The Early Life of
Codreanu
Corneliu Zelea
Codreanu was born on September 13, 1899 in the small town of Hushi
in Moldavia. His father, Ion Zelea Codreanu, had been a nationalist
fighter all his life, while his grandfather and great-grandfather
were foresters. Corneliu Codreanu had been educated for five years,
from age eleven to sixteen, at the military academy Manastirea
Dealului (“the Cloister on the Hill”). Codreanu explained how
his time there affected him (quoted from the key book he wrote,
For My Legionaries): “…my military education will be with me all
my life. Order, discipline, hierarchy, molded into my blood at an
early age, along with the sentiment of soldierly dignity, will
constitute a guiding thread for my entire future activity. Here too,
I was taught to speak little, a fact which later was to lead me to
hate ‘chatter boxing’ and too much talk. Here I learned to love the
trench and to despise the drawing room.”
After Romania
declared war on Austria-Hungary in August 1916, Corneliu Codreanu
and his father went to join the Romanian army moving into
Transylvania. Codreanu was not old enough to be accepted as a
volunteer, but still fought with the army in its advance and retreat
across the mountains. However, his father had been wounded in
battle, and insisted that Corneliu return home so that they do not
both die in battle and leave his mother unsupported. However, a year
later in 1917, Codreanu completed his military education in The
Military School of Infantry at Botosani by 1918, but did not get the
chance to join the front before the war ended.
After graduating
from high school in 1919, Codreanu was accepted into the University
of Iasi and left Husi for Iasi. He had already read many works by
the famous professors Nicolae Iorga and A.C. Cuza, which taught him
the ideals for Romania: “1. The unification of Romanian people. 2.
The elevation of peasantry through land reform and political rights.
3. The solution of the Jewish problem.” After arriving in Iasi,
Codreanu found that the city and university were heavily influenced
by Communist agitators and that even many professors were Marxists.
The Romanian workers were experiencing terrible working conditions
and had very low wages, and had therefore been drawn to Communism by
Marxist propagandists. Students at the University of Iasi were also
largely converted to Communism, and Communist student meetings
attacked the Army, Justice, Church, and the Crown, essentially
propagating anti-Romanianism.
After doing some research,
Codreanu discovered that the leaders of the Romanian Communist
workers were neither Romanians nor workers. At Iasi, the “workers’
movement” was led by Dr. Ghelerter along with Messrs, Gheler,
Spiegler, and Schreiber. At the capital, Bucharest, the leaders were
Ana Pauker and Ilie Moscovici. All of them, Codreanu found, were
Jews. Realizing that like in Russia, where a largely Jewish-led
Bolshevik revolution occurred a few years earlier, Romania was in
danger of being taken over by Jewish Communists who would destroy
everything Romanian. He commented:
“If these had been
victorious, would we have had at least a Romania led by a
Romanian workers’ regime? Would the Romanian workers have
become masters of the country? No! The next day we would
have become the slaves of the dirtiest tyranny: the
Talmudic, Jewish tyranny. Greater Romania, after less than a
second of existence, would have collapsed.” (For My
Legionaries)
Early Political
Activity
Codreanu then decided that he
quickly needed to take action against the Communist movement, while
the conservative students were not doing anything sufficient. He
joined a small organization, the Guard of National Conscience, which
had been recently created by Constantin Pancu, who was a well-known
steel-worker. The members of the Guard of National Conscience, with
Codreanu and Pancu at the head, made speeches and rallies to combat
Communism and eventually even got into physical battles with groups
of violent Communists. At the Nicolina railway works, where nearly
all the workers were Communist and a large number of Jews were also
present, a general strike began. Conservative Romanians led by Pancu
and Codreanu then met and marched around placing the national flags
on various buildings while removing Communist red flags. Codreanu
even heroically climbed on top of a factory to throw off the red
flag and put up a Romanian one in its place. By the time he was
down, the Communists workers were so impressed by his efforts that
they allowed Codreanu and Pancu to leave without a fight. Everywhere
across Romania news of this event was carried quickly, and the
Communist movement soon was reduced and had no chance at success.
The Guard of National Conscience
then declared its program for the improvement of the Romanian
nation, which they called “National Christian Socialism.” Codreanu
explained that “It is not enough to defeat Communism. We must also
fight for the rights of the workers. They have a right to bread and
a fight to honor, We must fight against the oligarchic parties,
creating national workers organizations which can gain their rights
within the framework of the state and not against the state.”
