YEAR IX, 2003
YEAR IX, 2003
altera 20-21
Contents
Editorial - 3
EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
AND THE STATUS OF MINORITIES
Gabriel
Toggenburg
A Rough Orientation Through a Delicate
Relationship:
The
European Union‘s Endeavours for (its) Minorities - 5
The issue of minority protection inside the EU-system is characterised
by contradictions but also by a considerable potential of development. The last
twenty years clearly
show that the interest of the EC-organs in this topic has been
considerably growing.
Maastricht gave birth to the concept of cultural diversity opening
hereby new realms
for minority-topics inside the EU. Still minority protection strictu
sensu is reduced to
the external sphere of the EU. It is only the Post-Amsterdam
development that seems to
foster the ‘internalisation‘ of minority related topics. Besides the
question how the law
is developing it seems important to stress that minority question is
also and mainly
about the political willingness of using legal bases and possibilities
which are already
today at disposal. But, however, under the surface of daily policy the
law is mushroom-like pathing its own way – time will show the outcome of this process.
George Schöpflin
The
Hungarian Status Law:
Political,
Cultural and Sociological Contexts - 38
Every state makes provision for the protection of both individual
rights and for the
reproduction of the collectivity — the cultural context within which the
individual
exercises those rights. Collective norms constitute a vital aspect of
human agency, the
capacity to act, precisely because these norms ensure that the
individual is not culturally
naked but is operating in a context in which action will be understood.
The Status Law,
by offering options for the cultural reproduction of all Hungarians, is
a significant
contribution towards that strategy and can take its place in other,
similar attempts to
regulate ethnicity within a civic and etatic framework. In effect, by
separating citizenship
from ethnic identity and constructing a clear definition of citizen of
the Hungarian
state and citizens of other states but ethnically Hungarian individuals,
the Hungarian
Status Law is enhancing and enriching the concept of citizenship. The
critics of the
law may well not understand their underlying, implicit assumptions,
which are
themselves ethnically coded, and, therefore, believe sincerely that
they are articulating
universalist
presumptions.
Zoltán Kántor
The
Status Law:
a
National Policy or a New Approach of Minority Protection? - 47
The author goes through the short, but hectic history of the law that
has established itself
in the consciousness of the public opinion as the Hungarian Status Law, and
presents
most various opinions from the equidistant standpoint of a political
scientist.
There have been many concerns – the author concludes – related to the
Status Law and
to its possible consequences. Among the sources of these problems may have been
the
position of the majority population, the accordance to EU provisions,
the financial aspects
or the law, the bias in those issuing the legitimations, the possible
encouragement of
emmigration, the hardening of the provisions on the regime of
foreigners, the problems
that should be regulated consequently by new laws, the tensions
triggered within domestic
politics and between the organisations abroad. According to the author,
two serious
problems could be raised concerning the Status Law. The first is that
the project is focused
mainly on the facilities granted within the territory of Hungary and not
on the strengthening
of the organisations and institutions abroad. Indeed, the law does not
affect the present
system of assistance for the Hungarians abroad, but it may be assumed
that another
distribution of resources would better contribute to their staying in
their native land. The
second problem is that there is no answer to the situation after
Hungary’s integration to
EU, which was also the original main starting point for the Status Law.
Constantin Iordachi
Redefining
the Boundaries of the Nation:
A
Comparison between Hungary’s “Status Law” and
Romania’s Policy on
Dual Citizenship in the Republic of Moldova - 69
How new and unprecedented are the stipulations of the “Status Law?”
While – in
investigating the law – numerous analysts have pointed out its unique,
innovative character, this paper argues that the Status Law can in fact be regarded as
part of a more
general revival of ethno-national policies of post-communist
nation-states in Central
and Eastern Europe. The 1989 dismantling of the communist system and the
collapse
of supranational authority – perceived by many scholars as the victory
of national
identity against Marxism, “the finest hour of East European nationalism” or the
“Springtime of Nations” – has created an unprecedented opportunity for
a radical
reorganization of national and minority policies in Central and Eastern
Europe.
