Outrageous Rehabilitations: Justice and Memory in the Attempts to Restore the War Criminals’ Cover Image
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Outrageous Rehabilitations: Justice and Memory in the Attempts to Restore the War Criminals’
Outrageous Rehabilitations: Justice and Memory in the Attempts to Restore the War Criminals’

Remembrance in Post-Holocaust Romania. The Recent Case of General Nicolae Macici (I)

Author(s): Andrei Muraru
Subject(s): Law and Transitional Justice, Political history, WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), Post-War period (1950 - 1989), Transformation Period (1990 - 2010), Fascism, Nazism and WW II, History of the Holocaust, Post-Communist Transformation, Politics of History/Memory
Published by: Institutul National pentru Studierea Holocaustului din Romania ELIE WIESEL
Keywords: Posthumous rehabilitation; war criminals; trials; Holocaust; (post-)communism;

Summary/Abstract: Starting from the most recent rehabilitation request in Romanian justice (General Nicolae Macici, one of the coordinators of the 1941 Odessa massacre), this study examines the case of the rehabilitation of war criminals during the communist regime and after the 1989 Revolution. In 1945, the post-war trials, in which many members of the Antonescu regime were tried, disappeared as subjects from the public sphere, though the trials went on. The series of rehabilitations began in the mid-1960s, when the communist regime put in practice a thaw and the release of political prisoners. Analyzing concrete cases of Romanian military, intellectuals, and dignitaries who obtained legal and social rehabilitation during communism, the present study shows that those rehabilitations were made with the tacit consent of the Romanian authorities. However, the trials were not retried and the convicts were not considered not guilty. The collapse of communism paved the way for the legal rehabilitation of many war criminals by the justice system through retrying the trials and acquitting those guilty of war crimes and genocide. In general, the legal rehabilitations were aimed either at honoring the memory and restoring the honor of those considered to have been victims of the Soviet occupation, or at allowing their heirs to reclaim the confiscated property of the convicts. The study shows that these posthumous post-communist rehabilitations were made possible due to the general current within Romanian society in the 1990s. This trend, maintained by a political and historiographical agenda, was stopped in the 2000s,with Romania’s access to NATO and the European Union. Although public campaigns to rehabilitate war criminals have continued, the justice system has not allowed any rehabilitation of those convicted of war crimes and genocide after 2000.

  • Issue Year: XII/2020
  • Issue No: 13
  • Page Range: 327-364
  • Page Count: 38
  • Language: English