Peste doua zile, kitschul reprezentat de fosta "Casa a Poporului" a
dictatorului comunist va gazdui summitul NATO - ironia suprema, nu-i asa?
 
----------------------------
 
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)
Aboneaza-te la  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ngo_list: o
alternativa moderata (un pic) la [ngolist]
Please consider the environment - do you really need to print this email?
 
 

 <http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSL2445754920080330>
http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSL2445754920080330

 

NATO leaders will glimpse Romanian dictator's dreams

Sun Mar 30, 2008 8:07am EDT

By Justyna Pawlak

 

BUCHAREST (Reuters) - When NATO leaders meet in Bucharest on Wednesday, they
will be granted an inside glimpse of the megalomaniac dreams of Nicolae
Ceausescu, Romania's communist-era dictator.

 <javascript:nextPhoto();> Photo

 

The Alliance's April 2-4 summit will be held in the giant Parliament Palace,
built in the 1980s on the orders of Ceausescu to reflect his power and his
vision of a mighty state.

 

Romanian guidebooks tout the building as the world's second largest after
the Pentagon. Architects lament the demolition of Bucharest's historic
centre, with its churches, synagogues and unique Modernist villas, to make
room for construction.

 

The building is in some ways a monument to the scars inflicted on Romania by
the late Ceausescu's brutal policies.

 

At the time of construction, its ostentatious excess contrasted with the
harsh living conditions endured by ordinary Romanians, whose food was
rationed to near starvation levels and whose heating came on for a few hours
a day, if at all.

 

Almost 20 years after Ceausescu's execution in 1989 during a bloody
revolution against his regime, authorities are still struggling to modernize
the dilapidated city, get its chaotic traffic moving and ease the poverty of
many inhabitants.

 

"The palace is a very good illustration of the totalitarian way of seeing
the relationship between people and their leaders," said Mariana Celac, an
architect and Ceausescu-era dissident.

 

"It has walls, boundaries, locked gates and huge distances to be walked
through, presumably with humility."

 

Ceausescu, who initially named the building "House of the People", was once
quoted as saying the Palace would become Romania's "Acropolis".

 

"I need something grand, something very grand, that reflects what we have
already achieved," he is reported to have said.

 

KITSCH AND SECURITY

 

Thousands of tonnes of crystal, marble and wood were hauled to Bucharest
from across Romania for the construction of the Palace, with its sprawling
corridors and glitzy halls, as well as secret tunnels and a nuclear bunker.

 

The security features, a testimony to Ceausescu's fears of attack, might
still be useful during the April NATO meeting if the Alliance's leaders were
to come under threat, said its designer and chief architect, Anca Petrescu.

 

"The building is prepared for a high degree of security," she said.

 

Ceausescu and his feared wife Elena regularly inspected the construction
site. Some 40,000 residents were evicted to make way for the palace, and
many were housed in the drab apartment blocs that now make up large swathes
of Bucharest, rusting and crumbling only a couple of decades after being
built.

 

Petrescu said six people died in accidents during the construction of the
3,000-room building, which now contains both of Romania's chambers of
parliament, an art museum and a vast conference venue.

 

The Palace's eclectic facade is replete with soaring marble columns.
Together with matching tower blocs nearby -- inspired by North Korean
architecture -- it looms over Bucharest.

 

"During construction, the entire (national) production of stone was
reserved. Marble was banned for private use," said Celac.

 

Bucharest was once a quietly elegant capital, with tree-lined boulevards and
discreet villas designed by progressive Modernist architects in the 1920s
and 30s.

 

At the start of World War Two it was considered one of Europe's most
advanced in terms of urban planning.

 

But after Ceausescu's demolitions, two earthquakes and free-for-all
construction that marred Romania's sluggish transition from communism to
democracy, the city is struggling to regain its style. This leaves
Ceausescu's palace as its biggest tourist attraction. Despite being widely
considered a monstrosity, its sheer size means it isn't going away soon --
and it does have its uses.

 

Romanian President Traian Basescu, asked by Reuters what he thought of the
building, was diplomatic.

 

"In my mind this building is relevant for a single reason. It is the second
largest building in the world after the Pentagon. Period," he joked.

 

(Additional reporting by Iulia Rosca and Luiza Ilie; reporting by Justyna
Pawlak; editing by Andrew Roche)

 

C Reuters 2007

<<attc1436.jpg>>

Raspunde prin e-mail lui