It was then, by 1920, that
Codreanu started focusing on the problems at Iasi University, when
they realized that Romanian universities, as revealed by the studies
of professor Ion Gavanescul, were swarming with Jews. The Jews, an
alien people hostile to Romanian culture, formed about five percent
of the population, and yet in Iasi a third of the students were
Jews. Codreanu knew that the schools, which had an unreasonable
number of Jews when compared to Romanians, formed the next leading
class in Romania. Once the Jews would become overwhelming in the
leading class, Romania’s national culture would be destroyed,
because, as professor Cuza taught, Jews were an alien people
culturally and racially and would only distort the culture of the
nation in which they lived. This menace disturbed Codreanu and
others who loved their Romanian nation, its culture, and the
Orthodox Christian religion. Codreanu put forth a dramatic
exposition of his own feelings about this issue in For My
Legionaries:
“At Posada, Calugareni, on
the Olt, jiu and Cerna rivers, at Turda; in the mountains of
the unhappy and forgotten Moti of Vidra, all the way to
Huedin and Alba-Iulia (the torture place of Horia and his
brothers-in-arms), there are everywhere testimonies of
battles and tombs of heroes. All over the Carpathians, from
the Oltenian mountains at Dragoslavele and at Predeal, from
Oituz to Vatra Dornei, on peaks and in valley bottoms,
everywhere Romanian blood flowed like rivers. In the middle
of the night, in difficult times for our people, we hear the
call of the Romanian soil urging us to battle. I ask and I
expect an answer: By what right do the Jews wish to take
this land from us? On what historical argument do they base
their pretensions and particularly the audacity with which
they defy us Romanians, here in our own land? We are bound
to this land by millions of tombs and millions of unseen
threads that only our soul feels, and woe to those
who shall try to snatch us from it.” (For My Legionaries)
The Jewish students at the
University of Iasi continued encouraging Communism, but after his
victory with Pancu, Codreanu could now put an end to the bullying of
nationalist students by Jewish and Marxist students. Students who
wore Russian caps as a sign of support for Bolshevism were beaten
and their caps burnt. A Marxist student strike was then defeated by
Codreanu and his friends when they seized the dining hall and
insisted that students who do not work, do not get to eat. Soon
afterwards, newspapers owned by Jews insulted King Ferdinand and
Codrenau, to which Codreanu responded by leading a group to the
papers’ offices to wreck the presses.
In 1922, Codreanu graduated from
Iasi University’s Faculty of Law, and by then had made almost the
entire university nationalist as well as having spread pro-Romanian
and anti-Jewish concepts to other universities. In that same year,
professors A.C. Cuza and Nicolae Paulescu, who Codreanu regarded as
being some of the greatest intellectuals to teach Romanians about
the Jewish Problem, published two articles in the magazine
Apararea Nationala (“The National Defense”): “The Science of
Anti-Semitism” (by Cuza) and “The Talmud, the Kahal, Freemasonry”
(by Paulescu, an excerpt from a book). Of this influential
publication, Codreanu wrote: “The articles of Professors Cuza and
Paulescu were religiously read by all the youth and had everywhere
upon students both in Bucharest and in Cluj a resounding impact. We
considered the publication of each issue a triumph, because it was
for us another munitions transport for combating the arguments in
the Jewish press.”
He continued studying political
economy and in the fall of 1922 traveled to Germany to register at
the University of Berlin. While in Berlin he spoke with German
nationalists and taught them what he knew of the Jewish problem. He
also heard of Adolf Hitler, who, upon becoming more prominent,
Codreanu thought of as a great anti-Jewish nationalist leader. It
was also in Berlin that Codreanu heard of Mussolini’s victory in
Italy, at which he declared: “I rejoiced as much as if it were my
own country’s victory. There is, among all those in various parts of
the world who serve their people, a kinship of sympathy, as there is
such a kinship among those who labor for the destruction of
peoples.”
The National
Christian Defense League & Reactions to Government Corruption
In December, 1922, Codreanu’s
education in Germany was suddenly halted, because a nation-wide
anti-Jewish nationalist student movement exploded in Romania and
Codreanu felt he had to return to join them at that crucial moment.
