Interviu Cu Horia Roman Patapievici: Вђќcomunismu... -

Reflecting on his own experiences—including 26 hours spent under arrest during the 1989 Revolution—Patapievici views witnessing as a moral law.

: Eradicating deep-rooted cultural influences, such as the German cultural tradition, which he describes as an extraordinary loss to the national identity.

: He suggests that what continues to unite totalitarians today is a shared "hatred toward capitalism" and the individual freedoms it represents. The Moral Imperative of the Survivor Interviu cu Horia Roman Patapievici: ”Comunismu...

: He asserts that a survivor is duty-bound to see the world through the eyes of those who can no longer see.

This feature explores the intellectual perspective of regarding the enduring impact of communism on the Romanian soul and cultural landscape. Based on his historical analysis and recent interviews, the narrative focuses on the systemic destruction of cultural critical mass and the moral obligation of memory. The Architecture of Absence Reflecting on his own experiences—including 26 hours spent

: Replacing individual initiative—the engine of all creation—with state-enforced stagnation. Communism as a "Political Religion"

For Patapievici, communism was never merely a political system; it functioned as a "political religion". He argues that this religious fervor explains why the ideology remains "cool" or acceptable in certain Western circles today, whereas Nazism is rightly condemned as monstrous. The Moral Imperative of the Survivor : He

: He notes a profound misunderstanding between Eastern and Western perspectives. While the West often views communism as "misapplied socialism," victims in the East recognize it as fundamentally evil because it was communism itself.