"Heroes die, fighters return to their homes and the opportunists make it to the foreground", the BBC consultant for the 1989 Revolution said in Bucharest on Sunday. Elsewhere in the news, the Romanian 1989 Revolution is still unfinished. Last but not least, the Americans publish details about the Omar Hayssam dossier in a book by Victor Gaetan.
Gandul reads "Heroes die, fighters return to their homes and the opportunists make it to the foreground", the BBC consultant for the 1989 Revolution said in Bucharest on Sunday, while taking part at a remembrance of the events that unfolded 20 years ago. Dennis Deletant is a historian and specialist in Romania's contemporary history. He was in Bucharest in December 31, 1989, as BBC consultant. He had been in Bucharest before that date, including in 1969, when he got a scholarship to study in Bucharest. Due to the negative reporting, he was declared persona non grata by the ex-Communist regime.
"Ceausescu's death made the political shift experience in Romania to be different from other European states, which itself is a hint that, in Romania, getting rid of the dictatorship with peaceful means was impossible. While Ceausescu managed to unite Romanians in opposing him, they remained in a disorientation state after his fall from power. The legacy the Romanian totalitarian regime left in Romania was subsequently different from other countries", Deletant argued during the "TNB Conferences".
The Romanian 1989 Revolution is still unfinished, Romania Libera reads. Historians still don't know a series of details about the way events unfolded. On top of that, justice has not ruled out a verdict in the case of the 1,500 dead and the violence that took place in that period. Overthrowing the Ceausescu couple from power was the first revolution in history to be broadcasted. But the sympathy towards Romania