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Michael of Romania

May 17th 2007
>From Economist.com

Romantic, royal and retiring


UNTIL the collapse of communism, being an exiled monarch was merely
thankless. Since then it has been cruelly disappointing. In Albania,
Georgia, Hungary, Montenegro, Russia and Serbia the monarchist cause has at
best crashed and burned-or more often failed to ignite at all, leaving royal
pretenders (or pretend royals) stranded on the eurotrash heap of history. In
Bulgaria, Simeon Saxcoburggotski (or ex-King Simeon II) was briefly a
popular prime minister. But now he languishes in an uncomfortable coalition
with the ex-communists, heirs to the party that exiled him and murdered his
followers.

The classiest act, however, is Michael of Romania: dignified, modest and
sharpwitted; ambitious for his country, but not for himself. He is one of
only three surviving heads of state from 1945 (the others are ex-King
Simeon, who was only seven when the war ended, and Mohammed Zahir Shah, once
King of Afghanistan and now, aged 92, back home as "Father of the Nation").
Michael makes no claims to his throne; in return, Romania's current rulers
treat him with the courtesies due to a former head of state.

Bursting with questions, your columnist hurried to a London hotel for a few
moments of monarchical nostalgia. But what does one call a king without a
country? For a representative of a republican newspaper, "Your Majesty"
seemed too deferential. "Sire" was clearly over the top. "Sir" seemed too
downbeat. "Mr Hohenzollern [the royal family's surname]" would be insulting.

In a language such as German, where spoken as well as written salutations
matter, the problem would have been insuperable. But English is flexible:
"you" proved just fine.

The real problem, though, was not addressing Michael correctly, but
understanding him. A speech impediment turns his idiomatic American into a
diffident mumble. His wife Anne, by contrast, speaks with crystalline
precision. An exiled Greek princess, she honed her English as a sales
assistant at Macy's in New York.


AFP     
 AFP <http://www.economist.com/images/columns/2007w20/KingMichael.jpg>  


The first question-and one that still rages in discussions in Romania-is
about the Soviet takeover. In August 1944 the then king staged a coup
against the pro-Nazi Antonescu regime and switched sides to the Allies,
signing a speedy armistice with the Soviet Union. After two years of uneasy
coexistence, he was forced to abdicate. Looking back, was there any card he
could have played differently? "No", is the firm answer. "It wasn't just the
Soviet Union. America and Britain forced us to include communists in the
coup against Antonescu. At the time there were only a few hundred in the
whole of Romania". As in other eastern European countries, the Red Army's
presence made communists sprout like mushrooms. Soon it was too late. Only
Ernest Bevin [British foreign secretary after 1945] was honest," says
Michael, flatly. "He said 'Britain is not in a position to help'." In short:
"when something happens like it did with us, suddenly nobody knows you no
more."

So palace coups gave way to earning a living: initially by market-gardening
in England, with some chickens on the side-"Rhode Island Reds and Sussex",
notes his wife, enthusiastically. Most royals don't get the chance to keep
chickens.

Unlike Baltic and Ukrainian exile leaders, Michael wisely shunned cold-war
attempts to stoke armed resistance in his captive homeland. "In the 1950s
the Americans wanted to use me to train a whole bunch of people and
parachute them in. I said 'no-what's the point?'". That is a sad theme for
eastern Europe, and perhaps an ominously contemporary one: almost as bad as
having the Kremlin as your implacable enemy is having the West,
absent-minded and unreliable, as your friend.

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Limited 2007

----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)

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