International Religious Freedom
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
The Constitution and the law provide for freedom of religion. While the
Government generally respected this right in practice, some restrictions
adversely affected the rights of some religious groups.
There was no change in the status of respect for religious freedom by the Government during the period covered by this report. Minority religious groups continued to claim, credibly, that low-level government officials impeded their efforts at proselytizing and interfered with other religious activities. The Government continued to differentiate between recognized and unrecognized religious groups, and registration and recognition requirements continued to pose obstacles to minority religious groups. Some international organizations, domestic nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and minority religious groups criticized a December 2006 religious freedom law (which took effect in January 2007) for institutionalizing discrimination against minority religions and creating impediments for many such groups to obtain official recognition. Restitution of Greek Catholic properties seized by the communist-era government in 1948 (and transferred to the Romanian Orthodox Church) also remained a problem. The Greek Catholic Church was the only denomination outlawed under communist rule and whose churches were confiscated and given to another denomination, the Orthodox Church.
The Government continued to make progress in
recognizing the history of the Holocaust in the country. Some minority religious
groups continued to allege that local authorities created delays in granting
construction permits based upon religion.
There were reports of societal abuses ordiscrimination based on religious
affiliation, belief, or practice. There were incidents in which the Romanian
Orthodox Church showed hostility toward non-Orthodox churches and criticized
proselytizing by Protestant and other religious groups. In general, the Orthodox
Church continued to refuse to return the Greek Catholic churches that it
received in 1948. The Orthodox Church often used its influence to put pressure
on small groups and government officials to its own advantage.
The U.S. Government discusses religious freedom with the Government as
part of its overall policy to promote human rights. The Embassy continued to
raise concerns with officials about the failure of the Government to ensure the
full restitution of religious properties, including Greek Catholic churches. The
Embassy also strongly encouraged the Government's efforts to recognize the
history of the Holocaust in the country, including the implementation of the
recommendations in the 2004 Wiesel Commission Report, training of teachers to
teach the history of the Holocaust in the country, erection of a Holocaust
memorial, and commemoration of the country's Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Section I. Religious Demography
The country has an area of 91,699 square miles and a population of 21.7
million. According to the 2002 census, Romanian Orthodox believers (including
the Orthodox Serb Bishopric of Timisoara) comprised 86.8 percent of the
population. Roman Catholics 4.7 percent, and Greek Catholics less than 1
percent. The Greek Catholic Church claimed that their church membership was
undercounted in the official census and estimated that its adherents comprise
3.6 percent of the population. The following religious groups comprised less
than 2 percent of the population: Old Rite Russian Christian (Orthodox) Church,
Protestant Reformed Church, Christian Evangelical Church, Romanian Evangelical
Church, Evangelical Augustinian Church, Lutheran Evangelical Church, Unitarian
Church of Romania, Baptist Church, Apostolic Church of God (Pentecostal Church),
Seventh-day Adventist Church, Armenian Church, Judaism, Islam, Jehovah's
Witnesses, the Baha'i Faith, the Family (God's Children), the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), the Unification Church, the Methodist
Church, the Presbyterian Church, Transcendental Meditation, Hare Krishna, and
Zen Buddhism.
Most religious groups have followers dispersed throughout the country,
although a few religious communities are concentrated in particular regions. Old
Rite members (Lippovans) are located in Moldavia and Dobrogea. Most Muslims are
located in the southeastern part of the country. Most Greek Catholics reside in
Transylvania, but there are also Greek Catholics in Bucharest and the Banat and
Crisana regions. Protestant and Catholic believers tend to be in Transylvania,
but many also are located around Bacau. Orthodox and Greek Catholic ethnic
Ukrainians live mostly in the northwestern part of the country. Orthodox ethnic
Serbs are primarily in Banat. Armenians are concentrated in Moldavia and the
south. Members of the Protestant Reformed, RomanCatholic, Unitarian, and
Lutheran churches from Transylvania are virtually all ethnic Hungarians.
Approximately 31 percent of the population claims to attend religious
services several times a month, according to a September 2007 poll.
Section II. Status of Religious Freedom
Legal/Policy Framework
Although the Constitution and the law provide for freedom of religion,
the Government exercises considerable influence over religious life through laws
and decrees. Government registration and recognition requirements continued to
pose obstacles to minority religious groups.
There is no law against proselytizing, nor is there a clear understanding
by the authorities of what activities constitute proselytizing.
The Government observes Christmas and Orthodox Easter as national
holidays. Members of other recognized religious groups that celebrate Easter on
a different date are entitled by law to have an additional holiday.
The total number of officially recognized religions remains low. Under
the provisions of the 2006 religion law, the Government implemented a three-tier
system of recognition: grup religios (which are not legal entities),
religious associations, and religions. Grup religios are groups of people
who share the same beliefs but do not receive tax exemptions or support from the
state.
Religious associations are legal entities that do not receive government
funding, must be registered as such in a religious association registry, and
receive only limited tax exemptions. This section of the religion law has
engendered some confusion, since it confers tax exemptions "according to the
Fiscal Code." However, the Fiscal Code itself does not address the issue of tax
exemptions for religious associations. Unrecognized groups are not permitted to
engage in profit-making activities. In order to register, religious associations
must have 300 citizen members and must submit members' personal data, while the
membership requirement for registration of any other type of association is 3
members. Religious associations are entitled to receive religion status if they
have 12 years of continuous religious activity in the country and a membership
of 0.1 percent of the population (approximately 22,000 persons).
The 2006 religion law recognizes the same 18 religions that had this
status prior to its adoption: the Romanian Orthodox Church, Orthodox Serb
Bishopric of Timisoara, Roman Catholic Church, Greek Catholic Church, Old Rite
Russian Christian (Orthodox) Church, Reformed (Protestant) Church, Christian
Evangelical Church, Romanian Evangelical Church, Evangelical Augustinian Church,
Lutheran Evangelical Church, Unitarian Church, Baptist Church, Pentecostal
Church, Seventh-day Adventist Church, Armenian Church, Judaism, Islam, and
Jehovah's Witnesses. Recognized religious groups are eligible for state support
according to their representation in the census. Additionally, they have the
right to establish schools, teach religious beliefs in public schools where they
have a sufficient number of adherents, receive government funds to build places
of worship, pay clergy salaries with state funds and subsidize clergy's housing
expenses, broadcast religious programming on radio and television, apply for
broadcasting licenses for denominational frequencies, have cemeteries, and enjoy
tax-exempt status.