In order to integrate the “Status Law” into a wider analytical context,
the current
paper focuses on the post-1989 revival of contrasting and ultimately
overlapping definitions of citizenship in Romania, Hungary and the Republic of Moldova,
and the
resulting diplomatic tensions over issues of dual citizenship or
symbolic national membership. The study takes as basis of reference Romania, a country
which, through its
geographical position, bridges citizenship litigation between Central Europe
(represented by Hungary) and the former Soviet space (represented by Moldova).
In exploring the original stipulations of the Status Law, the study thus employs
a double comparative perspective: first, it contrasts the Law with Romania’s
legislation on dual citizenship and its impact on the relationship between Romania and
Moldova; second,
it integrates the Law within the overall patterns of ideological
conflicts between Romania and Hungary. Finally, the paper derives more general conclusion about the
evolution
of-and multiple challenges to-national membership in post-com
munist East-Central Europe.
Károly Gruber
Positive Measures
with a National Feature for the
Protection of the Minorities across Borders in Europe - 87
One of the most important problems of political theory and international
law raised on
the occasion of the diplomatic discussions on the Law on the Hungarians
in the
neighbouring countries was whether the assistance and facilities granted
by the law
can or cannot be considered discriminatory Opponents to the law strived to
highlight
its unique, exceptional character as if there had never been a precedent
to it. The
author seeks to prove the opposite by drawing a comparison between the
EU and the
Council of Europe law, some of the national provisions of certain EU member
states
and the jurisprudence of neighbouring countries. As the author concludes,
within the
law sphere tackled here, the Law on the Hungarians in the neighbouring countries
is
not new either in Central Europe or in Western Europe. The basic
principles of the law
— free choice of identity, protection of national minorities culture and
identity — are
completely in line with the respective law texts of EU, that is with the
provisions
pertaining to national and cultural aspects. The future Europe should
be a Europe of
communities and within this context the Status Law is important since it
contributes to
maintaining the cultural and national diversity of the continent.
János Kis
The Status Law or
Hungary at a Crossroad - 101
The well-known liberal philosopher minutely and unsparingly anatomizes
the national
philosophy of those who initiated the Status Law and holds that the
reference to the
“unitary Hungarian nation” made in the Preamble to the Law redefines
the concept of
nation itself This redefinition confers a political dimension upon the
concept of nation
which entails a public law relationship between the Hungarians living
in the region
and the territorial Hungarian state. Nevertheless, the liberal analyst’s
insight does not
go beyond the scope of the theory of classical liberalism and, despite
earlier attempts
to this end, the critique of state nationalism which putatively imbues
the law is made
from the perspective of the philosophy of the national state and of the
international
status quo. The most important tasks, argues the author in the conclusion, can
be
briefly formulated. The status law must be fundamentally revised. According to
EU
law, any difference whatsoever on an ethnical basis is discriminatory and
forbidden,
except for the instances when it contributes to the protection of the
culture and language
of the respective group and to its maintaining its relationship with
its mother country.
Thus, the law provisions that do not comply to these ends must be
eliminated.
Elek Szokoly
Beyond the Status
Law - 125
The (ethnic) redefinition of the nation by the Status Law is — as the
author argues —
completely in line with the liberal standpoint. This is a fact even though
the redefinition
is indirect, for its effects due to the redefinition are similar to
those of a direct redefinition.
At the same time, the Status Law has a discriminatory character It is
discriminatory
outwardly as it distinguishes between “Hungarian” and “non-Hungarian”
(this being
the very aim of the project) and it is discriminatory inwardly as, due
to this indirect
redefinition of the concept of nation, it distinguishes between its own
Hungarian citizens.
