Arrival of the war “criminals”, 1945
From February 1945, the so-called war criminals arrived in Aiud. First a few groups of senior and junior officers, then non-commissioned officers, enlisted men and ordinary soldiers. The war criminals were the elite of the Romanian army that had fought against the invaders of the homeland and against communism.
Through the perfidious game of the Judeo-Masonic forces, they were guilty of fighting against the Soviet people, the working class and the high materialist-dialectical conception of life, etc. They were declared war criminals by a deviation and extension of the decisions of the Nuremberg Tribunal.
The Soviet people was not represented at the trial. Other people, with all its representatives, took its place in the trial of the Romanian army, inciting the people with slogans written on posters, on fences, on the walls of houses, in institutions, in factories: “Death to them, death to them, death to the criminals”. In the courtrooms, groups of thugs created the atmosphere, the defence brought a new accusation: that they were oppressors and exploiters of the people, backward bourgeois, village-exploiting bosses, imperialists. A look at the files of some of the war criminals shows that the judges and prosecutors were bought or morally blackmailed by Jews, and the investigators who drew up the indictments, with sentences already decided, were Jews. And almost all the judges were convicted after having been hired.
All this was directed by the great international cabal; Roosevelt, the paralysed Jew who became US president, fulfilled Israel’s dream of world domination. At the Yalta Conference, together with the Freemason Churchill, he handed over the states of Eastern Europe to Stalin and Soviet Jewry. A revenge on a scale never before seen in the history of the world was legally carried out: this was the real Holocaust.
The war criminals were housed in the Section, then, as their numbers increased, in the Cellular, on the top floor, on both sides. Some of the military or internal order members had been part of the repressive apparatus of Carol II and Antonescu. With a guilty conscience, they expected the legionnaires to be spiteful and vengeful. They were astonished when, on their rounds, the legionnaires, deceiving the vigilance of the guards, greeted them and asked them if they needed medical help (Doctor Uță obtained medicine from the guards he had treated) or offered them a piece of polenta and embraced them. Those who were beaten responded with love.
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Many senior officers died in Aiud, paying for the curse pronounced on the Romanian army at the time of the desecration of the bones of the heroes of the Great War. For at that time, not a single superior or subordinate officer protested thus drawing the fulfilment of the curse onto them.
(Virgil Maxim – Hymn for the Cross Carried)