While the students were making a strike for better conditions in
universities as well as a limit on the number of Jews, Codreanu,
Cuza, and a few others decided to hold a rally in March 3, 1923 in
Iasi to create a new organization. This organization, which they
decided to call “The League of Christian National Defense”, was to
be created once thousands of students would meet at the rally.
Codreanu explained the banner of the National Christian Defense
League (L.A.N.C.): “The cloth of these flags was black – a sign of
mourning; in the center a round white spot, signifying our hopes
surrounded by the darkness they will have to conquer; in the center
of the white, a swastika, the symbol of anti-Semitic struggle
throughout the world; and all around the flag, a band of the
Romanian tricolor – red, yellow and blue.”
However, just a few weeks
afterwards the Romanian government, under pressure from influential
Jews as in Romania as well as abroad, decided to change the Romanian
constitution to allow almost all Jews to become Romanian citizens.
This allowed an alien body in Romania, different in language, dress,
religion, customs, racial type, and soul, to further infiltrate
Romanian society and undoubtedly Judaize its culture. Romanian
nationalists were shocked and Codreanu so much that he cried. After
explaining this situation in For My Legionaries, Codreanu
reflects on how the great and highly respected Romanian leaders in
1879, after Romania won independence from the Ottoman Empire, took
action to make sure that Jews would not gain any power in Romania,
even though they were forced to give Jews a theoretical right of
citizenship (which depended on qualification through military
service, thus making only a few Jews citizens, since most Jews did
not want to fight in war). These men, whose works were read by all
nationalist students, were Vasile Conta, Vasile Alecsandri, Mihail
Kogalniceanu, Mihail Eminescu, Bogdan Petriceicu Hajdeu, Costache
Negri, A.D. Xenopol.
The larger Romanian parties ruling
the government also refused to take any action against the
increasing number of Jews flooding into universities, jeopardizing
the nation’s future. Codreanu wrote of them, “Fundamentally there
was no distinction among them other than differences of form and
personal interests-the same thing in different shapes. They did not
even have the justification of differing opinions. Their only real
motivation was the religion of personal interest.” He also knew,
having been educated by the works of Nicolae Paulescu, that the Jews
used their economic, financial, and media power to influence the
government’s activities. Finally, filled with despair at the almost
complete failure of the national student movement, Codreanu and his
close friends, including Ion Mota, decided that they would
assassinate the top Romanian politicians, top rabbis, and Jewish
bankers. Codreanu wrote explaining why he was more concerned with
going after the politicians:
“We unanimously agreed
that the first and greatest culprits were the treacherous
Romanians who for Judah’s silver pieces betrayed their
people. The Jews are our enemies and as such they hate,
poison, and exterminate us. Romanian leaders who cross into
their camp are worse than enemies: they are traitors. The
first and fiercest punishment ought to fall first on the
traitor, second on the enemy. If I had but one bullet and I
were faced by both an enemy and a traitor, I would let the
traitor have it.” (For My Legionaries)
However, one of the members of
this group, Vernichescu, decided to betray them and they were
arrested before they could take action. Upon being interrogated by
the police, Codreanu decided that honesty was the only noble way to
deal with the situation, and took full responsibility for the
assassination plot. They spent some time in jail, where they felt a
living spiritual force in the icon of Saint Michael the Archangel at
the prison church, which led them to decide that a new group they
would create should be named The Legion of Michael the Archangel.
The trial for the assassination
plot was held at Bucharest, at which Codreanu and his friends were
acquitted since the jurors, all Romanians, were sympathetic with
their action due to their anger at the government’s betrayal of the
will of the Romanian people. However, upon leaving, Ion Mota felt
that they could not succeed in their efforts without killing their
betrayer, who they recently discovered was Vernichescu. Mota had
shot him in his cell on the day of the trial and thus remained in
prison for a longer time to be tried for murder later (although he
was acquitted there as well, since few had sympathy for the
traitor).
Work for the
L.A.N.C. and the Split with Cuza
After Codreanu returned to Iasi in
May of 1924, he again started working for the National Christian
Defense League. The youth wing of the L.A.N.C. of which Codreanu was
a part, the Brotherhood of the Cross, was very low on money as well
as labor and was no longer allowed to hold meetings in universities.
