Hungarians, go back to Mongolia, where you came from - about 200 members of Romanian nationalist organizations commemorated the Romanian Army Day at the Úzvölgy military cemetery with a molino with this inscription.

The march organized on the occasion of the Day of the Romanian Army (October 25) was held three days earlier, on Sunday, by the nationalist organization Calea Neamului and Orthodox Fraternity. According to the call published on social media, in response to what they believe to be "Hungarian political organizations exerting enormous pressure" on the authorities to remove the new crosses they have erected.

Mihai Tarnoveanu, the leader of the Nation's Way, visited the Úzvölgy cemetery with a few followers already during the week.

According to the video posted on the social media site, in preparation for winter, the 151 wooden crosses that were arbitrarily erected on July 8 were coated with wax and wood preservative.

Plaques with the inscription Romanian hero (Erou roman) decorated with the colors of the Romanian flag were mounted on the crosses, the inscription "In memory of the heroes of the Romanian army" was placed on the larger cross, and a Romanian flag was wrapped around the lower part.

According to the online report of Hargita Népe, the participants came by bus from several Moldovan counties and Bucharest to the commemoration on Sunday. Police, gendarmes and the emergency rescue service (SMURD) were also present at the scene.

According to Székelyhon's richly illustrated coverage with photos, the participants in the Sunday parade also had an openly anti-Hungarian molino, which read "Hungarians, go back to Mongolia, where you came from" with incorrect Romanian wording and spelling.

On it (referring to the Romanian invasion in 1919) they also wrote: "Hungary is not on the map of Europe".

Hungarians-go-back-to-Mongolia

Bad message written in bad Romanian
Source: Székelyhon.ro

In addition, there was an incoherent and incorrect Romanian text on it, which can be interpreted in Hungarian as follows: "The barbarian Hungarians came to our regions with the intention of robbery in 1290. After that, the Mongolian-Hungarians also brought their families here," the news portal wrote. For the participants, the previously used “Something eternal. You could also see the inscription "Transylvanian Romanian land".

A crowd of about 200 people, mostly dressed in Romanian national costumes, waving Romanian flags entered the cemetery, where a table was waiting for them.

Maszol.ro wrote that Romanian military songs and the Romanian national anthem were playing from the loudspeakers. They held an Orthodox ceremony and read out the list of Romanian heroes whose remains, according to them, rest in the Úzvölgy cemetery. The participants "Present!" they responded to the names with exclamations.

Mihail Tarnoveanu said that they would do anything to keep the wooden crosses in place. In his anti-European and anti-foreign speech, he also spoke out against foreign guest workers, stressing that "Romania must remain the homeland of the Romanians and the Romanians."

He also spoke about the fact that the teaching of Romanian history is taking a back seat in Romanian schools, and objected to the fact that students learn about the history of the Jews and the Holocaust. The commemoration continued with candle lighting and a joint feast.

The Székelyhon wrote that at the end of the ceremony, those present hoisted a Romanian flag on the flagpole, on which on August 26, at a ceremony organized by the village of Csíkszentmárton, those commemorating the Hungarian veterans buried in the cemetery hoisted the Hungarian national flag.

The red-white-green flag was no longer on the pole at the beginning of the Romanian commemoration on Sunday.

The international military cemetery of the depopulated Úzvölgye settlement belonging to Csíkszentmárton in Hargita County became the site of the Romanian-Hungarian conflict four years ago.

In 2019, on Romanian Heroes' Day, thousands of Romanian commemorators forced their way into the cemetery to take part in the Orthodox consecration of the Romanian plot and monument, which hundreds of Szeklers unsuccessfully tried to prevent with chainsaws.

In its summary published on June 12, 2019, the National Heroes' Memorial Office (ONCE), which is subordinate to the Romanian Ministry of Defense, clarified that the Romanian soldiers whose names are regularly read out at commemorations of Romanian nationalists were not buried in Úzvölgy.

MTI