The president of the Romanian nationalist association Calea Neamului appeared in Kédivásárhely recently, and their scandalous behavior immediately became known.
According to Maszol, Mihai Tirnoveanu appeared at the statue of Áron Gábor, which he covered with a raised portrait of Avram Iancu, the leader of the 1848-49 revolution and anti-independence uprising in Transylvania, while two of his attendants held the Romanian flag next to him.
According to the paper, the association usually parades in the city on the first of December in the company of a few hundred of their followers, but they commemorated the anniversary of Avram Iancu's death in Kézdivásárhely.
In addition, Mihai Tirnoveanu proudly reported on the action on his Facebook page with a video and photo.
In the more than twenty-minute video recording, two male members of Mihai Tirnoveanu's association, Gabriel Ungureanu and Mihai Berchiu, as well as a woman named Elena, can be seen doing laps of honor in the main square of Kézdivásárhely. The recording also revealed why they chose this city and why they are "angry" at the Hungarian national hero.
Tirnoveanu's specific grudge against Áron Gábor and his statue is that he manufactured the cannons and gunpowder that the Hungarian army then used against the Mocs.
Maszol.ro added: Áron Gábor probably didn't even know who the Móc leader who died in Körösbány in September 1872 was, since the master gunner and freedom fighter from Bereck primarily defended his homeland against the tsarist and imperial troops.
Most people really associate the name of Áron Gábor with cannon casting, however, the weapons were mostly cast in Mózes Turóczi's workshop in Kézdivásárhely under the direction of the Saxon lathe master Ferdinánd Dummel, but Antal Végh, István Pásztor, Antal Paizs and Dániel Szabó also took a lion's share in the factory's activities.
Gunpowder production was carried out by János Szacsvay, nicknamed Nimrod from Estztelnek, Áron Gábor had nothing to do with the gunpowder mill. By the way, the approximately seventy cannons largely contributed to Háromszék's self-defense fight.
Mihai Tirnoveanu also criticized the fact that the "terrorists" in Kézdivásárhely did not receive their deserved punishment - showing the Székely flag displayed on some of the houses on the main square of the guild town.
The leader of the Nation's Way also threatened his viewers with the horror of the annexation of Transylvania, and even directly stated that Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is currently Lajosa Kossuth, who is working with his Romanian aides to ensure that Transylvania once again belongs to Hungary.
Mihai Tirnoveanu is planning his next promotions for Székelyudvarhely and Sepsiszentgyörgy.
Members of the nationalist organization last disrupted the Hungarian commemoration held at the Úzvölgy cemetery at the end of August, reported the Transylvanian Hungarian daily Krónika. Mihai Tirnoveanu then asked his followers to "make their presence felt" in the Úzvölgy, but "discreetly so as not to provoke".
At the same time, he also sent a message to the Hungarians: as he said, they are ready to organize demonstrations and initiate legal proceedings against the 600 wooden crosses erected by the Hungarian community in the military cemetery, as they also do not have the permission of the Romanian War Graves Caretaker (ONCE). "We left your crosses alone, leave ours alone," he said.
Before the event that took place last month, Nemzet Útja drew attention to Viktor Orbán's speech in Tusnádfürdő - complaining that its members were not able to attend the event. Two Romanian groups marched to the scene to provoke the Prime Minister before his speech, but the security guards did not let them in. Mihai Tirnoveanu persuaded the police chief for a long time, but they did not get into the auditorium.