They resorted to holding meetings in old wooden barracks, until they
finally decided to build a “Christian cultural home” by their own
work at Ungheni. With picks and shovels, even making their own
bricks with the help of local brick-makers, they built this meeting
house, which inspired local villagers (who simultaneously learned
about the ideas of the regeneration of Romania).
However, while they were doing
their construction work, they were brutally beaten several times
without any legal reason by policemen. Codreanu and other students
were arrested and hauled off to the police station in Iasi, where
the Police Prefect Manciu had them tortured while hanging
upside-down in chains. Only with the intervention of Cuza and other
leading citizens in Iasi were the students finally freed. The Jews
in the area were extremely happy over the torture of the students,
and rewarded Manciu, who received no punishment for his actions, by
buying him a car. Months later in October, 1925, Codreanu was
defending a student at court who was arrested at the raid on the
Ungheni site. In this courtroom, Manciu burst in with several
gendarmes (police type) and was prepared to harm Codreanu again. But
Codreanu reacted quickly, refusing to be illegally beaten and
humiliated, by taking out his revolver and shooting Manciu.
Codreanu was transferred to be
tried at trial to Tunul Severin, as far south from Moldavia as
possible in order to make sure that he was not in an area where
everyone sympathized with him. Yet even there, while the policemen
denied torturing the students, the jury knew the truth of what
happened and proclaimed Codreanu innocent. Shortly after this trial
he returned to Iasi and there married Elena Ilinoiu. From there he
and his wife decided to travel to France where he would earn his
doctorate in political economy at the University of Grenoble.
In May of 1927, Codreanu returned
from France and found that the L.A.N.C. was split into two factions
due to a lack of coordination and unity (specifically because of a
confusion over the expulsion of a deputy), which he felt was the
beginning of failure and disaster. Codreanu found that Cuza, the
leader of one faction, was perfectly happy with the situation, which
caused Codreanu to realize that Cuza was not a good leader. He
commented on Cuza’s leadership abilities: “If the doctrinaire is
expected to master the science of researching and formulating truth,
the leader of a political movement is expected to master the science
and the art of organization, education and leadership of men,
Professor Cuza, excelling and unsurpassed on the first plane, when
brought down on the practical one showed himself ignorant, awkward…”
After failing to get the two
factions, one led by professor Sumuleanu and the other by Cuza, to
come to an agreement, and also after seeing Cuza willing to
cooperate with corrupt politicians from other parties to an extent,
Codreanu finally decided to split off. He thought that the youth,
which was beginning to form a faction of its own, should become a
totally new organization that would be better led and more unified.
Codreanu and his best friends visited Cuza as well as Sumuleanu and
declared their intentions to create a movement on their own. The
students met at the “Christian cultural home” and founded their own
fully independent group, the Legion of Michael the Archangel, which
used the icon of Saint Michael as its symbol.
The Legion of
Michael the Archangel
The Legion of Michael the
Archangel did not present a party program and Codreanu did not even
consider the Legion to be a political movement, but rather a
spiritual movement whose aim was to improve Romania. He asserted
that even the best political programs would be compromised if the
Romanian people were corrupted by the influence of Jews and greedy
politicians. In The Nest Leader’s Manual, he wrote: “The
Politician’s goal is to build a fortune, ours is to build our
homeland flowering and strong. For her we will work and we will
build. For her we will make each Romanian a hero, ready to fight,
ready to sacrifice, ready to die.”
The Legion was to be more of a
school and an army, rather than a political group, for the creation
of a New Man (Omul Nou), a generation of Romanians who,
through their Christian spirituality and nationalism, would create a
Greater Romania freed from darkness and oppression. A spiritual
revolution would be the prerequisite for a political revolution. He
declared in For My Legionaries:
“From this Legionary
school a new man will have to emerge, a man with heroic
qualities; a giant of our history to do battle and win over
all the enemies of our Fatherland, his battle and victory
having to extend even beyond the material world into the
realm of invisible enemies, the powers of evil. Everything
that our mind can imagine more beautiful spiritually;
everything the proudest that our race can produce, greater,
more just, more powerful, wiser, purer, more diligent and
more heroic, this is what the Legionary school must give us!