It is high time to realize — the author argues — that the system of
minority protection
in force after the second world war has rather been a palliative aimed
at appeasing
the decision-makers consciousness which has led in the end, if we were
to draw a line,
to a slow abolition of minority existence throughout Europe. Thus, it is no
wonder that
the turn of the millenium has resurfaced all the contradiction and
pending problems
which the bi-polar system of the cold war had anasthetized for a while. As a
matter of
fact, in extreme circumstances when there was only the problem left, often the
minority
had disappeared. And while we are growing more and more sensitive to plant and
animal species extinction, when it comes to ethnic, linguistic and
cultural communities
extinction, we will resort to stability and status quo. This is why the
author deems
legitimate and necessary for normative systems to be pushed beyond
their limits through
initiatives like the status law. It is unfortunate that, due to an
erroneous political-
philosophical starting point, to an unproper historic moment and to a
hybrid legal
couching, the project was to be nipped in the bud. This endangers the
very future of the
national-cultural
philosophy contained by the law.
DOCUMENT
Act on Hungarians Living in Neighbouring
Countries
(Hungary’s Status
Law) - 139
Report on Preferential Treatment of
National Minorities
by their kin-States
(the Venice Commission’s Report) - 152
TRANSYLVANIAN CONVERGENCIES
Mihnea Berindei
The Transylvanian
Issue in the Hungarian Policy of Soliman I - 176
The Romanian historian, holding aloof from traditional hitoriography
stereotypes,
tackles courageously and objectively a subject prone to inflate
patriotic gung-ho spirits
in this part of Europe. “A preliminary question is prerequisite here:
what did the
Otomans understand at the time by the term ‘Transilvania’? What was the
territorial
entity referred to by this term? The voivodship of Transilvania, a
province of the
Hungarian Kingdom, enjoyed an autonomous structure. The region,
delimited in the
South and East by the natural border of the Carpathians, consisted of seven
counties,
the Szeklar and Saxon counties and the “Romanian lands”. But, since 1541, after
the Otoman province of Buda was founded — bglerbegilik de Budun —, the
Otomans used
the name of Transilvania (the Country of Ardeal, more precisely Erdel
villayeti), to
refer to a
much wider region, that of the Eastern part of the Hungarian Kingdom.”
Adrian Majuru
The Khazar Jews - 182
An unwanted subject as it may seem, the history of “the thirteenth
tribe” of the Mosaic
Khazars has
incited curiosity not only of historians but also of men of letters and of
ethnologists. The presence within the
Transilvanian territory of vestiges of a Mosaic
Turk people even more diversifies our
view on a past much too often deemed monolithical
and justifies a profound historic
research. The study here attempts such an approach
in spite of the scarcity of sources.
ANALYSES
Emőd Veress
Reconstruction of Minority Communities
Property Rights - 193
The communist regime, built on the Marxist-Leninist ideology according
to which the
abolition of
all forms of exploitation may be achieved only through the abolition of
private property on production means, turned the statist principle into an
ultimate
value. Thus, through different procedures specific to totalitarian systems
(such as
nationalization,
cooperativization etc.) private property was abolished or severely
curbed. After the
changes occuring in December 1989 a reverse process —
reprivatisation — should have been expected
to emerge through the democratisation
of the political system as a prerequisite of the rule of law, of the free and
competitive
market. The author seeks to answer the question regarding the stage of this
process
both from the point of view of the
relevant law adopted and of its implementation into
the Romanian political reality.
CASE STUDY
Edwin Bakker
The ’Roma Exodus’. A truly pan-European
Issue - 227
This article investigates the recent emigration of Roma from East Europe
to West European
countries, such as Belgium, Finland and Great Britain. It investigates why
Roma emigration from East Europe has
increased in recent years. The article also
focuses on the reaction of
authorities in both East and West to this so-called ‘Exodus’.
Both intend to stem the flow through
various policies ranging from expulsion to Roma-programs aimed at improving the
living conditions of members of this group in their
home country. The short-term results
of these policies are not very promising. There is,
however, one positive aspect of the
Roma ‘Exodus’. The Roma emigration places the
‘Roma problem’ on the international political agenda. This has led to
increasing
attention to this truly cross-border and pan-European issue.