The law entitles religious communities to bury, without restriction,
their believers in the cemeteries of other religious groups in localities where
they do not have their own cemetery and there are no communal (public)
cemeteries.
Under the religion law, the state-provided budget is determined by the
number of adherents of each recognized religious groupin the most recent census
and "the religion's needs" (an ambiguous provision). Some minority religious
groups, such as the Greek Catholics, claimed that the census significantly
undercounted members of their community.
The law governing the rights of foreigners, revised in 2003, introduced a
long-stay visa for religious activities. Visa requirements include approval by
the Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs, submission of evidence that the
applicants represent a religious organization legally established in the
country, certification of medical insurance, and a criminal record review. The
law provides for up to 5 years of visa extensions. There are penalties for any
foreigner who stays without a visa, but such penalties do not appear to be
linked to religious activities.
The Government permits, but does not require, religious instruction in
public schools. Attendance in religion classes is optional. To opt out of
religion classes, students must submit a request in writing. A new draft
education law proposing the elimination of religion classes in high schools
generated protests by some NGOs, media, and the Orthodox Church, which launched
a campaign against the draft law. Only the 18 recognized religious groups are
entitled to hold religion classes in public schools, but only if their adherents
constitute a certain proportion of the student population. The law permits
instruction according to the religious affiliation of students' parents. The
Constitution and the 2006 religion law allow the establishment of confessional
schools subsidized by the state.
The law forbids public authorities from asking individuals to specify
their religious affiliation for any reason related to their interactions with
the state.
In 2005 the Government amended legislation governing property restitution
with the expressed aim of expediting restitution, simplifying restitution
procedures, and broadening the scope of restitution. This law also covers the
restitution of farm and forest land and other real estate to ethnic communities
and addresses restitution to religious groups.
The 2005 amended law also introduced fines for officials who hinder the
restitution process and created a property fund to compensate claimants with
shares of stock for properties (farm and forest land included) that cannot be
returned in kind. However, the potential $5 billion (12 billion RON) property
fund was not listed on the stock exchange by the end of the reporting period;
after repeated postponements, it is expected to be listed in 2009. A June 2007
ordinance provides for cash payments in lieu of restitution of up to
approximately $215,000 (500,000 RON), paid over a 2-year period. Claims over
$215,000 (500,000 RON) are to be additionally paid with stock in the property
fund.
Under the amended restitution law, church buildings used by public
institutions (such as museums, schools, and hospitals) are to remain in tenants'
hands for a period of 3 or 5 years, depending on the function of the public
institutions, during which time they are to pay rent to the churches. The
majority of church properties belong in this category. This law does not address
the Greek Catholic churches, which were confiscated under communist rule in 1948
and handed over to the Orthodox Church; the 2005 amendments stated that the
matter would be addressed in separate legislation, which was not adopted during
the reporting period. A national joint Orthodox and Greek Catholic committee,
set up by government decree in 1990 to resolve the situation of former Greek
Catholic churches, proved ineffective, and this effort effectively ended in
2004. A 2005 law permits the Greek Catholic Church to resort to court action
whenever the bilateral dialogue regarding the restitution of churches with the
Orthodox Church fails. Prior to that, the courts often refused to rule in cases
regarding Greek Catholic churches due to the 1990 decree. While this law enables
the many restitution lawsuits to proceed, the law itself does not restitute
properties to the Greek Catholic Church, and effective implementation of court
decisions remained problematic.
A 2004 law, also amended by the 2005 legislation, provides for the
restitution of all buildings that belonged to ethnic communities and were
confiscated between September 6, 1940, and December 22, 1989. As in the case of
religious properties, buildings used for the "public interest" would remain in
the hands of the present users for either 3 or 5 years, depending on the current
use of the structure. At the request of the Jewish community, the law extended
the period of the confiscation of properties to include the time period between
1940 and 1944, when the pro-Nazi government seized a large number of Jewish
properties.
Ministry of Justice regulations provide for unrestricted access of
recognized religions and religious associations to any type of detention
facilities, even if their assistance is not specifically requested. The National
Administration of Penitentiaries can bar the access of representatives of a
religious group only if it can provide solid proof that the presence of the
group in question endangers the security of the detention facility. The
regulations also forbid any interference by the management of penitentiaries
with religious programs and forbid the presence of management representatives at
meetings between representatives of any religious group and prisoners.
Distribution of religious publications cannot be subjected to any restriction.
Prison representatives in charge of religious assistance should not be priests
or representatives of any religious group.
The law entitles recognized religious groups to have military clergy
trained to render religious assistance to conscripts.
Local permits are required in order to build places of worship, similar
to other types of construction.
A 2006 law to combat anti-Semitism bans fascist, racist, and xenophobic
organizations and includes the persecution of Roma in addition to Jews in its
definition of the Holocaust. There have been no convictions under the law.
The International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania (Wiesel
Commission) Report (2004) made recommendations aimed at increasing public
awareness of events that occurred in the country during the Holocaust. The
recommendations included government reversal of the previous rehabilitation of
Nazi war criminals, establishment of a national Holocaust Remembrance Day,
construction of a national Holocaust memorial and museum in Bucharest, and
enforcement of legislation making Holocaust denial a crime. In addition, the
Commission recommended the comprehensive inclusion of the accurate history of
the Holocaust in school curricula and textbooks.
Restrictions on Religious Freedom
Since 1990 authorities have refused to grant religion status to the
Organization of the Orthodox Believers of Old Rite, the Adventist Movement for
Reform, the Baha'i Faith, and the Mormons, mostly because of the absence of
legislation before the adoption of the 2006 religion law. These groups are
instead registered as religious associations. During the reporting period, no
groups currently with grup religios status attempted to acquire religion
status because of the restrictive legal requirements. Since the religion law
became effective, nine religious groups received approval from the State
Secretariat for Religious Affairs to register as religious associations;
however, the national registry for religious associations had not been
established at the end of the reporting period.
All 18 recognized religious groups submitted their statutes in order to
reconfirm their religion status as required by the 2006 law. The statutes of 10
were approved, while the approval of the statutes of the other 8 religious
groups was pending at the end of the reporting period. The Jehovah's Witnesses
complained that, although they made all the changes in the statutes that had
been requested by the State Secretariat for Religious Affairs by the end of
March 2008, they did not receive an answer from the State Secretariat within the
legal 30-day deadline for approving its statutes. The Government eventually
approved the statutes of Jehovah's Witnesses in June 2008. The Baha'is
criticized the provision requiring 300 members and their personal data for
registration as a religious association, arguing that it is not only
discriminatory but also against the law, which forbids authorities from asking
individuals to declare their religious affiliation.
The Baha'is also expressed concern about the lack of provisions in the
religion law regarding the burial of individuals belonging to unrecognized
religious groups.
In June 2008 representatives of the Reformed, Lutheran, Unitarian, Greek
Catholic, and Hungarian Baptist churches complained to the EU Commission in
Brussels, arguing that the religion law discriminates against minority religious
groups and, despite the constitutional provision guaranteeing religious freedom,
the state unjustly favors the Orthodox Church. The minority religious groups
further complained that the Greek Catholic Church has not received back its
churches; students belonging to minority religious groups do not have equal
access to religious education; the Orthodox Church receives disproportionately
large funds and sizeable properties from the state; and the state does not
sanction the Orthodox Church's actions that are against the principle of
dialogue, i.e., destruction of properties that should be restituted, hate-speech
on state television, and discrimination against minority religious groups in
public schools and the media.
A survey on the relationship between state and religion, conducted by the
Association for the Defense of Human Rights in Romania-the Helsinki Committee
(APADOR-CH) between September 2007 and March 2008, criticized the ambiguous
provisions of the religion law regarding tax exemption for religious
associations and the fact that the Fiscal Code does not make any reference to
religious associations, stipulating tax exemption for buildings used for
social-humanitarian activities by "associations, foundations, and religions."
This leaves room for interpretation by the local authorities, which in some
cases decided that buildings belonging to a religious association should not be
tax exempt. The Society of New-Apostolic Christians in Romania, a religious
association, faced such a case in Sibiu in November 2007. In other localities,
the same association was granted tax exemption.
According to the State Secretariat for Religious Affairs, in 2007
recognized religions received approximately $68 million (162.7 million RON) for
the construction and repair of churches in direct proportion to the number of
their believers according to the 2002 census, with the Orthodox Church receiving
the largest share. During 2008 the Government earmarked $60 million (142.7
million RON). According to the APADOR-CH survey, the Government lacks a clear
and transparent policy for the allocation of funds to the recognized religious
groups. In addition to amounts earmarked in the state budget, the Government
also allocates funds from its special reserve budget to the recognized religious
groups. Minority religious groups continued to complain that the Government
delayed disbursement of the granted funds, since they did not have time to spend
the funds for their intended purpose by the end of the calendar year, by which
time any unspent funds must be returned to the state. According to the APADOR-CH
survey, in 2007 the Government supported the overseas spiritual-cultural and
social activities only of the Orthodox Church.
Some minority religious groups continued to report that local authorities
opposed granting them construction permits for places of worship for unjustified
reasons. For example, during the previous reporting period, Jehovah's Witnesses
complained that in Sighisoara (Mures County) the authorities illegally
conditioned the granting of permits on the requirement that all neighbors in the
area agree to the construction. The Jehovah's Witnesses took this case to court
and won the lawsuit. The Greek Catholic Church reported a similar case in
Sapinta (Maramures County).
Although the construction of a Holocaust memorial should have started
during the reporting period, the Bucharest general mayor's office delayed the
issuance of the required construction permit. The Minister of Culture and
Religious Affairs accused the Bucharest general mayor's office of obstructing
the construction of the memorial.
In contrast with previous reporting periods, minority religious groups
did not complain about difficulties in obtaining approval to use public halls.
However, several minority religious groups complained that local authorities and
Orthodox priests prevented some religious activities from taking place,
especially in rural areas or small localities.
Few politicians sponsor bills and measures that would displease the
Orthodox Church. Because 2008 was an electoral year, parties and politicians
rushed to draft laws favoring the Orthodox Church. Some critics charged that
this was done in order to win favor with the Church during the electoral period.
For example, in March and May 2008, the Government allocated approximately $200
million (500 million RON) for construction and repair of churches, with most of
the funds going to the Orthodox Church. A group of liberal parliamentarians
proposed a draft law restituting to monasteries the forests they had received
under an inter-war law; the Social Democratic Party also proposed to increase
subsidies for the salaries of the clergy and argued that the clergy should not
be investigated for possible ties with the secret police of the communist
regime.
Generally, local officials tended to be tolerant toward minority
religious groups, but there were incidents in which they were pressured or
intimidated by Orthodox clergy. In some instances local police and
administrative authorities tacitly supported societal campaigns (a few of which
involved physical intimidation) against proselytizing by non-Orthodox religious
groups or demonstrated a passive attitude towards stopping the harassment of
such groups (see Section III).
In Pesteana a Greek Catholic community established in 2005 continued to
face discrimination and harassment. Tensions also continued because of the
Orthodox Church's refusal to comply with a court ruling allowing Greek Catholics
to have access to the local cemetery. After year-long opposition, the local
authorities issued a construction permit for a Greek Catholic church, and the
cornerstone for the new church was consecrated on October 14, 2007.
State authorities did not respond to Greek Catholic complaints regarding
restitution of properties or discriminatory attitudes by local officials.
Unlike in previous reporting periods, the Jehovah's Witnesses and the
Baptist Church did not experience problems obtaining visas for their
missionaries. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints complained about
problems they encountered in renewing visas for their missionaries, some of them
receiving only 1-year extensions after lengthy and tedious endeavors.
Although proselytizing is not restricted by law, several minority
religious groups, including both recognized and unrecognized religious groups,
made credible complaints that low-level government officials impeded their
efforts to proselytize, interfered in religious activities, and otherwise
discriminated against them during the period covered by this report.
Minority recognized religious groups continued to complain that public
schools refused to offer classes in their religious beliefs. Minority religious
groups, such as the Jehovah's Witnesses and the Baptist Church, credibly
asserted that authorities pressured children of their faith to attend Orthodox
religion classes. The Jehovah's Witnesses reported such a case in Oravita,
Caras-Severin County, while the Baptist Church reported a similar case in
Giurgiu, Giurgiu County. Allegedly some schools purposely scheduled Orthodox
religion classes in the middle of the day so that all students were required to
attend.
In addition, minority religious groups continued to report that at some
festivities in public schools officials required all students to attend Orthodox
religious services. Similar official conduct requiring attendance at Orthodox
religious services also reportedly occurred within the army.
Some minority religious groups also complained that the authorities
generally allowed only the Orthodox Church to have an active role in opening
ceremonies in schools and on other occasions.
A 2006 National Anti-Discrimination Council (CNCD) decision that asked
the Ministry of Education to remove religious symbols from schools, with the
exception of classrooms where religious classes were taught, was not enforced
during the reporting period because of several ongoing lawsuits regarding this
decision. The Ministry of Education and several NGOs challenged the decision.
The Orthodox Church also vehemently opposed the decision, since Orthodox icons,
and even chapels, remain the only religious symbols in schools. On June 11,
2008, the High Court of Cassation ruled in favor of the opponents of the
decision.
An Orthodox religiontextbook published in 2006 by the Ministry of
Education with the coordination of then State Secretary for Religious Affairs
continued to generate complaints and dissatisfaction among minority religious
groups. The book describes the emergence of the Greek Catholic Church in the
18th century as the result of "Catholic proselytizing" and describes the
Jehovah's Witnesses, Baha'is, and Mormons as sects "representing a genuine
threat to the society." A chapter in the religion textbook alleged that sects
proselytize using such means as brainwashing, bribing, blackmailing, and
exploiting the poor. On February 12, 2008, the Jehovah's Witnesses complained to
the Government Agent Office (within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs), requesting
the withdrawal or republishing of the textbook, but they did not receive an
answer. In reaction to a complaint by the Baha'i community, on October 2, 2007,
the CNCD decided that the manner in which the Baha'i faith was described in the
textbook infringed upon the right to dignity of the Baha'i community by
generating a hostile atmosphere for the Baha'is. The Baha'is complained that the
textbook continued to be used during the 2007-08 school year.
According to a survey on religious education in schools conducted in 2007
by Pro-Europe League (a human rights NGO based in Targu Mures), religion is
taught in a discriminatory manner in schools, and Orthodox religion textbooks
might develop intolerance in students toward other religious groups.
According to minority religious groups, the military clergy is comprised
only of Orthodox priests, with the exception of one representative of the Roman
Catholic Church and one from the Evangelical Alliance (Baptist), a situation
perceived as discriminatory by the Reformed and Greek Catholic Churches. The
Greek Catholic Church reported that its request to have a representative in the
military clergy was rejected by the Ministry of Defense in March 2008.
In contrast with previous reporting periods, there were no reports of
discriminatory requests for religious affiliation in identity card application
forms.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints complained that the
customs authorities delayed by more than a month the release of a shipment the
religious group received in March 2008.
Minority religious groups complained of a lack of provisions to provide
for the free access of religious groups to state-owned media.
In many cases, religious minorities have not succeeded in regaining
possession of properties that were confiscated under communist rule. Many
properties returned to religious denominations contained government offices,
schools, hospitals, or cultural institutions that would require relocation, and
lawsuits and protests by current occupants have delayed restitution of the
property to rightful owners. Although some progress was made during the period
covered by this report, the pace of restitution was extremely slow, and the
large majority of religious property restitution cases remained unresolved. In
many cases local authorities refused to turn over restituted properties in which
county or municipal governments had an interest and challenged in court the
decisions of the Special Restitution Commission, the section within the National
Authority for Property Restitution responsible for restituting religious and
ethnic communal property. There were many complaints that the local authorities
consistently delayed providing information about the claimed properties to the
Special Restitution Commission, thereby obstructing the restitution process,
despite the fines stipulated by the 2005 legislation for such delays.
Some minority religious groups complained that the Special Restitution
Commission delayed the actual issuance of restitution decisions after approving
them in principle. There were many complaints that the Property Fund, which
should provide compensation in stock, was not listed on the stock exchange and
was not expected to be listed before 2009.
The Special Commission for Restitution started its activity in 2003 and
by the end of the reporting period had restituted to recognized religious groups
1,232 buildings of a total of 14,716 applications. Another 186 cases were
approved to receive compensation and 330 cases were denied.
Since 2003 the Special Restitution Commission returned only 113 of the
6,723 properties other than churches that the Greek Catholic Church claimed
under the restitution legislation, and decided to grant compensation in 8
additional cases. The Church has also received 60 to 65 of the 80 properties
that were restituted by government decree in 1992, but mostly only on paper. For
example, according to Greek Catholic reports, the implementation of the
decisions restituting 3 schools in Cluj were obstructed by the mayor’s office
and other political authorities and the Bucharest general mayor's office
consistently blocked the restitution of 1 of the 80 properties.
The Government continued to avoid adoption of legislation regarding the
restitution of Greek Catholic churches by the Orthodox Church, which had
received them from the communist state in 1948. The Greek Catholic Church has
received from the Orthodox Church, either through negotiation or in court, fewer
than 200 of the 2,600 churches and monasteries it owned in 1948. During the
reporting period, the Greek Catholic Church received only three churches from
the Orthodox Church. Restitution of existing churches was an important matter to
both denominations because residents were likely to attend the local church
regardless of whether it was Greek Catholic or Orthodox. This had financial
consequences since the number of members of a church is directly linked to the
corresponding share of the state budget allocated for religious groups.
Courts delayed hearings on many lawsuits filed by the Greek Catholic
Church, and the lawsuits were often impeded by appeals by the Orthodox Church.
For example, in Sisesti, Maramures County, a lawsuit over the former Greek
Catholic church has been going on for 16 years. Nevertheless, the Greek Catholic
Church received an increased number of favorable court rulings during the
reporting period.
Historical Hungarian churches, including Roman Catholic as well as
Protestant churches (Reformed, Evangelical, and Unitarian), have received a
small number of their confiscated properties from the Government. Approximately
80 percent of the buildings confiscated from Hungarian churches are used as
public buildings. Of approximately 3,000 buildings, 33 were restituted by
government decrees. Hungarian churches could not take possession of all of them
because of lawsuits and the opposition of current occupants. The Roman Catholic
Church had not received the Batthyanaeum Library, despite a 2003 court ruling.
The Church filed a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights in 2003,
and a decision was pending at the end of the reporting period. The Roman
Catholic Church and the Special Commission for Restitution continued discussions
to identify potential solutions for the restitution of the building. Full
restitution of the Roman Catholic Bishop's palace in Oradea remained impeded by
the slow pace of repair and construction work at the new location of the Tarii
Crisurilor Museum, which has not relocated from the palace. Since 2003 the
Special Commission for Restitution issued restitution decisions for 728 of the
approximately 2,700 buildings claimed by Hungarian churches, rejecting 59
claims. However, Hungarian churches did not regain physical possession of many
of these properties. The Unitarian Church won separate lawsuits regarding three
buildings in Cluj and took actual possession of two of them. The Cluj mayor's
office continued to delay signing the documents for the third building under
various pretexts.
The case of a sports playground claimed by the Reformed Church in Oradea
and allocated to a local Orthodox parish in 2004 remained unresolved. The Church
claimed that it rightfully belonged to a local Reformed high school and
continued to sponsor protests repeatedly.
In the 1990s the Government decreed the return of 42 buildings to the
Jewish community. The community took partial or full possession of 36. In many
cases restitution was delayed by lawsuits. The community was able to reclaim
land only in Iasi, where it received 18 plots of land; however, 18 additional
land claims of the Jewish community remained unresolved in Iasi, including a
51-hectare plot of land that the prefect divided and distributed to other
persons. In this case, the county's land restitution commission decided to give
different plots in compensation for the one that was sold, but the National
Agency of State Domains challenged this in court. The Jewish community won the
lawsuit, but it has received only a plot of approximately 6 hectares so far.
Discussions continued with the National Agency of State Domains to identify
plots of land to compensate for the ones that are no longer available. The
Special Restitution Commission processed 266 of approximately 2,000 claims and
approved 108 cases for restitution or compensation. The users of 10 of the
buildings challenged the restitution decisions in court, and 4 of the decisions
were cancelled by courts. The Jewish community won the other six lawsuits and
took over one of the buildings in question. According to the Federation of
Jewish Communities, the Jewish community has received fewer than 100 of the
approximately 1,900 buildings it claims.
Another frequent problem with restitution was a refusal by the occupant
to return a property or pay rent for occupancy. The nominal owner can still be
held liable for payment of property taxes in such cases.
The Greek Catholic Church also complained that, in many regions where it
claimed farm and forest lands now in the hands of the Orthodox Church, local
authorities opposed restitution outright or proposed that restitution to all
religious denominations be in direct proportion to the number of their
believers. The Greek Catholic Church also reported that the Bucharest mayor's
office continued to oppose the return of 40,000 square meters of land in
Bucharest. In Cluj County, the authorities delayed the restitution of land to
the Greek Catholic Church in the localities of Feleacu and Morlaca; meanwhile,
local authorities gave the former Greek Catholic land to other individuals or
companies.
The lawsuit regarding the restitution of 166,813 of the 192,000 hectares
of forest land reclaimed by the Romanian Orthodox Church Fund of Bukovina
continued and the case remained pending at the end of the reporting period.
In May 2008 in Certeze, Satu Mare County, the Greek Catholic Church
received land for the construction of a church. Under the pressure of Orthodox
priests, the local authorities for many years had refused to return the
property. The Christian Evangelical Church complained about alleged
discriminatory attitudes of the local and central public administration and
judicial bodies toward some Protestant religious groups.
The Baptist Church complained that the Bucharest city hall allegedly
wanted to expropriate a piece of land owned by the Church for the construction
of a shopping center.
The local Muslim community continued to face problems with the burial of
its members. Despite promises by the Bucharest general mayor's office, during
the reporting period the community still did not receive land for the
establishment of a Muslim cemetery.
There were no reports of religious prisoners or detainees in the
country.
Forced Religious Conversion
There were no reports of forced religious conversion, including of minor
U.S. citizens who had been abducted or illegally removed from the United States,
or of the refusal to allow such citizens to be returned to the United
States.
Improvements and Positive Developments in Respect for Religious
Freedom
Most mainstream politicians continued to publicly denounce anti-Semitism,
racism, xenophobia, and attempts to deny the occurrence of the Holocaust in the
country.
The Government continued to make progress in its efforts to expand public
school education on the true history of the Holocaust in the country. It
included the Holocaust as a dimension of World War II in compulsory
7th grade history courses; as a full chapter in a 9th grade history
course; in connection to World War II in 10th grade; as a specific theme in 11th
grade; and in the chapter on national minorities in the 12th grade curriculum.
There is also an optional course on "History of the Jews and Holocaust" for the
12th grade, which 330 12th grade student groups took in the 2007-08 school year.
The President formally launched the textbook for this course on the national
Holocaust Remembrance Day in October 2007. The Government continued to train
teachers in Bacau, Cluj, Bucharest, Iasi, and Craiova to teach about the
Holocaust. In addition, the teachers received training for programs offered
jointly by the Ministry of Education and the Yad Vashem Institute, and others
went to Paris and the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. During the
summer of 2007, the Godstein Goren Foundation sponsored, with the support of the
Ministry of Education, training courses for teaching about the Holocaust and
seminars on the same topic in Targu Mures, Craiova, and Iasi. The Ministry of
Education maintained a website that included a guide to assist teachers
nationwide who instruct courses on the Holocaust. The Ministry of Education also
published and distributed 15,000 copies of the guide in schools, continued to
distribute books and supplementary materials to help teach the Holocaust, and
continued to sponsor national and international seminars on the Holocaust and
the teaching of its history, as well as national contests regarding the
Holocaust.
The Ministry of Education, the Wiesel Institute, and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum signed an agreement stipulating Holocaust education for high school teachers, poster exhibitions in high schools, and essay contests for high school students on Holocaust topics.
A December 2006 ruling by the Bucharest Appellate Court, which partially exonerated Marshal Antonescu and some others convicted for war crimes, was overturned on May 6, 2008. Antonescu was responsible for widespread atrocities against the country's Jewish community and Roma during World War II.
In January 2008 government officials and Members of Parliament attended
and addressed the commemoration of the 1941 pogrom in Bucharest. In his message
on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the President stated that a
democratic Romania reasserts "its respect for the memory of those who suffered
and the commitment to rigorously combat, by enforcing the existing laws, racial
discrimination, xenophobia, and anti-Semitism." In accordance with
recommendations by the Wiesel Commission, the Government continued to
commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day in October 2007 with events in several
cities. The events, many organized in local schools, were attended by officials
and key dignitaries.
Between September 4 and 9, 2007, Sibiu hosted the third European
Ecumenical Assembly, the first one to take place in a country with a majority
Orthodox population.
In 2007 the government earmarked approximately $4 million (9.9 million
RON) for construction of a Holocaust Memorial in Bucharest. However, Bucharest
city officials held up issuance of construction permits.
A religion law provision, which allows recognized religious groups access
to cemeteries belonging to other churches, contributed to a decrease in the
number of conflicts over the access of recognized minority religious groups to
cemeteries. According to the State Secretariat for Religious Affairs, this
institution mediated some of these conflicts during the reporting period.
During the reporting period, the State Secretariat for Religious Affairs,
jointly with the Conscience and Liberty Association (an NGO focusing on
religious freedom) organized symposia in Targoviste, Dambovita County; Bacau,
Bacau County; and Focsani, Vrancea County.
Several religious groups, including Jehovah's Witnesses, the Greek
Catholic Church, and the Seventh-day Adventist Church, reported that the access
of religious groups to detention facilities continued to improve.
Section III. Societal Abuses and Discrimination
There were reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on
religious affiliation, belief, or practice.
Acts of anti-Semitism, including desecration and vandalism of Jewish
sites, continued during the reporting period with no appreciable change in
frequency compared to previous reporting periods. The extreme nationalist press
and individuals continued to publish anti-Semitic articles. Some groups held
public events or made statements with anti-Semitic themes. According to the NGO
Center for Monitoring and Combating Anti-Semitism in Romania, authorities tended
to minimize the significance of such incidents of vandalism, usually explaining
them as being the actions of children, drunkards, or persons with mental
disorders.
On June 29, 2008, unknown perpetrators painted swastikas on railway
electric poles in the rail station of Ploiesti. On the night of March 25, 2008,
an individual drew swastikas and wrote anti-Semitic graffiti on the walls of the
headquarters of the Jewish Community in Cluj. The Federation of Jewish
Communities issued a protest, and the police identified the perpetrator, who
said that he was drunk when he committed the act; however, the police did not
issue an arrest warrant for him. On October 22, 2007, unidentified persons stole
two menorahs from the chapel of a Jewish cemetery in Bucharest. On October 15,
2007, the grave of a writer was vandalized in a Jewish cemetery in Bucharest.
The Federation of Jewish Communities took legal action in February 2008,
requesting damage compensation, against an individual who desecrated several
tombstones in a Jewish cemetery in Resita, and the court decided in July 2007 to
fine and not prosecute him. The Federation also sued the mothers of two minors
who desecrated tombstones in the Jewish cemeteries in Tulcea twice in January
2007 but were not prosecuted, requesting compensation for damages. There have
been approximately a dozen reported anti-Semitic incidents involving property
destruction and vandalism during each of the recent reporting periods, ranging
from painting swastikas on buildings, to desecrating graves and cemeteries, to
vandalizing synagogues, Jewish-owned buildings, and, in one case, a Torah
scroll. Police sometimes identified perpetrators, but most of them were not
prosecuted.
On February 26, 2008, a 20-year-old drew swastikas, wrote "Heil Hitler"
on the windows, and destroyed three mirrors of a trolleybus in Bucharest.
However, the prosecutor's office charged him only with destruction of public
property.
In February 2008 the prosecutor's office of Bucharest Sector 3 decided
not to prosecute a professor who consistently denied the occurrence of the
Holocaust in the country in the media and his books. The Federation of Jewish
Communities and a Jewish NGO filed a criminal complaint against him in January
2007.
The Legionnaires (also called the Iron Guard, an extreme nationalist,
anti-Semitic, pro-Nazi group that existed in the country in the interwar period)
continued to republish inflammatory books from the interwar period. Authorities
occasionally investigated and prosecuted offenders, but all court cases resulted
in acquittals.
During the reporting period, anti-Semitic views and attitudes were
expressed during talk shows broadcast by private television stations, which
failed to respond to complaints made by Jewish organizations.
Extremist organizations occasionally held high-profile public events with
anti-Semitic themes. The New Right Organization continued to sponsor marches,
followed by religious services, to commemorate Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, the
founder of the Legionnaire Movement. During the reporting period, commemorations
of Codreanu and the Legionnaire movement took place on November 24, 2007 in the
vicinity of Bucharest, on September 22, 2007 in Predeal, and on September 13,
2007 in Galati. However, there was not a broad participation in such events. The
New Right continued to foster the ideals of the Iron Guard in the media and on
the Internet.
During the reporting period, the publications of the extreme nationalist
Greater Romania Party (PRM), headed by Corneliu Vadim Tudor, continued to carry
statements and articles containing strong anti-Semitic attacks. In April 2008
the authorities did not react to the publication of a reversed swastika on the
front page of the PRM's weekly, Romania Mare (Greater Romania).
Although in May 2007 the President signed a decree withdrawing the Star
of Romania medal from PRM leader Corneliu Vadim Tudor, known for making numerous
xenophobic and anti-Semitic comments, Tudor challenged the decision in court and
the court suspended the enforcement of the decree until it rules on this case.
The lawsuit was ongoing at the end of the reporting period.
The Romanian Orthodox Church exercises substantial influence in its
dominant role among a majority of the population and policymakers, and Orthodox
religious leaders almost exclusively preside over state occasions. In
particular, many Orthodox leaders make public appearances with prominent
political figures, and religious messages often contain political promises or
goals, as well as support for particular political positions.
Romanian Orthodox Church authorities were often intolerant of other
religious groups and repeatedly criticized the "aggressive proselytizing" of
Protestant, neo-Protestant (Baptist, Pentecostal, Adventist, Romanian
Evangelical, and Christian Evangelical churches), and other religious groups,
which the Church repeatedly described as "sects." This led to physical and
verbal conflicts in some cases. Some high-ranking Orthodox clergy criticized the
"heresies" committed by Orthodox Metropolitan Nicolae Corneanu of Timis, who
received the Eucharist together with Greek Catholics in May 2008, and Bishop
Sofronie Drincec of Oradea, who blessed the water at Epiphany along with a Greek
Catholic Bishop in January 2008. In January 2008 Orthodox Metropolitan
Bartolomeu Anania of Cluj, Alba, Crisana, and Maramures told journalists that
the major threat for the Orthodox Church is represented by "neo-Protestant
sects" that buy believers. The Metropolitan also described their proselytizing
as "spiritual corruption."
Minority religious groups alleged that some members of the Orthodox
clergy provoked isolated incidents of organized group intimidation, impeded
their efforts to proselytize, and interfered in religious activities.
The press also continued to report several cases in which adherents of
minority religious groups were prevented by others from practicing their
religious beliefs and local law enforcement authorities did not protect
them.
The CNCD, established to curb discrimination of any kind (including on
religious grounds), received 12 complaints of discrimination on religious
grounds during 2007 and 6 such complaints through June 30, 2008.
