.[9] After leaving the propaganda section, he sat on the central committee's secretariat, supervising the party's sections for ideology and for international relations (1965–1972); on the executive committee (1965–1989); and on the permanent presidium (1969–1974).[5] He began holding these positions several months after Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej died and Nicolae Ceauşescu came to power in March 1965, but as his loyalty—manifested, for instance, during the purges of an older generation of party members in 1958–1960—, political skill and less rigid thinking meant he was probably slated for a promotion anyway, he felt less of a debt to Ceauşescu than others promoted by the new leader.[7] He portrayed himself as an intellectual, and was viewed as one of the party's ideologues,[8] indeed as its most prominent one after Răutu was marginalized in 1965.[10] In February 1968, he headed the Romanian delegation to a meeting in Budapest that made preparations for the following year's International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties. There, he made a striking gesture, leaving the room in protest at Soviet attacks on Romania's position of defending the principle of equality and independence within the global communist movement, in particular Czechoslovakia's right to carry out the reforms of the Prague Spring.[1][5]

Ministerial posts, loss of power and post-communist course

During Ceauşescu's years in power, he was Education Minister (1972–1976), Finance Minister (1978–1981), and deputy prime minister (1972–1981).[5][11] He sat in the Great National Assembly from 1957 to 1961 and from 1965 to 1989, successively representing areas in Galaţi, Timiş, Arad, Bacău and Satu Mare counties. From 1965 to 1969 he was on the leadership of the Romanian Society for Friendship with the Soviet Union and of the National Committee for Defending Peace, and served as Romania's permanent representative to the Comecon from 1979.[1] As Ceauşescu's rule, the economic, political and cultural excesses of which he openly criticized on several occasions,[7][8] became more personal and his policies less predictable, Niculescu-Mizil gradually lost influence. He became a marginal figure in the 1980s, despite remaining on the executive committee.[5][8] He headed Centrocoop, a cooperative union, from 1981 to 1989, and it was the start of his tenure there that marked his real diminution in power.[1][12]

After the fall of the communist regime in 1989, he was initially in the leadership of the National Salvation Front, but pressure from civil society groups quickly saw him ejected. He was arrested and sent to prison, accused of direct involvement in repressing revolutionary activities in Timişoara and Bucharest, and was incarcerated until 1992.[5][11] Accounts differ on what in fact occurred: one suggests he had no real power and could not influence events either way,[7] one claims he opposed opening fire on demonstrators in Timişoara,[8] while another states he backed Ceauşescu's decision to use force.[13] Together with Ion Iliescu, who was marginalized during the 1970s, he was among the less dogmatic figures around Ceauşescu. In his last years, he actively attempted to justify the communist dictatorship for the national values he claimed it upheld. Alongside other top party activists, including Manea Mănescu, Ştefan Andrei and Dumitru Popescu, he promoted the idea of a break between the "Comintern" phase of the 1950s and the later national communism, allegedly patriotic and enlightened.[5]

Although he sought to avoid what Tismăneanu calls the "police-state brutalities and asphyxiating dogmatism of a sclerotic ideology", his defense of the system ignored its classically Stalinist features such as censorship, the Securitate secret police and hyper-bureaucratic planning. Hence, it was situated within the same intellectual constraints as the Letter of the Six.[7] He discussed the regime during numerous talk-show appearances, where he was countered by representatives of anti-communist civil society groups, and also published his memoirs.[1][11] He died of heart disease and his body was displayed for public viewing at the Finance Ministry he once headed. This drew criticism from prominent members of the National Liberal Party against then-minister Varujan Vosganian, himself a Liberal. He was buried in Cernica following a Romanian Orthodox service.[8][14]

He and his wife Lidia had six children. Of these, a son (Serghei) and two daughters (Donca and Lidia) were biological children, while two sons and a daughter were adopted. Adopting children was fashionable among party elites at the time and helped solidify his position. His granddaughter, through Lidia, is Oana Niculescu-Mizil, herself a politician.[1][11][15] Donca was in a ten-year relationship with Nicolae and Elena Ceauşescu's son Nicu; Elena disapproved and intervened to end the romance.[8][12] Later, he and Nicu were cellmates at Jilava prison for six months.[8] Serghei is considered the rebel of the family.[11]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 (Romanian) Ilarion Ţiu, "A murit Paul Niculescu-Mizil", Jurnalul Naţional, 7 December 2008; accessed 6 April 2012
  2. Ioniţă, p.10-17
  3. Ioniţă, p.17
  4. Dobre, p.432
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 (Romanian) Biografiile nomenklaturii, at the Institute for the Investigation of Communist Crimes and the Memory of the Romanian Exile site; accessed 6 April 2012
  6. (Romanian) Bogdan Cristian Iacob, "Jdanovul României", 22, 27 January 2009; accessed 9 April 2012
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 (Romanian) Vladimir Tismăneanu, "Sociologia comunismului", 22, 18 February 2002; accessed 9 April 2012
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 (Romanian) Ionela Săvescu, "A murit un comunist de omenie: Niculescu-Mizil", Evenimentul Zilei, 7 December 2008; accessed 6 April 2012
  9. Dobre, p.433
  10. Vladimir Tismăneanu, Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism, p.176, 194. University of California Press, 2003, ISBN 0-52-023747-1
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 (Romanian) Liliana Năstase, Ionel Stoica, "Fiica lui Paul Niculescu-Mizil, greu de evacuat din Dorobanţi", Adevărul, 2 October 2010; accessed 6 April 2012
  12. 1 2 (Romanian) Vladimir Tismăneanu, "Cine a fost Nicu Ceauşescu? (V) Ispita comunismului dinastic", Evenimentul Zilei, 5 October 2011; accessed 6 April 2012
  13. Dennis Deletant, Ceauşescu and the Securitate, p.376. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, New York, 1995, ISBN 1-56-32463-33
  14. (Romanian) Cristina Dobreanu, "Reabilitarea fruntaşului comunist Paul Niculescu-Mizil îi irită pe liderii liberali", România Liberă, 9 December 2008; accessed 9 April 2012
  15. (Romanian) Mihai Voinea, Cristian Delcea, "Iubirea dintre 'doamna Oana' şi tandrul Marian", Adevărul, 18 January 2012; accessed 6 April 2012

References

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