A man in whom all the possibilities of human grandeur that
are implanted by God in the blood of our people be developed
to the maximum. This hero, the product of Legionary
education, will also know how to elaborate programs; will
also know how to solve the Jewish problem; will also know
how to organize the state well; will also know how to
convince the other Romanians; and if not, he will know how
to win, for that is why he is a hero. This hero, this
Legionary of bravery, labor and justice, with the powers God
implanted in his soul, will lead our Fatherland on the road
of its glory.” (For My Legionaries)
The Legion, because it needed a
strong structure of organization, was designed as a hierarchical
system. The basic unit of the Legion was called a nest, numbering
from simply three to thirteen members. At each level of the Legion,
from the nest to town, city, county, and regional sections up to the
Căpitanul (“Captain”),
the top leadership role which Codreanu attained, the leaders were
not chosen by election but by bravery and skill. The movement would
be opposed to the republican system, which Codreanu observed did not
really represent will of the people, and replace it with a new form
of government in which a leader would be selected rather than
elected, and would not be able to do what he personally
wishes, but only what is best for the nation. He explained the role
of the leader in this way: “He (the leader) does not do what he
wants, he does what he has to do. And he is guided, not by
individual interests, nor by collective ones, but instead by the
interests of the eternal nation, to the consciousness of which the
people have attained. In the framework of these interests and only
in their framework, personal interests as well as collective ones
find the highest degree of normal satisfaction.”
All the members of the Legion were
educated in Christian virtues, love of nation, and were taught to be
disciplined and disinterested in battle. The Legionaries marched and
sang national songs together along with volunteering to help
impoverished lower class Romanians (especially peasants) in
building, repairing houses, assisting in farming, and other areas of
work. The Legion’s nests were to be self-sufficient, not reliant on
buying materials for survival.
Codreanu and other nationalist
Romanians had witnessed for many years the suffering of the Romanian
people at the hands of the Capitalists, which were largely Jews only
interested in profit, and had no sympathy for Romanians. The
peasants were extremely poor, in some areas even to the point of
starvation, and were barely surviving by borrowing money at interest
rates from Jewish money-lenders. Jew-owned companies were chopping
down forests at alarming rates, destroying the source of livelihood
for certain groups of peasants such as the Moti. Jewish speculators
were buying up land and malnutrition was widespread, making the
situation seem grim for the Romanian people.
The Legionary Movement grew,
spreading through Romania and determined to change this situation by
finally banishing the Jews who usually had little sympathy for
Gentiles. Through charity and volunteer work, they revealed that
they were not just another corrupt party interested in power and
money. By 1929, in order to progress further, the Legionaries were
forced to create a political branch of the Legion to run for
elections. This organization was called Garda de Fier (“Iron
Guard”), which is the name by which the Legionary Movement would
later be commonly called.
Throughout the early 1930s Iron
Guard members marched through villages, wearing the green-colored
uniform with a white cross sewn on their shirts. Top Legionaries,
including Codreanu, were making speeches and marches, sometimes at
night, calling for the regeneration of Romania and the expulsion of
the Jews. But influential Jews and established political parties
were determined to stop the Iron Guard. In certain areas, Codreanu
and other top Legionaries were illegally barred from speaking and
often beaten by policemen as well as by Jews, usually without
provocation. Unfortunately, they also got into clashes with members
of the L.A.N.C., also called Cuzists, who viewed them as a threat to
their own success.
Eventually, by 1932, Codreanu and
his father entered the Romanian National Assembly through elections
in Moldavia. Despite this, the treatment of Legionaries got worse as
time passed, and all members, including girls, were beaten and
humiliated. By 1933, the Liberal Party, led by Ion Duca, was elected
into power and declared that it would exterminate the Iron Guard.
In that same year, Duca’s
government, after having already terrorized, tortured, and
assassinated several Legionaries, went ahead and banned the Legion
to keep it from participating in elections, leading to the arrest of
about 18,000 Legionaries (although Codreanu succeeded in hiding).
The Legionaries Nicolae Constantinescu, Doro Belimace and Ion
Caranica then assassinated Ion Duca for revenge, and immediately
turned themselves in to the police. Following this, the tortures and
assassinations of Legionaries by the government multiplied.
By the fall of 1936, the Legion
decided to send a symbolic team of seven top Legionaries to Spain to
help Francisco Franco fight the Marxist Republicans. While fighting
there, Ion Mota and Vasile Marin died at Majadahonda, near Madrid.