DIALOGUE
Transylvanian
Identity – a „Nation of Will”? - 236
Between 9-14th July 2002 the first edition of the
Transsylvania Summer University was
held at Ilieni organised by the Intercultural Centre of the Pro Europe
League. The 50
participants — students and young political activists — could assist in
discussions on
themes such as: Regionalism in Europe — regionalism in Romania;
Transylvania — a
drifting economy? Political Transylvania — the policy of Transylvania;
Transylvanian
identity — a “nation of will”? the text in this issue consists of excerpts from
the discussion held in the fourth day of the summer university.“To what degree is
there an entitlement to talk of a nation of Transylvanian will?” one of the participants
wonders. “I
think we cannot answer this question without tackling history and
without drawing
certain conclusions. The history of Transylvania has some particulars
when compared
to the other Romanian principalities (…). I believe we
must talk of Transylvania’s
symbolic role for the history of each ethnic group that lived and still lives in
this land.
The Romanians justly consider Transylvania to be the cradle of the Romanian
people
ethno-genesis. To Hungarians it is Transylvania that maintained the political
continuation of the Hungarian nation during the period when the Hungarian state
had been a
Turkish pashalik, while to the Saxons, it was only here (in
Transylvania) where German, Flemish and Walloon settlers became a community that considered
itself a
people and that enjoyed a status of political nation.”
RESTITUTIO
Olivier Gillet
Romanian
Anti-Masonic Movement after 1989.
Origins
and Present Development - 263
The problem of anti-masonic movement in Romania, which emerged after
the collapse of
the communist regime, cannot be tackled without a profound study of the
whole present
political background. Moreover, the lack of perspective, but also the
intricacy of the
political situation — especially the revival of between the war
ideological trends — do
not allow for drawing of permanent conclusions. The anti-masonic
discourse may find
a certain response because of the political and economical crisis
situation, but it is still
extremely difficult to assess its impact on mentalities. Although a
certain irrational character prevails and the general arguments resemble those circulated in
other countries
(that is, the filiation made between Judaism, communism and
freemasonry), a certain
coherent intention can be discerned here depending on the present
Romanian political
background, mainly minority and monarchy issues, having as its ultimate
goal the justification of an authoritarian and nationalist regime facing the dangers
that emerged in
the Balkans after 1989 from national and international instability.
FACES OF
EUROPE
Ioan Codruţ
Lucinescu
The Jews in the
19th century Romanian Principalities - 282
“The Romanian territory grew richer as early as the Medieval Age by
ethnic
communities that played an important part in national history; one of
them was the
Jewish community. The existence of Jews in Wallachia was first dated in
1330 at Cetatea
Albă and in the 16th century in Bucharest”, maintains the
author and then reviews the
crucial moments of the Jewish presence in the Romanian Principalities,
all their ups
and downs. “Unfortunately, the 20th century was to be an extremely
difficult moment
for the Jews throughout Europe and the community in Greater Romania,
having reached
the impressive number of almost 800.000 members after all Romanian
provinces were
united, was not spared of severe problems. The extermination of the
Transylvanian
community beginning with April 4th 1944, the mass deportation
of Bessarabian Jews
by the Romanian authorities, famine and other kinds of shortage during
the second
world war dramatically diminished the number of Jews in Romania after
1945. Massive
immigration to the newly founded state of Israel (1948), led to the same
outcome as the
emmigration of another community important to Romanian society, the
German one:
the actual disapperance of the Jewish community as a social, cultural
and economical
factor in
post-war Romania.”
REVIEWS
Miklós Bakk
Gabriel
Andreescu: Ruleta
(The
roulette) - 290
Laura Ardelean
Daniel Vighi,
András Visky, Alexandru Vlad: Fals tratat de convieţuire
(Fals
Treaty of Coexistence) - 294