Dokument #1258208
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
For information on the treatment of
Pentecostals during Ceausescu's regime, please refer to attached
information requests (Nos. ROM1381 and ROM3360).
As stated in response number ROM1381, the
Pentecostal religion appears to have been one of the 14 recognized
religions in Romania during Ceausescu's regime. Pentecostals
therefore did not suffer the type of treatment given those
denominations considered to have interests hostile to the
state.
Nicolae Ceausescu maintained tight state
control on religion and according to the IRBDC's Country
Profile: Romania, the government also restricted religious
freedom indirectly through administrative measures; it controlled
admissions to seminaries, the construction of churches and the
distribution of religious materials. Vocal advocates of change are
reported to have faced surveillance, loss of jobs and arrests. The
country profile also summarizes the Communist Party's view of
religion: in his statement to the RCP Congress of 1977, Ceausescu
stated "backwardness, superstition and religion had no place within
the ideal of Communist Society" (IRBDC, 1990).
Although detailed information on the
treatment of adherents to the Pentecostal religion is not available
to the IRBDC at this time, it is apparent that the December
revolution has had a strong impact on the freedom of religion in
Romania.
Kent Hill, executive director of the
Washington based Institute of Religion in Democracy, which promotes
democratic change and religious freedom, states that the results of
his fact-finding mission to Romania show that "religious believers
are considerably better off since the fall of Nicolae Ceausescu"
(Witham 15 June 1990, B5).
A promising change in Romania's religious
policy is the granting of legal status to the Evangelical Alliance
as well as to the Jehovah's Witnesses who, according to a New York
based group, had been "repressed for decades" (Jehovah's Witnesses,
5 May 1990). Other examples of the religious freedoms which
followed the December revolution include the right to re-establish
monastaries closed by the Communists in 1962 and to provide
religious instruction in state schools (Borrell, 12 Nov. 1990). An
article in Report on Eastern Europe states that this is a
time of relaxation in relations between the state and Romania's
religious denominations. On 19 January 1990, the Department for
Religious Affairs, the Communist's instrument of control over the
religious life of the country, was replaced by a Ministry of
Religious Affairs. The report goes on to state that it can now be
assumed that the state will try to "reduce its interference in
religious matters to a minimum and to establish good relations with
all religious communities" (Ionescu, 9 March 1990). It seems
evident that since the December revolution and the end of
Ceausescu's regime, Romania is more tolerant of various religious
beliefs and of the right to freedom of religion.
Borrell, John. "A Monastery Returns to
Life: Romania's Churches Recover from an Era of Repression."
Time, 12 November 1990
Ionescu, Dan. "Crisis in the Romanian
Orthodox Church." RFE/RL Report on Eastern Europe, 9 March
1990.
Immigration and Refugee Board
Documentation Centre (IRBDC). Romania: Country Profile.
IRBDC, July 1990.
Jehovah's Witnesses Legalized in
Romania." Los Angeles Times, 5 May 1990.
Witham, Larry. "Religion Faces Many Road
Blocks in East." The Washington Times, 15 June 1990.
For further information, please find attached Information Request
No. ROM1381, 4 July 1989 and No. ROM3360, 28 December 1989.