
Ioan Simu (June 27, 1875–June 22, 1948) was an
Austro-Hungarian
Austria-Hungary, often referred to as the Austro-Hungarian Empire,, the Dual Monarchy, or Austria, was a constitutional monarchy and great power in Central Europe between 1867 and 1918. It was formed with the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of ...
-born
Romanian
Greek-Catholic priest and politician.
Biography
Origins, early activity and World War I
Born in the village of
Ciufud, in
Alsó-Fehér County, part of the
Transylvania region in
Austria-Hungary (now
Alba County, Romania), Simu studied in the nearby town of
Blaj. He married Eugenia Ciura, the daughter of a
Greek-Catholic priest from
Abrud
Abrud ( la, Abruttus;Ștefan Pascu: A History of Transylvania, Dorset Press, 1990, , hu, Abrudbánya; german: Großschlatten) is a town in the north-western part of Alba County, Transylvania, Romania, located on the river Abrud. It administer ...
, and was himself ordained to the priesthood in 1898. The couple had six daughters and a son. While still a student, Simu was charged with agitation against the Hungarian state after singing the Romanian patriotic song “
Deșteaptă-te, române!” as part of a choir. He was fined and spent four months imprisoned at
Szeged.
Simu began his activity as a priest in 1900, at Abrud. Under constant surveillance by the authorities, in 1909 he was dismissed by government order for his nationalist stance. Assigned as parish priest at
Luna de Arieș in 1912, he was promoted to archpriest at
Sebeș the following year, by order of
Metropolitan
Metropolitan may refer to:
* Metropolitan area, a region consisting of a densely populated urban core and its less-populated surrounding territories
* Metropolitan borough, a form of local government district in England
* Metropolitan county, a typ ...
Victor Mihaly de Apșa. He was involved in Romanian cultural organizations, founding a craftsmen's society in Abrud and pressing the Sebeș authorities to grant subsidies to
ASTRA
Astra may refer to:
People
* Astra (name)
Places
* Astra, Chubut, a village in Argentina
* Astra (Isauria), a town of ancient Isauria, now in Turkey
* Astra, one suggested name for a hypothetical fifth planet that became the asteroid belt
Ent ...
, in which he remained active through the 1920s.
When Romania entered World War I in August 1916, the Hungarian authorities launched a wide-scale campaign of repression against nationalist Romanian leaders throughout Transylvania. Simu, together with other community leaders in Sebeș, was arrested at night. Not only was he an intransigent activist, but his son had crossed the
Southern Carpathians and joined the
Romanian Army. Initially taken to
Sibiu, the arrestees were joined by a larger group, all of whom were sent to the detention camp at
Sopron. Simu was held there until March 1917, when he returned to Sebeș.
Entering politics in Greater Romania
In early November 1918, as Austria-Hungary neared defeat in the war, Simu defied the government and held an assembly in the main square of Sebeș. He subsequently became president of the city's Romanian National Council (CNR).
Simu was a delegate to the
Great National Assembly at
Alba Iulia, which proclaimed the
union of Transylvania with Romania on December 1.
He subsequently resigned as CNR head, reversed his decision and then resigned for good, in favor of the local
Romanian Orthodox archpriest. Evidence suggests Simu was pushed aside due to his religion, although according to his account, he had always sought to avoid conflict with the Orthodox. At the same time, as the Romanian authorities consolidated their hold over Transylvania, Simu appeared on a list of reliable persons.
Active within the
Romanian National Party (PNR), Simu was selected as its candidate for the Abrud seat in the
Assembly of Deputies at the
1922 election. Although he had left the town a decade earlier, he retained influence among the local ''
moți''. His wife died during the campaign. His opponent was
Ioan Rusu-Abrudeanu
Ioan is a variation on the name John found in Romanian, Bulgarian, Russian, Welsh (), and Sardinian. It is usually masculine. The female equivalent in Romanian and Bulgarian is Ioana. In Russia, the name Ioann is usually reserved for the clergy ...
of the
National Liberal Party (PNL); although native to the area, he vehemently criticized the “provincialism” and (implicitly Greek-Catholic) “confessionalism” of Transylvania's Romanians in the press, constantly attacking the PNR. At the time, the PNL controlled the area's
prefecture
A prefecture (from the Latin ''Praefectura'') is an administrative jurisdiction traditionally governed by an appointed prefect. This can be a regional or local government subdivision in various countries, or a subdivision in certain international ...
,
police and
gendarmerie
Wrong info! -->
A gendarmerie () is a military force with law enforcement duties among the civilian population. The term ''gendarme'' () is derived from the medieval French expression ', which translates to " men-at-arms" (literally, ...
, helping ensure Rusu-Abrudeanu's victory through electoral fraud. Ample free stew and brandy distributed by PNL agents were not enough to sway the vote to Rusu-Abrudeanu; it needed the Abrud election administrator to invoke bureaucratic reasons for invalidating the votes from
Zlatna
Zlatna (german: Klein-Schlatten, Kleinschlatten, Goldenmarkt; hu, Zalatna; la, Ampellum) is a town in Alba County, central Transylvania, Romania. It has a population of 7,490.
