RRI Live!

Listen to Radio Romania International Live

Mircea Carp turns 100

In his long career as a radio journalist, Mircea Carp has worked for both Radio Free Europe and The Voice of America.

Mircea Carp turns 100
Mircea Carp turns 100

, 06.02.2023, 14:00


We
dedicate this edition of the History Show to radio journalist Mircea
Carp, who used to work for the Romanian service of Radio Free Europe
and contributed to the huge prestige enjoyed by that station. Carp
turned 100 on 28th
January 2023, having lived through one of the most problematic
centuries in the history of mankind, including Romania: the century
of two world wars, fascism and communism. After fighting on the front
in the second world war, where he was wounded and decorated, Mircea
Carp emigrated to the West when the war was over. He was one of the
most recognizable voices on the radio and worked with the most
important free media institutions in the Romanian language after
1945, namely The Voice of America and Radio Free Europe. Together
with his colleagues, he stood by the Romanian people in all the
difficult moments they went through, both before 1989 and after. Those
who were around at the time will never forget the opening Radio Free
Europe’s broadcast, which played George Enescu’s First Romanian
Rhapsody and Mircea Carp’s announcement This is Radio Free
Europe, which was repeated four times.




In
1997, the Oral History Centre of the Romanian Radio Broadcasting
Corporation recorded Mircea Carp’s experience working for The Voice
of America. He was asked if the station knew about the tragedy of
political prisoners in Romania and how it covered this issue for the
Romanian public:





We covered the subject, but we had to be careful with the
information we would broadcast. In fact, the news broadcast by The
Voice of America, then and today, had to be verified by at least two
sources in order to be confirmed. You can imagine that we got all
sorts of information from Romania and had to consider if it was true.
We were very aware of the horrors taking place in the Romanian
prisons, at the Canal and in other places, but we had to be careful
when we named names, dates and places, because things might have been
exaggerated, or some people couldn’t remember exactly when the
events occurred or when exactly they met a certain person. So, in
this respect we were very, very careful not to make mistakes. Of
course, after we got the confirmation we needed, we would broadcast
the information, including interviews. In most cases, the persons we
interviewed wanted to remain anonymous, and rightly so, because they
still had families back in Romania and didn’t want to make their
situation unpleasant.





Carp
began working for Radio Free Europe in 1951 before moving to The
Voice of America where he became known to Romanian-language listeners
for the quality of his programmes. In 1978, he returned to Radio Free
Europe, where he infused more energy into the station’s Romanian
language broadcasts and where his foreign policy show called The
Political Programme was very popular with the public. Mircea Carp
explains:





Before
I joined Radio Free Europe, their broadcasts were a bit flat. Without
wanting to blow my own trumpet, I brought some American energy to
these broadcasts – shorter reports and interviews with people from
all corners of the world, including well-known Romanians living in
exile, in the free world. But apart from my own contribution, the
station itself, perhaps sensing that the collapse of the Iron Curtain
was near, intensified its campaign. The Romanian language department
increased its focus on programmes that scrutinised the situation in
Romania and revealed everything that was intolerable about this
situation. I’m speaking of the things that were not visible on the
surface, but which many people knew about, although not all in any
case. The fact that a foreign radio station shed light on the real
political, economic, cultural and military situation in Romania was
much appreciated by our listeners, who were themselves unable to
speak openly, to say what they were thinking or what they had heard
and who found their feelings echoed in the programmes of Radio Free
Europe.





The
Romanian radio journalist Mircea Carp turned 100. He is an integral
part of the history of free audiovisual media in Romania, alongside
the likes of Noel
Bernard, Monica
Lovinescu, Virgil Ierunca, Vlad Georgescu and
Neculai
Constantin Munteanu.

The History Show
The History Show Monday, 01 June 2026

The events in Tatarbunar

The events that unfolded in Tatarbunar, in the fall of 1924 constitute a textbook case of state sponsored terrorism. They also illustrate how a...

The events in Tatarbunar
Photo: Artyom Korshunov / unsplash.com
The History Show Monday, 25 May 2026

The nationalisation of the mines

Mining is an old occupation in the Romanian lands, present in the earliest records of the inhabitants of these parts. A peculiarity of Romanian...

The nationalisation of the mines
Sighet Memorial (Photo: Mariana Chirita/ RRI)
The History Show Monday, 18 May 2026

Romulus Rusan

The name of the writer Romulus Rusan is synonymous with the recovery of the memory from the years of communism, a memory that suffered severely...

Romulus Rusan
RRI
The History Show Monday, 11 May 2026

Romania and the Group of 77

From 1945 until well after 1958,  the year the Red Army withdrew, Romanian diplomacy, like that of all other socialist states in Central and Eastern...

Romania and the Group of 77
The History Show Monday, 04 May 2026

The Royal Hunts

Hunting also carried a magical‑religious dimension, served as a marker of belonging to an elite, and functioned as a symbol of authority embodied...

The Royal Hunts
The History Show Monday, 27 April 2026

Pharmaceuticals in the Phanariot era

According to historians, the Phanariot era in the Romanian Principalities began in 1718 and ended more than a century later, in 1822. It is named...

Pharmaceuticals in the Phanariot era
The History Show Monday, 20 April 2026

Feminism in Romania after World War II

After 1945, the feminist movement in Romania was subordinated to the policies of the communist regime and ideology dictated what should be done....

Feminism in Romania after World War II
The History Show Monday, 13 April 2026

Aron Pumnul High School in Chernivtsi (Cernăuți)

School is what has mostly shaped human beings starting with the 18th century, when humanity began to understand that only through education can human...

Aron Pumnul High School in Chernivtsi (Cernăuți)

Partners

Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român
Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS
Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online
Institului European din România Institului European din România
Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti
Muzeul Național de Artă al României Muzeul Național de Artă al României
Le petit Journal Le petit Journal
Radio Prague International Radio Prague International
Muzeul Național de Istorie a României Muzeul Național de Istorie a României
ARCUB ARCUB
Radio Canada International Radio Canada International
Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti” Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti”
SWI swissinfo.ch SWI swissinfo.ch
UBB Radio ONLINE UBB Radio ONLINE
Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl
creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti
italradio italradio
Institutul Confucius Institutul Confucius
BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți

Affiliates

Euranet Plus Euranet Plus
AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters
Digital Radio Mondiale Digital Radio Mondiale
News and current affairs from Germany and around the world News and current affairs from Germany and around the world
Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona

Providers

RADIOCOM RADIOCOM
Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company