Posted on 10/17/2017 5:43:27 PM PDT by marshmallow
If youve ever seen Casablanca, you wont have forgotten the scene in Ricks Cafe where the German officers who are singing Die Wacht am Rhein are drowned out by the French patrons who burst into a rousing rendition of the Marseillaise.
Something similar happened last week at the National Opera in Cluj Napoca, Romania. A multicultural opera that included a Muslim muezzin chanting the call to prayer was interrupted by members of the audience singing the national anthem.
The Romanian national anthem is not quite as rousing as La Marseillaise (at least, not to the non-Romanian ear), and the singers were not as talented as the cast of Casablanca, but the sentiments were the samenamely, that tyranny must be resisted.
What tyranny is that, you may ask. Romania is not an occupied country, nor is it in imminent danger of an Islamic takeover.
But it was not that long ago that Romanians did live under the boot of a communist tyrant. Indeed, Nicolae Ceausescu, who demolished churches and employed slave labor, was one of the more ruthless of recent dictators. With the memory of his bloody regime fresh in mind, it is no wonder that Romanians are sensitive to any signs of nascent totalitarianismeven if it is only the soft totalitarianism of the European Union.
Having joined the EU in 2007, Romania is subject to the increasingly Orwellian dictats of the EUparticularly those touching on immigration. Like it or not, every EU country is expected to take in a certain quota of immigrants. As migrant crime rates soar, many are now beginning to look upon EU membership as akin to membership in a suicide pact.
This is a particularly touchy subject for Romanians because their country is the first stop on one of the main migration routes into....
(Excerpt) Read more at crisismagazine.com ...
I believe that having lived under actual communism, former citizens of Eastern Europe were actually sheltered from the cultural marxist germ-warfare that spread in the West.
Interesting point, FRiend.
They certainly haven’t been spoiled by the sort of prosperity that leads one to forget what a struggle life was for most of human history — and still is in many parts of the world.
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