At the funeral, before the bodies of Mota and Marin, Codreanu
declared in an “Oath of Ranking Legionaries” (1937): “That is why
you are going to swear that you understand that being a Legionary
elite in our terms means not only to fight and win, but it also
means above all a permanent sacrifice of oneself to the service of
the Nation; that the idea of an elite is tied to the ideas of
sacrifice, poverty, and a hard, bitter life; that where
self-sacrifice ends, there also ends the Legionary elite.” Later,
there were large funeral processions all over Romania, and in the
next year a new elite unit in the Legionary Movement was created,
the “Mota-Marin Corps”.
In March of 1938, Codreanu sent a
letter to Nicolae Iorga to complain about Iorga’s campaign of
calumny against the Legion, in which he told Iorga that he is a
dishonest person who has taken part in the oppression of innocent
people. Iorga, insulted, then filed a lawsuit against Codreanu,
which resulted in King Carol II (who had earlier established himself
as a dictator, changing the constitution) and his Minister, Armand
Calinescu, arresting Codreanu (and then thousands of Legionaries)
and condemning him to six months in prison. The government organized
a second trial to take place, closed to the public and extremely
biased, in which Codreanu was sentenced to ten years in prison for
unreasonable and unproven accusations of sedition and treason.
Calinescu, a few months later, then had the military police murder
Codreanu, acting outside of the law (this occurred on November 30,
1938).
After Codreanu’s death terrible
persecutions of the Legion continued, and eventually a group of nine
Legionaries assassinated Calinescu. General Argeseanu, the new
leader in the Romanian government, afterwards executed 252
Legionaries and imprisoned thousands more, intensifying the
persecution yet more. By 1940, The Legionaries, under the leadership
of Horia Sima, attempted to negotiate with King Carol II. Later that
year, General Ion Antonescu would finally overthrow King Carol’s
government, resulting in the creation National Legionary State ruled
jointly by Sima and Antonescu.
Comments About
Codreanu from Notable People
Codreanu was seen by many people
as being an extremely charismatic and influential person. Even the
Hungarian speaking Jewish historian Nicholas Nagy-Talavera commented
his book The Green Shirts and the Others:
“There was suddenly a hush
in the crowd. A tall, darkly handsome man dressed in the
white costume of a Rumanian peasant rode into the yard on a
white horse. He halted close to me, and I could see nothing
monstrous or evil in him. On the contrary. His childlike,
sincere smile radiated over the miserable crowd, and he
seemed to be with it yet mysteriously apart from it.
Charisma is an inadequate word to define the strange force
that emanated from this man. He was more aptly simply part
of the forests, of the mountains, of the storms on the
snow-covered peaks of the Carpathians, and of the lakes and
rivers. And so he stood amid the crowd, silently. He had no
need to speak. His silence was eloquent; it seemed to be
stronger than we, stronger than the order of the prefect who
denied him speech. An old, white-haired peasant woman made
the sign of the cross on her breast and whispered to us,
‘The emissary of the Archangel Michael!’ Then the sad little
church bell began to toll, and the service which invariably
preceded Legionary meetings began. Deep impressions created
in the soul of a child die hard. In more than a quarter of a
century I have never forgotten my meeting with Corneliu
Zelea Codreanu.”
The famous Italian intellectual
Julius Evola was fascinated with him as well, and wrote of his
meeting with Codreanu upon visiting Romania in his article “The
Tragedy of the Romanian ‘Iron Guard’: Codreanu”:
“Through a group of
Legionaries who part comes towards us a young, tall, slender
man, with an uncommon expression of nobleness, frankness and
energy imprinted on his face : azure grey eyes, open
forehead, genuine Roman-Aryan type : and, mixed with virile
traits, something contemplative, mystical in the expression.
This is Corneliu Codreanu, the leader and founder of the
Romanian ‘Iron Guard’, the one who is called ‘assassin’,
‘Hitler’s henchman’, ‘anarchist conspirator’, by the world
press, because, since 1919, he has been challenging Israel,
and the forces which are more or less in cahoots with it, at
work in the Romanian national life.”
