The National Assembly in Alba Iulia on December 1st, 1918

the national assembly in alba iulia on december 1st, 1918 World War One veterans reminiscing about the Great Union

The National Assembly in Alba Iulia on December 1st, 1918, proclaimed the Union of Transylvania with the then Kingdom of Romania, The 1,228 delegates thus confirmed the fact that Romanians in the Austrian-Hungarian Empire were part of the Greater Romania project, initiated by King Ferdinand I and Queen Marie.

December the 1st, 1928, was a cold winter day, yet it was also a day of joy. The Romanians do have a penchant for festivities, so today's celebrating mood might make us believe the general enthusiasm back then was a moderate one. Nevertheless, documents of the time reveal the fact that crowds of people openly expresses their joy around December 1st. It was the joy marking the end of a bloodcurdling ending, that of the trench war, a joy that was blended into the advent of peace and the access to a new country, to Greater Romania, which claimed the lives of millions of servicemen on the front lines in the Carpathians or around river Danube. The joy of the Romanians living in the Austrian-Hungarian Empire was also bolstered by the fact that a great many of them had been in the line of duty for the whole four years of the war. They had fought on the front line and had seen death in all its harrowing forms. The 12 battles on the Isonzo river alone, along Italy's border with Slovenia, according to the testimonies of Transylvanian Romanians who fought there, were also reasons for everybody to hail peace, from the bottom of their hearts.

The press of that time, the correspondence, diaries and memoirs back then are written evidence for the enthusiastic atmosphere around the day of December 1st, 1918. People wanted to organized themselves, to do away with the after math of the war, to bring back peace, economic prosperity and personal safety. The early days of winters were also the days of the first snowfall, what with the fact that winter holidays were drawing near, while the return to normality made everybody view events with great optimism.

Clement Bolfă was from the commune of Maieru, the County of Bistrița-Năsăud. He was 90 in 2000. He recalled that in 1918, when he was an eight-year old child and a 1st-grader, mobilizing joy seized the adults around him.

"I remember I was in school and I had a school teacher, Barna Ionuc, and he told us he had to travel to Alba Iulia to take part in an assembly, because Transylvania united with the Mother Country. And when he came back he told us how it was and then taught us children to sing "The Union is written on our flag", "The Great Round Dance ", "Join your hands and never part/ all ye with Romanian heart". I was on the verge of tears...The schoolteacher told us how Transylvania got united and how they cried out in support of the union. When he came from Alba Iulia he set up a festivity here and we were singing and there was such a joy! Those were the days!"

Emil Wagner was a former member of the National Peasant Party and a member of the Romanian National Party before 1918. He knew Iuliu Maniu, the leader of the National Peasant Party very well. In 2000, when he was 104 years old, he recalled the circumstances prior to December 1st 1918. Wagner was a member of the delegation that was to get in touch with the Romanian National Party of Bukovina, being sent by Maniu together with Ilie Lazar, another important leader of the National Peasant Party. Wagner recalled how in August 1981 Alexandru Vaida-Voevod, a leading politician of the Romanian National Party and deputy of the Parliament in Pesta, had been empowered to demand the independence of Transylvania on behalf of the party:

"Vaida took the floor in the Hungarian Parliament and demanded the independence of Transylvania. Count Tisza, who was head of government, said that Vaida was a traitor. Then Iuliu Maniu took the floor demanding the same thing. Then, Ferdinand, a member of the Habsburg family addressed parliament, saying "We can't blame these people as being traitors because they are our deputies, they are not traitors. It is normal that they should demand the independence of Transylvania!" Then, it was demanded that the independence of Transylvania should be subject to vote. Votes were cast, but Ferdinand did not vote. However, his proposal exonerated Iuliu Maniu and Vaida and they were not executed; Count Tisza had demanded that they should be executed."

The women's involvement in the achievement of the Great Union was no less important than that of men. The mothers, wives, sisters or daughters of the great men who achieved the union of December 1st 1918 were no less than their sons, husbands, brothers and fathers. Lucia Mihaly of Apsa, the daughter of a great Romanian lawyer, recalled that she had sewn the tricolour flag she had hoisted in the balcony of their house in Sighet, Maramures. The new civil servants swore allegiance to the Romanian state on that flag after December 1st, 1918. 

Lucia Mihaly:

"In 1918 my brother came from Cluj and brought a flag from Iuliu Maniu to my mother. I sewed it with coloured silk and my brother and I took the flag to the square in the middle of the town. Delegates from every village came there to go to Alba Iulia and swore they would not come back without a result. They either walked or went by wagon or on horseback because Hungarians didn't let them go by train to Alba Iulia. My brother and Ilie Lazar carried the flag. And when my brother came back I put the flag on the balcony; it was October 24."

Can there be a greater joy when a four year long destructive war is over? All the more so when a new country is born.



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Publicat: 2019-12-07 11:00:00
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