Romanian communist activist and bureaucrat
Iosif Ardeleanu (born Adler Döme , September 25, 1909 – July 26, 1988) was an Austro-Hungarian -born Romanian communist activist and bureaucrat.
He was born into a Hungarian-Jewish family in Salonta .[ 1] [ 2] After World War I , he moved with his family to Oradea , where he completed his secondary studies. In 1928 he went to Timișoara , where he was employed for 6 years by an iron commerce firm. During that time he changed his name and married his first wife, Gherghina.[ 2] Ardeleanu joined the Romanian Communist Party (PCR) in 1933, while it was banned, and was a militant in Timișoara, tasked with Agitprop by the party. Arrested in 1934, he was incarcerated for 5 years at prisons in Timișoara, Caransebeș , and Doftana . From 1939 to 1941, he was the PCR Secretary for the Yellow Sector of Bucharest .[ 3] During World War II , Ardeleanu was detained at the Târgu Jiu internment camp for political prisoners, together with Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej ,[ 4] and also at the Vapniarka concentration camp and in Grosulovo .[ 3]
After 1944 he divorced his first wife and in the early 1950s he married Clara Turcu,[ 2] a manager at the Foreign Ministry under Ana Pauker .[ 5] As head of the General Press and Typography Directorate from 1951 to 1973, Ardeleanu was one of the chief enforcers of censorship in Communist Romania . His obtuseness, intolerance and dogmatism became legendary. Between 1956 and 1958, he was part of a team that investigated and monitored the ousted Imre Nagy -led Hungarian government being held under arrest at Snagov .[ 5] He retired in 1973 and died in 1988 in Bucharest.[ 2]
Notes
^ Pușcaș, Cristina Liana (February 19, 2015). "O carte despre istoria Direcției Generale a Presei și Tipăriturilor – Cenzura și mecanismele sale" . Crișana (in Romanian). Retrieved January 8, 2023 .
^ a b c d Dobra, N.I. (April 15, 2016). "Lumea ca bâlci" . Tribuna (in Romanian). Retrieved January 8, 2023 .
^ a b "Adler/Ardeleanu Iosif" . www.ilegalisti.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved January 8, 2023 .
^ Chiorean, Andru (2009). Inside the Romanian Communist Party Apparatus: An Anatomy of the Institution of Censorship in the 1960s (PDF) (MA). Budapest: Central European University . Retrieved January 8, 2023 .
^ a b (in Romanian) Biografiile nomenklaturii Archived 2012-03-05 at the Wayback Machine , at the Institute for the Investigation of Communist Crimes in Romania site