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Scarlat Callimachi

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Callimachi in December 1966

Scarlat CallimachiorCalimachi(Romanian pronunciation:[skarˈlatkaliˈmaci];nicknamedPrințul Roșu,[1]"theRed Prince "; September 20, 1896 – June 2, 1975) was aRomanianjournalist, essayist,futuristpoet,trade unionist,andcommunistactivist, a member of theCallimachi familyofboyarandPhanariotelineage. He is not to be confused with his ancestor,hospodarScarlat Callimachi.

Biography

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Born inBucharest,he lived for part of his childhood at the familymanorinBotoșani,where, at age 11, he witnessed first-hand the1907 peasants' uprisings(which, as he later admitted, contributed to hisleft-wingsympathies).[2]As a youth, he readRussian anarchistbooks, while studying in Paris during World War I, joinedanarchistcircles.[3]While travelling throughFinlandin 1917, Callimachi attended a public meeting at whichVladimir Leningave a speech, and consequently adoptedBolshevism.[3]

After his return to Romania, Callimachi edited a short-lived magazine in Botoşani (1924–1925),[4]and publishedAvant-gardepoems infree verse— inspired by the work ofRussian Futurists.[5]With fellowmodernistsIon VineaandStephan Roll,he later issued theliterary magazinePunct.[3]Callimachi was also theeditor-in-chiefof the magazine.[6]He began working on communist and other leftist newspapers (includingClopotul,which he himself edited in his native town) while keeping a front as an employee of his relatives.[2]

According to his own testimony, he joined the outlawedCommunist Party of Romania(PCdR, later PCR) in 1932,[7]an allegiance which brought Callimachi into a relatively small, but dedicated, category of communist sympathisers ofupper classupbringing — it also includedN. D. Cocea(to whom Callimachi was a close collaborator) andLucrețiu Pătrășcanu.[8]Nevertheless, at the same time, he was a nominal member of theNational Peasants' Party(PNȚ).[3]He continued to criticize the PNȚ: the most virulent of his attacks on the cabinet ofAlexandru Vaida-Voevod— voiced soon after the authorities had repressed theGrivița strike of 1933— led to his arrest and sentencing.[2]

Among PCR activists charged with establishing links with other groups (in accordance with thePopular FrontStalinistdoctrine), Callimachi, who had been a member ofAmicii URSSin 1934,[9]was one of the leaders of the Democratic Bloc (Blocul Democratic), a PCR-created legal organization which in 1935 succeeded in forming a tight alliance withPetru Groza'sPloughmen's Front(the agreement was signed inȚebea).[10]

In 1937, as thefascistIron Guardwas gaining unprecedented momentum and the secondary fascist movement around theNational Christian Partywas ascending to power, Callimachi decided to leave Romania and settled in France, but returned a year later, afterKingCarol IIacted against the Iron Guard and established a dictatorship around theNational Renaissance Front.[3]In August 1940, as Carol engineered a crackdown on the left-wing opposition, he wasinternedinMiercurea-Ciuc.[3]

Like Pătrășcanu, Callimachi was set free bySiguranța Statuluiunder theNational Legionary State,established by the Iron Guard later in the year (the regime, which had aligned itself withNazi Germany,was attempting to preserve a good relationship with the Soviet Union).[3]He was again imprisoned byIon Antonescu'smilitary dictatorship in Romania,and again interned, as many other PCR members, inCaracal,and laterTârgu Jiu.[11]

After World War II, he became a leader of the Singular Journalists' Trade Union, which had replaced the Union of Professional Journalists in October 1944 and had since become an instrument of the PCR-controlled government in controlling the press. He, with N. D. Cocea,Miron Constantinescu,andIon Pas,organized the expulsion and denouncement of journalists who professedanti-communism,and maintained this position after the proclamation of thePeople's Republic of Romaniain 1948,[12]before moving on to become head of the Romanian-Russian Museum (Muzeul Româno-Rus), an institution created to highlight cultural and social links between Romania and the Soviet Union in accordance with theZhdanov Doctrine.The Museum was closed down in 1956, after theGheorghe Gheorghiu-Dejregime began rejecting Soviet influence.[13]

He died in 1975, and was buried in the BucharestBellu Cemetery;he had refused the ostentatious funeral reserved for senior PCR members.[3]

Notes

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  1. ^Chiva & Şchiop; Mihailov
  2. ^abcChiva & Şchiop; Lăcustă, p.25
  3. ^abcdefghChiva & Şchiop
  4. ^Grigorescu, p.420, 431
  5. ^Grigorescu, p.420
  6. ^Peter Brooker; Sascha Bru; Andrew Thacker; Christian Weikop, eds. (19 May 2013).The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines: Europe 1880 - 1940.Oxford University Press.p. 1173.ISBN978-0-19-965958-6.Retrieved3 August2015.
  7. ^Lăcustă, p.25; according to his son, Scarlat Callimachi was officially affiliated with the party only after 1944 (Chiva & Şchiop)
  8. ^Chiva & Şchiop; Tănase, "Belu Zilber. Strategia Moscovei: lideri PCR din zone periferice"
  9. ^Mihailov
  10. ^Frunză, p. 115
  11. ^Lăcustă, p. 25
  12. ^Diac, "Comunism - Artiști și ziariști în febra epurărilor. Ziariștii"; Frunză, pp. 254-255
  13. ^Frunză, p. 457

References

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