Administration
The town administers eighteen villages: Botești ('' ...
and Feneș and turn Simu's 270-vote victory into a 152-vote defeat.
For a time, the cheated Simu focused on the church, obtaining some 16 hectares for its use as a result of the
1923 land reform. His repeated requests for funds from the city hall were at last repaid, the money being used for a new roof, repairs to the parish house and a cemetery fence. Despite a war reparation paid in 1926, the sum was not enough to purchase new bells; the old ones had been requisitioned during the armed conflict. He came in contact with a Romanian Greek-Catholic priest from
Aurora, Illinois
Aurora is a city in the Chicago metropolitan area located partially in DuPage County, Illinois, DuPage, Kane County, Illinois, Kane, Kendall County, Illinois, Kendall, and Will County, Illinois, Will counties in the U.S. state of Illinois. Locat ...
, asking him to hold a fundraiser for new bells. The latter demurred, claiming his bishop would not allow it. In the event, new bells arrived only in 1947, after Simu's retirement.
Switching parties
Beginning in 1925, Simu waded back into politics, harshly criticizing a PNR proposal to ally with the
national minorities, in particular the
Magyar Party, ahead of the
1926 election. He claimed that the
Hungarian minority displayed a hostile attitude towards the Romanian state, and admitted that he could not forget various indignities he had suffered under Hungarian rule. As a result, certain leaders of the Alba County PNR harassed Simu and attacked his faith. This provoked the prickly priest to quit the PNR and join
Alexandru Averescu’s
People's Party (PP). Running on its lists, he was successful this time in his bid for election as a deputy. However, he did not feel at home in the PP, which he left in November 1927. He subsequently entered the
Nicolae Iorga-led
Democratic Nationalist Party, finding there some old PNR cadres who had joined in 1925.
[Totoianu, p. 326]
Simu served as acting mayor of Sebeș in 1930-1931.
By this time, his public image was in decline, with a hundred parishioners from Sebeș penning a letter to Metropolitan
Vasile Suciu Vasile Suciu may refer to:
* Vasile Suciu (bishop) (1873–1935), Romanian Greek-Catholic metropolitan bishop
* Vasile Suciu (footballer) (1942–2013), Romanian footballer
{{hndis, Suciu, Vasile ...
, complaining that he focused on political power to the detriment of church matters. Already during his time as deputy, his frequent trips to parliament and ministries in distant
Bucharest angered the faithful, even though he helped secure funds for the church and its school. In 1931, former PNR comrades, by now in the
National Peasants' Party (PNȚ), published bitter articles against Simu, accusing him of greed for his involvement in a land dispute. The priest replied via open letter, but a fresh salvo ended in a quatrain calling him “Father Million”.
Nevertheless, Simu joined the PNȚ, running as its candidate at the
1933 election. The following year, he was elected to its Alba County executive. From that point, he was exclusively involved in party work, no longer seeking office. In November 1934, at
Cut, he led a group of priests in celebrating the liturgy, following which he delivered a speech; the occasion was the unveiling of a bust of
Septimiu Albini, which 10,000 attended. In 1935-1936, he was vice president of the Alba County PNȚ, attending rallies and lavishing praise on party president
Iuliu Maniu. Turning 60 in 1935, he had become a loyal activist, no longer clashing with the leadership.
Communist onset and death
In August 1946, with the
Romanian Communist Party
The Romanian Communist Party ( ro, Partidul Comunist Român, , PCR) was a communist party in Romania. The successor to the pro-Bolshevik wing of the Socialist Party of Romania, it gave ideological endorsement to a communist revolution that woul ...
consolidating power, the PNȚ Alba chapter, representing the main faction still backing Maniu, met at a bank in Alba Iulia. Their purpose was to nominate candidates for the
November election. Following a pattern of communist activists disrupting Peasantist gatherings, some 40 people broke into the bank and started beating those present. Simu, while trying to leave the room, was brutally beaten with a chair and an electric lamp.
[Totoianu, pp. 328-29]
Shortly thereafter, Simu retired from the priesthood. Most likely, the beating left him unable to carry out his duties. He departed Sebeș and moved in with one of his daughters at Alba Iulia, where he died two years later, just short of age 73.
Simu was buried in the
Maieri cemetery.
[ Mircea Dimitriu]
“Un luptător pentru Marea Unire, protopopul Ioan Simu”
in ''Dacoromania'', nr. 41/2008, p. 33 Thus, he did not live to see the new
communist regime outlaw his church several months later, nor the widespread campaign of persecution it launched against its clerics, and against non-communist politicians.
[Totoianu, p. 329]
Notes
References
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Simu, Ioan
1875 births
1948 deaths
People from Blaj
Romanian Greek-Catholic priests
Romanian activists
Delegates of the Great National Assembly of Alba Iulia
Prisoners and detainees of Austria-Hungary
Austro-Hungarian prisoners and detainees
World War I prisoners of war held by Austria-Hungary
Austro-Hungarian prisoners of war in World War I
Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Romania)
Romanian National Party politicians
People's Party (interwar Romania) politicians
Democratic Nationalist Party (Romania) politicians
National Peasants' Party politicians