Horia Sima, Codreanu’s successor
as commander of the Legion in 1940, gave a description of Codreanu’s
appearance and character in his book
Istoria Mişcarii Legionare
(“History of the Legionary Movement”):
“There is no doubt, that
in this world, there are all sorts of people who look nice,
but are empty inside; who do not feel either moral or
spiritual aspirations in addition to the physical gifts with
which nature blessed them … But Corneliu Codreanu, his
magnificient physique corresponds to an exceptional inner
wholeness. Exclamations of admiration from men left him
indifferent. Praise angered him. He had only a fighter’s
greatness and the ambition of great reformers… The
characteristic of his soul was goodness. If you want to
penetrate the initial motive which prompted Corneliu
Codreanu to throw in a fight so hard and almost desperate,
the best answer is that he did it out of compassion for
suffering people. His heart bled with thousands of injuries
to see the misery in which peasants and workers struggled.
His love for the people – unlimited! He was sensitive to any
suffering the working masses endured. He had a cult for the
humble, and showed an infinite attention to their
aspirations and their hopes. The smallest window, the most
trivial complaint, were examined with the same seriousness
with which he addressed grave political problems.”
The Legionary
Movement After Codreanu
Horia Sima joined the Legion of
the Archangel Michael in November of 1927, the same year it was
founded by Corneliu Zelea Codreanu. But Sima was prominent only when
he first became a leader of the Legion in October of 1938, after a
new Legionary Command (of which Sima was a part) was organized due
to the fact that Corneliu Codreanu was imprisoned and other top
Legionaries arrested or assassinated. In 1940, Sima and Ion
Antonescu made a coup against the tyrannical King Carol II and
together created the National Legionary State. It was only after
this state was established that Horia Sima became the top commander
of the Legion. Of the establishment of the National Legionary State,
Horia Sima said in his book Era
Libertaţii – Statul naţional-Legionar vol. 1 (“It was
Freedom – National Legionary State vol. 1″) that “Rarely in our
people’s history has there been experienced a moment of collective
exaltation of as impressive enthusiasm as that of the popular masses
after the expulsion of King Carol from the country. You cannot even
compare the intensity of national sentiment with that rush of joy in
the annexed provinces, when the Union of 1918 was formed.”
Sima and Antonescu then proceeded
to nationalize or Romanianize the nation’s economy, trade, industry,
and mass media. Jews had previously gained an unreasonable and
ridiculous amount of ownership of factories, companies, newspapers,
cinemas, and various economic positions. Romania would no longer
allow the Jews, an alien ethnicity whose influence previously had
negative effects on Romanian life, to dominate their nation’s
economy and media and distort Romanian culture and lifestyle.
A note needs to be made of an
event that occurred in the Legionary State. On November 25, 1940,
the bodies of Codreanu and other murdered by Calinescu were exhumed.
In two days, by November 27, the Legionaries who were working in
that exhumation were so disturbed and angered upon seeing the bodily
remains of Codreanu and the other martyrs that they could not
restrain themselves from executing 64 members of previous political
regimes imprisoned at Jilava who were involved in imprisoning,
torturing, and massacring Legionaries in the past. Among these
executed for their past crime was Nicolae Iorga.
Iorga’s death was oftentimes, and
still is, used as propaganda against the Legionary Movement by
philo-semites, Jews, and Communists (it was used by the Romanian
Communist regime during its reign) in order to label Horia Sima and
the Legion as “terrorists” and “criminals”. Sima wrote in his 1990
book Era Libertaţii – Statul
naţional-Legionar vol. 2 (“It was Freedom – National
Legionary State vol. 2″) that “Iorga’s killing offered our enemies a
weapon of great efficiency, which they fired into the Movement and
which has not left their hands even today.” Of course, the Communist
propaganda usually overlooks the fact that Iorga was very
anti-Semitic and very anti-Communist like many other Romanians, and
also that Iorga brought his death upon himself by his own actions.
It has also been pointed out that Traian Boeru, Iorga’s assassin,
was a Communist agent and that the Legionaries involved would not
have actually killed Iorga had this agent not been there. The facts
of the situation are not fully clear, but what is clear is that it
is foolish and unreasonable to condemn the Legionary Movement based
on Iorga’s death, especially when considering how many “democratic”
movements throughout history are not condemned, but praised, despite
the murders they had committed.
