The Anti-Humans - Dumitri Bacu (1963).pdf

(940 KB) Pobierz
THE ANTI-HUMANS
STUDENT RE-EDUCATION IN ROMANIAN PRISONS
by Dumitru Bacu
© 1971, Soldiers of the Cross, Englewood, Colorado.
The original Romanian manuscript, under the title,
Pitesti, Centru de Reeducare Studentesca
was published at Madrid in 1963.
Online version here:
http://www.miscarea.net/anti-humans.htm
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION......................................................................................................................... 5
CHAPTER I: PROLOGUE..........................................................................................................29
CHAPTER II: SIGNS.................................................................................................................. 33
CHAPTER III: THE BEGINNING................................................................................................42
CHAPTER IV: THE PRISONS OF SUCEAVA AND PITESTI......................................................46
CHAPTER V: HOSPITAL ROOM FOUR....................................................................................55
CHAPTER VI: THE COLLAPSE.................................................................................................60
CHAPTER VII: THE CONDITIONED REFLEXES......................................................................66
CHAPTER VIII: A ROUTINE DAY..............................................................................................75
CHAPTER IX: THE CATHOLICS...............................................................................................82
CHAPTER X: THE STAGES......................................................................................................94
CHAPTER XI: THE DESTRUCTION OF PERSONALITY - “THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY”............111
CHAPTER XII: THE PSYCHOLOGICAL PREPARATION........................................................118
CHAPTER XIII: VERIFYING THE METHOD............................................................................120
CHAPTER XIV: “PROFITABLE” USE OF TIME.......................................................................123
CHAPTER XV: AMPLIFICATION OF THE EXPERIMENT.......................................................126
CHAPTER XVI: THE FIRST RESULTS....................................................................................129
CHAPTER XVII: PAUSE FOR ESCALATION?.........................................................................131
CHAPTER XVIII: THE ESCALATION.......................................................................................136
CHAPTER XIX: THE EXTENSION INTO OTHER PRISONS (THE FIRST PHASE)................143
CHAPTER XX: THE DEMON PERSISTS................................................................................158
CHAPTER XXI: DESPERATE ENDEAVORS...........................................................................166
CHAPTER XXII: THE UNLEASHED DOGS.............................................................................173
CHAPTER XXIII: THE SECOND PHASE.................................................................................177
CHAPTER XXIV: INHUMAN PENALTIES................................................................................180
CHAPTER XXV: THE POWER OF COMPASSION..................................................................188
CHAPTER XXVI: REUNIONS..................................................................................................195
CHAPTER XXVII: ENDLESS ISOLATION...............................................................................198
CHAPTER XXVIII: THE TRIAL.................................................................................................208
CHAPTER XXIX: AT JILAVA AS WELL....................................................................................222
CHAPTER XXX: A LAST WORD..............................................................................................225
POSTSCRIPT.......................................................................................................................... 229
-2-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
He attended high school in Greece, obtained his baccalaureate in Constanta, then
registered in a Polytechnic (Engineering) Institute, from which he was later discreetly
eased out because of his political convictions.
His father, an orthodox priest, was ‘fired’ in 1946 when Greek authorities closed down
Romanian churches in Greece as a result of Ana Pauker’s suspension of the priest’s
salaries, which traditionally had always been paid by the Romanian government.
Arrested in September of 1949, Bacu learned about the unmaskings in 1951 while a
prisoner at Aiud, and after being transferred to Gherla prison in May 1953, he decided to
begin his own investigation of the “Pitesti Phenomenon”.
He was freed in April of 1956, by decree of amnesty for foreigners, for, though a
Romanian, he held a dual citizenship by virtue of having been born in Greece. Following
his release, he spent three more years gathering further material for his book. Then he left
the country.
In these pages, translated from the Romanian, the reader will, for the first time, have at
his disposal a fairly complete account of the Bolshevik techniques of dehumanization,
including some details here mentioned as delicately as possible, of which we do not like
to think ... The book was written to make known what is in store for the West if it permits
itself to continue to be fascinated by the song of the co-existentialist sirens.
The persons selected by the Bolshevik beast for de-humanization were a clearly defined
group, namely, university students. That was because in Romania, in sharp contrast to
what we see in the United States today, university students were a highly respected elite,
and included men who combined the vigor and ardor of youth with unsurpassed
patriotism and a lucid conservatism, intellectual and religious.
-3-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
So devoted were they to the memory of their leader, Codreanu, a man of noble purpose
and pure religious faith, that thirty years after his death, and twenty years after the loss of
their country, these dedicated followers, exiles in foreign lands, are menaced even there
by the ubiquitous power of the anti-humans and the ever accelerated conquest of the
Western world by its furtive enemies.
Even though the greatest proportion of students and of those who underwent unmaskings
were Legionaries, one must not forget that such an experiment encompasses MAN in his
totality, and that it is possible at any time and in any place.
The essential ideas of this book are two-fold: the Satanism of the method used, implying
total disregard for the human condition; and the impossibility of fundamental re-
structurization of character, of the human essence.
The Western reader must understand that in his country too these things can happen with
certainty, if apathy makes possible the inauguration of such a regime as that which caused
the disaster in Romania. All they have to do is look at the so-called ‘cultural revolution’
in Mao’s China, and at the public unmaskings not of the enemies of the regime, but of
that regime’s high echelon cadres. Or no one can affirm seriously that these ‘self-
criticisms’ are the result of convictions that appeared overnight. We, sufferers under the
Romanian regime, as administered by the Bolsheviks, know how these ‘confessions’ were
extracted.
When the United States has progressed to the point reached by Romania in 1948, there
will be no place on earth to which Americans can flee, and there will be no one to hear
their screams.
-4-
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
by Warren B. Heath
The author of this book, a Romanian born in Greek territory, went to Romania for his
university education and there became a member of the anti-Communist organization that
flourished in that nation before and during the tragic and fratricidal Second World War.
After the Bolshevik conquest of Romania, the Soviets, undoubtedly on orders from their
masters, maintained a pretense that their occupation was merely temporary and further
disguised their purposes by keeping on the throne as King of Romania the legitimate heir,
a young man who was merely a puppet in their hands, but served to give to the people an
illusive hope that Romania, though devastated and impoverished, might again become a
free nation. In this hope, of course, the Romanians (like many other captive peoples)
were encouraged by the governments of the Western nations that had won the military
victory. Those governments, especially in the United States, maintained a pretense that
they were not the servants of the Bolsheviks’ masters, and, whenever they deemed it
expedient to administer a little verbal paregoric to their own population, manufactured
oratory about “defending the Free World” and “containing Communism.” Americans,
who were so charmed by those phrases that they did not notice what their own
government was doing, cannot blame the Romanians (or the others) for having supposed
that the official verbiage was an indication of national policy.
During the early years of Soviet occupation, therefore, the Romanian people entertained
delusive hopes of eventual liberation, and the author of this book accordingly remained in
Romania, his true fatherland. When he was at last arrested and imprisoned on suspicion
of holding opinions inimical to Bolshevism, he, luckily, suffered only the excruciating
tortures and hardships that are normal in what is called a Great Society. During his
imprisonment, however, he had by chance an opportunity to learn of an experiment
conducted on a select group of young men, and he had the acumen and patience to
discover precisely what that experiment was. In this book he discloses for the first time
the facts about a practice of which the peoples of the West still know nothing.
-5-
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin