In his book, Justice and Restitution, Stefan Cristian Ionescu addressed a major gap in the historiography by examining the mechanisms of restitution of Jewish property in postwar Romania, and how Holocaust survivors understood and pursued justice.During World War II, Romanian authorities and their Nazi allies killed roughly half of the Jewish population through mass executions, deportations to Transnistria, forced labour, and starvation.The number of survivors remained uncertain amid mass displacement and the postwar loss of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina to the Soviet Union, with about 400,000 Jews remaining in Romania at the end of the war.Drawing on administrative and court records, ego-documents, the press, and a rich pool of documentary works, the study brings to the fore Jewish survivors' agency in their struggle to reclaim property after wartime dispossession (Romanianisation) in a society marked by postwar political, social, and economic instability.The main finding of the book is the enduring continuity between fascist and communist regimes, which treated Jews as racial, political, or class enemies.It traces postwar antisemitism to long-standing religious, cultural, and economic prejudices embedded in Romania's nation-building and culminating in wartime genocide, with effects that persisted long after the war.Chapter one reconstructs the political, social, and economic context of postwar Romania after its switch from the Axis to the Allies with the Armistice Agreement of 12 September 1944.The restitution of Jewish property, framed as an Allied demand pursued to secure better peace treaty terms, was instrumentalized by the transitional governments through retributive legislationcommon across Eastern Europenot only to address wartime injustices, but also to punish political opponents and consolidate power.Although Romanian political parties formally supported the restoration of Jewish rights to citizenship (225,200 Jews had been stripped of citizenship under the 1938 Decree Law), professional status and property, Romanianisation agencies continued to rent Jewish real estate and stores to gentiles.Restitution became leverage to pressure Jews into joining the Communist Party, whose leadership remained ambivalent toward Jewish integration or emigration.
Svetlana Suveică (Sat,) studied this question.
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