The Jehovah's Witnesses continued to allege verbal and physical abuse, in
particular by some Orthodox priests, and indifference from some police; in some
instances, the priests reportedly had the support of local authorities and the
police. Many complaints regarding assault remained unresolved, and aggressors
often were not punished.
The Jehovah's Witnesses did not receive any answer to a letter sent to
the Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs, in which they complained that in
April 2007 in Barlad, Vaslui County, an Orthodox priest and his deputy verbally
and physically abused two female Jehovah's Witnesses in the presence of a minor.
Complaints filed by the Jehovah's Witnesses with the local and county police
remained unanswered for several months. In answer to a letter sent by Jehovah's
Witnesses on October 10, 2007, to ask about the progress of the investigations,
the Vaslui County Police Inspectorate stated that the case had been solved on
June 16, 2007. At the end of the reporting period the Jehovah's Witnesses had
not discovered the manner in which this case was solved.
In contrast with previous reports, during the reporting period the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints stated that the number of cases of
harassment and discrimination against its members, or of incidents with Orthodox
priests, decreased. In Galati a group of teenagers occasionally harassed the
missionaries, and unidentified individuals broke into the apartment of two
female missionaries in Bucharest.
There were several instances of priests confiscating religious
publications of Jehovah's Witnesses. On September 15, 2007, several Jehovah's
Witnesses from Ramnicu Valcea went on a ministry activity to the commune of
Pausesti-Otasau, Valcea County, and reported to the police precinct to notify
them of their presence in the locality. The police conditioned their activity on
obtaining licenses both from the mayor's office and the Orthodox Bishopric.
Later, three Orthodox priests disrupted the Jehovah's Witnesses activity, and,
in the presence of the police, assaulted them, confiscated and tore up their
Bibles and religious leaflets, and threatened to beat them unless they left the
locality. On September 27, 2007, the Jehovah's Witnesses complained to Horezu
police, which has jurisdiction over Pausesti-Otasau. On October 29, 2007, the
Valcea County Police Inspectorate answered that the case was under investigation
but that the police in Pausesti-Otasau did not commit any acts of indiscipline.
The Greek Catholic Church, Baptist Church, and Baha'i Faith continued to
complain that Orthodox priests allowed the burial of non-Orthodox believers in
confessional or even public cemeteries (often treated as confessional by
Orthodox priests in rural areas) only when certain conditions were met; they
allowed burials only in isolated sections of the cemetery if non-Orthodox
religious services were not used. Such incidents, though in smaller numbers,
continued during the reporting period, although the 2006 religion law allows
religious groups access to cemeteries belonging to other churches. Most of the
Adventist Church's requests from previous years for land for cemeteries in the
localities where it had congregations remained unanswered. Media reported a case
in Sibot, Alba County, where in February 2008 the local Orthodox priest opposed
the burial of a Greek Catholic believer in the village cemetery. The dispute was
eventually settled by the Orthodox Archbishop of Alba Iulia, and the believer
was buried according to her own rites. The Baptist Church also complained that
in January 2008 in Potcoava, Olt County, it faced the opposition of the Orthodox
priest, who did not allow the burial of a Baptist believer with Baptist
religious service, although the cemetery was a public one. The Orthodox priest
allowed the Baptist burial only after the Baptist Church complained to the
mayor's office and the police. After this incident, in line with the 2006
religion law, the Baptist Church requested a plot in the cemetery in Potcoava
but had not received an answer by the end of the reporting period.
The Baptist Church also reported that its attempts to receive land from
city halls for cemeteries in some localities were unsuccessful. It cited a
situation in Piatra Neamt, Neamt County, where Baptist believers are buried in
the same part of the cemetery as individuals who commit suicide. Orthodox
priests also denied access for Greek Catholics to many cemeteries, including in
Pesteana, Valcea County; Damuc, Neamt County; Ungheni, Mures County; Vintu de
Jos, Alba County; Magina, Alba County; Radesti, Alba County; Telec-Bicaz, Neamt
County; and Bicaz-Chei, Neamt County.
The Baptist Church also complained that the building of Credinta
(the faith) Baptist Church in Piatra Neamt was repeatedly subject to acts of
vandalism, the most recent being the demolition of its fence by an unidentified
truck driver and a window broken by an unidentified perpetrator.
Relations between the Greek Catholic Church and the Orthodox
Archbishopric of Timisoara continued to be amicable and cooperative. The
Orthodox Bishoprics of Caransebes and Oradea also continued to have similar
positive dialogues with the Greek Catholic Church regarding the restitution of
some churches. For the most part, however, Orthodox leaders opposed and delayed
returning churches to the Greek Catholics. The Greek Catholic Church of the
eparchy of Lugoj complained that the Orthodox Bishopric of Arad, Ienopole, and
Halmagiu, which was using more than 90 Greek Catholic churches, continued to
refuse to restitute them and to hold alternate religious services.
The Greek Catholic Church did not receive a major cathedral in Gherla,
Cluj County, which the late Orthodox Patriarch promised to restitute in 2005.
Despite the stated desire for dialogue, the Orthodox Church continued to
demolish Greek Catholic churches--some of which had been declared historical
monuments--in at least ten localities, half of which were in Cluj County.
Authorities did not react to Greek Catholic complaints about the illegal
demolition of Greek Catholic churches in Taga, Cluj County, in 2006 and an
18th-century Greek Catholic Church in Badon, Salaj County, in April 2007. On May
8, 2008, the Orthodox Church began the demolition of another 18th-century Greek
Catholic church in Ungheni, Mures County, where the Orthodox Church began by
constructing a new church around the Greek Catholic church, entirely surrounding
the historic Greek Catholic church building. In Salonta, Bihor County, the
Orthodox Church was also building a new church around the old Greek Catholic
church, which it refused to restitute. A lawsuit, which the Greek Catholic
Church won in the first-level court, was in progress following the appeal and
requests by the Orthodox Church to transfer the case to other localities. The
Orthodox Church in Salonta also opposed the allocation by the local authorities
of a piece of land to the Greek Catholic Church for the construction of a new
church.
In Nicula, Cluj County, the Orthodox Church continued construction which
encroached upon the old Greek Catholic church of the historic Monastery of
Nicula despite a court order to halt any construction. A decision in a
slow-moving lawsuit over the ownership of the monastery remained pending.
Similar cases were reportedly developing in Orastie, Hunedoara County, and Iara,
Cluj County, where the Orthodox Church continued construction of buildings close
to the former Greek Catholic churches, presumably with the intention of
subsequently demolishing them. Over the years the Orthodox Church has repeatedly
rejected Greek Catholic requests for alternating services in more than 230
localities.
