On György Sepsiszent, the leader of the Nation's Road (Calea Neamului), Mihai Tîrnoveanu, who caused scandal several times at the Úzvölgy military cemetery, invites his followers to gather in the city of Székely on December 1, the national holiday of Romania. The authorities are watching all this with their hands in their laps.

In order to hold their event, which will be organized jointly with the Orthodox Brotherhood (Frăția Ortodoxă), the National Movement (Mișcarea Națională) and the New Right (Noua dărță), they also call on their followers to donate in their appeal, which the extremely anti-Hungarian dentist from Brasov is trying to inflame the organizers in the usual way, Mihai Tîrnoveanu.

"The National Road Association mobilizes all its strength to raise the Romanian tricolor in the heart of the country!" - can be read in the invitation, in which it describes: their association "was born in the battles for Kovászna and Hargita".

"Here, in the heart of the country and for the heart of the country, we fought our first battles since 2014", writes the nationalist leader, who says that he is not driven by hatred, but by Romanian brotherhood and brotherly love, which is why supporters from all over the country joined him, because the "heart of the country" cannot be "defeated alone", writes Tîrnoveanu in reference to György Sepsiszent.

He explained that, in his opinion, everything that means "Hungarian structure" in Kovászna or Hargita county is inflammatory.

"No, we are not 'outsiders', but they come from outside the Romanian territory, serving the regional autonomy policy according to ethnic aspects, coordinated directly by the Budapest government," explains the leader of the Nation's Way.

This is not the first time that such an event has been organized, reminds the Mikó Imre Legal Protection Service. Over the past few years, anti-Hungarian, provocative marches and events have been organized several times, and as their location they choose "places where a peaceful Hungarian community lives, but they provoke and humiliate them with aggressive, anti-Hungarian expressions and slogans. Unfortunately, the authorities are not taking any steps to stop them."

Mihai Tîrnoveanu announces that they are concentrating with all their might on bringing everyone to this big celebration on the first of December on Sepsiszentgyörgy.

The leader of the Nation's Way pointed out that with their presence they fulfill the call of their "Romanian brothers" living here and undertake solidarity with the Romanians living here, so that "the heart of the country does not have to beat alone among people of other blood and faith".

The anti-Hungarian members of the above-mentioned Romanian organizations have already marched in Sepsiszentgyörgy on the first of December several times in previous years, chanting xenophobic and nationalist slogans and inciting against the Hungarian community.

Regarding the event, Erika Benkő, head of the Mikó Imre Legal Protection Service, explained: "I condemn it because I think it harms balanced and harmonious ethnic relations, it serves to create hatred and tension, not the peaceful coexistence of communities. I hope that the authorities will act with sufficient severity, because such primitive and hurtful nationalism has no place in a European state."

Members of the association Calea Neamului and the organization Orthodox Brotherhood gathered on October 22nd at the Úzvölgy military cemetery, where they organized a ceremony on the occasion of Romanian Army Day (October 25th) in the cemetery known to be home to Romanian patriots. they are not buried.

Despite this, the supporters of these two organizations previously set up one hundred and fifty wooden crosses in the military cemetery - without any kind of permission, moreover, in full view of the authorities but without intervention.

The Romanian nationalists were remembered as anti-Hungarians in Úzvölgye

Mihail Tîrnoveanu then said that they would do anything to ensure that the wooden crosses erected at the beginning of the summer remained in place. At the same time, he intensified the mood with an anti-European and anti-foreigner outburst, plucking far-right strings, emphasizing that "the history of Romania is missing from the curriculum in schools today, while the education of the Holocaust has been made compulsory." He also stated, "Romania belongs to the Romanians and must remain the homeland of the Romanians." He stressed that he strongly condemns the admission of other nations into the country.

Maszol.ro

Cover image: Romanian extremists recently rioted in the Úz valley
Source: Maszol.ro/Balázs Borsi