Earlier in November of 1940,
Legionary Romania had joined the Tripartite Pact of National
Socialist Germany, Italy, and Japan, bringing Romania into World War
II on the side of the Axis powers. However, the dual leadership of
Sima and Antonescu was imperfect, since Antonescu was extremely
ambitious and wanted to gain complete power by personally becoming
the leader of the Legionary Movement. In January of 1941, Antonescu
prepared a personal meeting with Adolf Hitler without notifying Sima
or any other Legionary leaders (which results in Sima being unable
to participate) and left for Berlin on January 13th. Antonescu
discussed with Hitler the possibility of a war with the Soviet Union
and the conditions for Romania’s participation in that war.
Antonescu argued that the Romanian army is on his side and if Hitler
wants Romania to join in fighting the U.S.S.R., Germany must remain
neutral in the event of a conflict between him (Antonescu) and the
Legionary Movement.
General Antonescu in a few days
then prepared for a coup d’etat against the Legion by having
anti-Legionary propaganda spread through rumors claiming that
Legionaries are undisciplined, are engaging in scuffles with
military members, and are of questionable use in war. Antonescu then
took various anti-Legionary actions, including removing various
prominent Legionaries from government positions and eventually began
to arrest and imprison Legionary leaders. In this situation, on
January 21 of 1941, Horia Sima and a large amount of Legionaries
rebelled against Antonescu, and although they would later tried to
make agreements, Antonescu harshly repressed the Legionaries. In
another meeting with Hitler, Antonescu convinced the German leader
that the Legionaries were “fanatics” that needed to be suppressed.
The Romanian government under Antonescu then became highly
authoritarian and began to arrest and kill hundreds of Legionaries.
By April of 1941, Horia Sima and many other members of the Legion
fled into German territory and were confined to compulsory quarters
in certain camps; although they are treated well by the Germans.
During World War II, Romania under
Antonescu took part in Operation Barbarossa, fighting with
the Axis against the Soviet Union. After the Battle of Stalingrad
was lost, the Soviets expanded westwards. As the Soviet armies were
moving into Romania in 1944, Antonescu contemplated making peace
with the Allies but decided to firmly stay in the Axis alliance.
Because of this decision, the Royal Coup of August 23 occurred that
year, in which groups led by King Michael I decided to remove
Antonescu from power by surrounding him and having him arrested.
Romania then switched sides in World War II, joining the Allies. The
Germans reacted to this by releasing Horia Sima and the other
Legionaries. Upon this release, Sima established, with German help,
a Legionary government in Vienna to assist in the battle against
Communism. However, by 1945 the Soviet conquest could not be stopped
so they retreated westwards.
Sima and most other Legionaries
fled to Italy or to parts of Germany, where they established
Romanian Committees to help Romanian refugees fleeing from Communism
get into Western Europe. By 1949-50, Sima and other top Legionaries
started collaborating with French, American, and British authorities
to fight Communism, especially by assisting emigrants from the
Soviet Union (which would weaken Communist regimes in Eastern
Europe). The French-American military then assisted in preparing
Legionaries to move into Romania in order to physically fight
Communists and start an anti-Communist uprising in that nation. By
1954, the agreement was cancelled due to Soviet infiltration of
British intelligence (led by Kim Philby) and because Western powers
wanted to establish a “peaceful coexistence” with Stalin’s regime.
Although some Legionaries in
Romania continued fighting the Communists into the 1960s, most
Legionaries went into exile, scattered across nations in Europe,
North America, South America, and Australia. Horia Sima, from the
1950s onwards, had lived in various places throughout Germany,
Italy, France, and finally to Franco’s Spain (where he received
political refugee status). Various dissident groups created factions
splitting off from Horia Sima’s rule, although Sima was considered
leader by the majority of Legionaries. For decades, most Legionaries
could not do much other than write articles, books, and translate
works. However, in 1989 after Ceausescu’s Communist regime was
overthrown in Romania, Sima and other Legionaries took the
opportunity to attempt to revive Legionarism in Romania. Legionaries
created various parties, although Sima could not go to Romania
himself since he had been sentenced to death there since 1946.
Unfortunately, the Legionary parties came into conflict with each
other and none could establish a large movement. Sima died in May
25, 1993 in Madrid, Spain unable to end the quarrels among the
various groups. However, the Legionary Movement still continued in
its new form and modern Legionaries today are still working to
educate the younger generations as to the truth of Legionary
history.
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