CHAPTER XIV

"PROFITABLE" USE OF TIME

The relationship of "unmasked" students to the "patron" O. D. C. C. is not clear. Not everyone considered re-educated became a member of O. D. C. C. as a matter of course; in fact, only a very small number were chosen by Turcanu and approved by his unseen superiors. The exact number of those considering themselves members could not be learned. Supposedly it did not exceed 50 or 60 out of a total of more than 1,000 re-educated students. It was from these approved "joiners" that committee leaders were selected to direct unmaskings.

As the number of re-educated grew, using all of them in unmaskings became of course more difficult. Everything possible was done to ensure that each participated in at least one such operation, in order to confirm his disintegration into the new state. There were, on the other hand, always the zealots who carried the load, and were taken from cell to cell to begin their work anew.

The rest of the re-educated students passed their days according to the established program. Usually the program came from "above," namely from the directorate of the O. D. C. C., but many times it was left to the discretion of cell committees, the leadership being confident that its underlings understood very well what was permitted and what was not.

Topics for discussion, once selected, were often assigned to a student to confirm his degradation, but there were plenty of volunteers who offered to speak on "agreed upon" subjects out of a desire to put to sleep any suspicions the committee might entertain. In this manner were organized short theatrical productions in which the old order, or organizations of which the "creators" were former members, were maligned. Poetry, and particularly the epigram, was employed in developing the topics selected by the committee. Out of these efforts came a collection of verses, entitled "The Red Notebook," to which several students over a period of three years contributed their work. The student Sergiu Mandinescu, a quite talented youth, had charge of editing the work, which was finally presented to the political officer of the Gherla prison, Avadanei, who, in addition to torturing prisoners, busied himself with being a "patron of the arts. " The collection, as was to be expected, contained lavish praise of the Communist Party and its early underground fighters; laudatory poems about machinery in factories; and odes on the creative nature of prison life which "forged new men. "

Educational discussions were held based on materials prepared by the prison's directorate and by O. D. C. C. members. In these, plans of action for further unmaskings were worked out and various reports of "in the field" leaders of unmaskings were analyzed. During these "analysis meetings" were scrutinized also the written declarations of those subjected to torture, especially those concerning the outer unmasking; if found adequate, they were sent every month to the Ministry of the Interior by special courier.

The fulfillment of this program was supervised by members of the O. D. C. C., a watchful eye being particularly kept on things which might prove symbolic, resulting sometimes in quite preposterous situations. Here is an example:

One afternoon a student began humming a popular tune of the 1940's. From the whole song, I here give only the refrain:

"But I cannot, and slowly pass the years
Waiting for the buckeyes to bloom again ... "

Just a few common words. But back in 1947 the Romanians had modified the last line, substituting "Waiting for the Americans to arrive. " Doubtless our music lover was only humming a tune without thought for the substituted verse, but someone who heard him shouted, "Unmask!" This was the term used to announce you had something to say about yourself or someone else. At once, everybody had to stop what he was doing and listen. "The bandit X sang a song with a hidden meaning; he cannot forget what he was; and he awaits the Americans to take revenge on the re-educators. " The student in question, surprised, could not but admit that the bandit within him had not yet disappeared and that he was guilty and deserving of stringent punishment!

Any slackening in attention to "the new nature" was taken care of by controlling the rhythm of the unmaskings. When the effect was at a low ebb, those who were still in their own cells were sent either to other cells where unmaskings were being started, or into cells where the newly arrived were being held. Here they were required to act as "confidence men" and obtain all the information they could from the newcomers, which could be used later when the cudgels were brought out and the re-education began.