Longstanding tensions persisted between the Orthodox and Greek Catholic
Churches in many localities where large numbers of the Orthodox congregation
switched to the Greek Catholic Church. An example is in Stei, Hunedoara County,
where the Orthodox Church continued to deny the Greek Catholics access to their
former church and lawsuits are in progress both for the church and the rectory,
restituted in 2004 by a decision of the Special Restitution Commission, which
was appealed by the Orthodox Church. Similar disputesoccurred in Valea de Jos,
Bihor County, and in Chet, Bihor County.
Representatives of minority religious groups credibly complained that
Orthodox priests give out most of the religious assistance in the country,
partly because the Orthodox Church prevents minority religious groups from
granting humanitarian or religious assistance to hospitals, children's homes,
and shelters for the elderly. Charitable activities carried out by other
churches in children's homes and shelters were often negatively interpreted as
proselytizing.
After the dialogue between the Greek Catholic and Orthodox Churches came
to a halt in 2004, disputes between the two religious groups over church
property increased in intensity. Greek Catholic communities decided, in many
cases, to build new churches because of the lack of progress in restituting
their properties either through dialogue with the Orthodox Church or in court;
however, their efforts were hampered by the Orthodox Church, sometimes with the
support of local authorities. Tensions continued in many localities where the
Orthodox Church refused to comply with court rulings that ordered restitution of
churches to the Greek Catholic Church, such as in Simand, Arad County; Bogdan
Voda, Maramures County; Valanii de Beius, Bihor County; Lupsa, Alba County; and
in localities where the Greek Catholic Church began lawsuits for restitution,
such as Prunis, Cluj County; Stei, Hunedoara County; Camarzana, Satu Mare
County; Viile Satu Mare, Satu Mare County; and Negru, Vintere, Holod, Sanlazar
and Bocsa (all in Bihor County). In Valanii de Beius, Bihor County, after
refusing for more than a year to comply with a final court ruling restituting a
Greek Catholic church, the Orthodox Church eventually handed the church over to
the Greek Catholics on April 2, 2008. Before reaching this agreement, tensions
had increased dramatically and violent incidents were prevented only by the
presence of gendarmes. The two Churches signed a protocol to hold alternate
religious services until the Orthodox Church builds a new church. A similar
protocol was signed in Prisaca, Bihor County, in April 2008. In Simand, Arad
County, the local Orthodox priest refused, for a lengthy period, to hand over
the church restituted by court ruling to the Greek Catholics in 2007. At the end
of June 2008, the Orthodox parish in Simand agreed, after many rounds of
negotiations, to restitute the church to the Greek Catholics. Tensions continued
in Taga, where the Orthodox Church demolished the old Greek Catholic church in
2006, as well as in Salva, Bistrita-Nasaud County, and Sinca Veche, Brasov
County, where the Orthodox priests refused to hand over the rectories, despite
decisions restituting them to the Greek Catholic Church.
During the reporting period, the Orthodox Church increased pressure on
Parliamentarians to support a draft law stipulating that the restitution of land
and other properties should be in direct proportion to the number of
believers--a law which would, in effect,legitimize to a great extent the
Communists' decision to give the Greek Catholic properties to the Orthodox
Church. The draft law remained under debate in Parliament.
In most
localities with two churches (one of which had belonged to the Greek Catholic
Church) and only one Orthodox priest, the Orthodox Church frequently does one of
three things: alternates religious services between the two locations; keeps the
Orthodox church locked and holds their services in the former Greek Catholic
church; or establishes a second Orthodox parish in the locality, either a new
parish or by splitting an Orthodox parish into two parishes. During the
reporting period, more than 20 former Greek Catholic churches remained closed,
while Greek Catholics held religious services in more than 150 unofficial places
(e.g. believers' homes, houses of culture, etc.).
In Dumbraveni, Sibiu County, the Orthodox Church continued to refuse to
enforce a previous court ruling to share a local church with the Greek Catholic
Church. Although the Orthodox Church had signed a protocol promising to return
the Greek Catholic church after it completed the construction of a new Orthodox
church, it continued to refuse to do so after the construction was complete.
A Roman Catholic Csango community, an ethnic group that speaks a
Hungarian dialect, continued to complain that they were unable to hold religious
services in their mother tongue because of opposition by the Roman Catholic
Bishopric of Iasi.
Section IV. U.S. Government Policy
The U.S. Government discusses religious freedom with the Government as
part of its overall policy to promote human rights.
The U.S. Government maintained active public outreach on religious
freedom. The Embassy maintained close contact with a broad range of religious
groups and NGOs in the country, including Muslim groups and other minority
religious groups, to monitor and discuss religious freedom. The Ambassador and
other embassy representatives regularly met and raised religious freedom
concerns with religious leaders and government officials who work on religious
affairs.
Throughout the reporting period, embassy representatives and other U.S.
government officials discussed with government officials at multiple levels the
importance of full official recognition of the Holocaust in the country,
improvements in Holocaust education in school curricula, and implementation of
the 2004 recommendations of the Wiesel Commission. The Embassy supported
visiting delegations focusing on matters related to the Holocaust, including the
Wiesel Commission members. Embassy personnel and visiting U.S. officials
repeatedly discussed the Holocaust in the country with local and international
members of the Wiesel Commission and supported its work. Among many other
events, embassy officials participated in the commemoration of National
Holocaust Day in October 2007. The Embassy also supported the activities of the
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and urged Bucharest authorities to approve
construction of a Holocaust memorial in the city. The Embassy sponsored the
project on Combating Discrimination and Promoting Mutual Respect and
Understanding Through Knowing the 20th Century Tragedies, Holocaust and
Communism; New Education of the 21st Century to develop a train-the-trainer
course for history teachers to increase the number of high schools in the
country in which students will have a better understanding of the Holocaust and
the history of Jews. The project extends from September 1, 2007 to September 15,
2008.
The Ambassador and other embassy officials repeatedly raised
concerns about the slow restitution of religious properties, particularly of
Greek Catholic churches, with government officials, including the President,
Prime Minister, and the Minister of Culture and Religious Affairs. U.S.
officials continued to advocate in government circles for fair treatment on
property restitution matters, including religious and communal properties, and
for nondiscriminatory treatment of all religious groups. The Embassy also
specifically raised its concerns with government authorities and with the
Orthodox Church over the continuing destruction of the historic Greek Catholic
church structure in Ungheni.