In Memoriam: Commemorating the Fallen
On 9 and 10 April 2024, impressive military and religious ceremonies took place in the
communes of Soultzmatt and Haguenau, France, commemorating 100 years since the
inauguration, by King Ferdinand and Queen Maria of Romania, of the Romanian military
cemeteries in Alsace. The events were attended by HRH Prince Radu of Romania,
Archbishop Joseph, Metropolitan for Western Europe of the Romanian Orthodox
Church, Romanian “Invictus” veterans who participated in international missions in Iraq
and Afghanistan, ambassadors, diplomats, civilian, religious and military authorities.
The honor guard was provided by the Romanian “Michael the Brave 30 th Guards
Brigade” and the French “Régiment de Marche du Chad”.
The Great War (WWI) was a global one which included Europe, USA, and countries
from Asia, Pacific, Middle East and Africa. About 17 million soldiers and civilians were
killed between 1914 and 1918. On the East front in Europe, 800,000 Romanian soldiers
fought on the Entente side and 335,706 of them made the ultimate sacrifice. 130,000
Romanian civilians also lost their lives. Modern Romania was built on their bones. The
dimension of the Great War tragedy was so touching described by the Canadian author
and soldier John McCrae in a famous poem: "In Flanders fields the poppies blow /
between the crosses, row by row. / We are the Dead. Short days ago, / We lived, felt
down, saw sunset glow, / Loved and were loved, and now we lie in Flanders fields". A
glimpse to those times is a necessary sign of gratitude for the memory of the fallen.
In the spring of 1916, Romania was insistently requested by France and Great Britain to
enter the war in order to relieve the huge German pressure on the West front. Queen
Maria of Romania, who was British by birth and a granddaughter of Queen Victoria,
strongly advocated entering the war on the Entente side. The Allies promised to launch
an offensive in Greece and to assist Romania against an attack coming from the South
of the Danube River. Despite a strategically vulnerable position, Romania intervened in
WW I and in August 1916 crossed the Carpathian Mountains into Transylvania, where
its soldiers were received as liberators because the province was ethnically and
historically Romanian.
As Romanian troops advanced rapidly in Transylvania, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany
told his aides: "The war is lost" and field marshal Von Hindenburg wrote: "Judging by
the military situation, it was to be expected that Romania had only to advance where
she wished to decide the world war."
But there was no Allied offensive in Greece and no military support on the Danube. The
German High Command put on hold all other campaigns, throwing its main weight
against Romania, which was simultaneously attacked from three sides. The Romanian
Government was forced to withdraw from Bucharest to Iasi, in Moldova. To protect the
retreat, a fierce resistance was organized on the peaks of the Carpathians, closed to my
native town Campulung Muscel. To make the defense impenetrable, the Romanian High
Command brought there the 70 th Infantry Regiment formed by inhabitants of the region,
who had their families living in villages just behind the frontline. They successfully
stopped the advance of much better equipped and trained German Alpine Corps (one of
the German commanding officers was the future marshal Erwin Rommel). It was a
“Romanian Thermopylae”. A reminder of that terrible battle are the relics of over 2,300
soldiers who rest for eternity in 21 crypts of the impressive Mausoleum on the Mateiaș
Mountain. Those who fell prisoners during the retreat were transferred to German prison
camps. Thus begins the story of the 2344 Romanian soldiers who died in captivity in
Alsace, most of them during the harsh winter of 1917, due to ill-treatment, malnutrition,
frost and exhaustion (data engraved on the crosses attests that the number of deaths
was 25-30 per day).
In the USA, during the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln declared that
everyone who died defending the Union must have an individual grave, and on 17 July
1862 established national legislation instituting the system of national cemeteries.
Based on this model, at the end of WWI former belligerent states agreed to provide
individual and permanent graves, so each soldier who died for his country be genuinely
acknowledged as an individual, and his name be preserved forever.
On 30 August 1919, the French village of Soultzmatt donated to Romania, in Val du
Pâtre (Shepherd’s Valley), the land needed to bring together the remains of Romanian
soldiers dispersed around 35 Alsatian towns and villages. Soultzmatt military cemetery
is the largest Romanian necropolis in France, containing the graves of 678 soldiers: 553
individual tombs, and two common graves with the remains of 125 prisoners who died
of frost on the night of 27 January 1917. 27 Alsatian families risked their lives to provide
food and clothes to Romanian prisoners; all their names were mentioned during the
remembrance ceremony on 9 April 2024.
The Soultzmatt cemetery was unveiled on 9 April 1924 by King Ferdinand and Queen
Maria of Romania. General Henri Berthelot, military governor of Strasbourg, who during
the war led the French military mission in Romania, also attended that ceremony. The
Queen placed flowers on each grave and, on the monumental central cross, a marble
plaque bears her words: “Romanian soldiers! Far from your homeland for which you
sacrificed yourselves, rest in peace, haloed with glory in this land which is not foreign to
you”. The next day, the Royal couple attended a similar ceremony at the military
cemetery in Strasbourg, where Romanian soldiers were also buried. Between 1969 and
1972, their remains and of those resting in Colmar (in total 472 bodies) were transferred
to the Romanian military square “St. George” in Haguenau.
A hundred years on, France and Romania remember together a slice of their common
history: the link between the Romanian soldiers who rest in French soil and the
compassionate local community which respected the prisoners in both life and death. In
September 2023, the Romanian necropolis in Soultzmatt has been included on the
UNESCO World Heritage List.
Back in time on the Eastern front, in July 1917, under the command of general (future
marshal) Alexandru Averescu, the Romanian Army succeeded in breaking the Austro-
Hungarian front in the Battle of Mărăști. German general Von Mackensen promptly
launched a counterattack at Mărășești, announcing his superiors, "Gentlemen, see you
in two weeks in Iasi!", while the Austro-Hungarian army attacked the Oituz Valley. But
both offensives were repelled with heavy losses by Romanians, who in some occasions
fought only with the bayonets. The Battle of Marasesti, where almost 22,000 Romanian
soldiers lost their lives, is considered "The Romanian Verdun". In 1918, Romania ended
the Great War on the side of the victorious.
When the official ceremonies in Soultzmatt were over, a teenager approached us and
introduced himself as “Yann Hoffer, a Franco-Romanian citizen”. Born in Romania and
raised in France, he wanted to read his thoughts written for that occasion:
“With boundless emotion, I share a story with you on this day of commemoration. A
story impossible to tell. A story forgotten forever. It’s George’s story. George. A common
name. An ordinary human being, with a tragic destiny. George was a shepherd. He
marveled at the simple things in life: the song of the birds, the soothing presence of the
Danube. George never thought that one day he would have to leave his native land.
And yet, here and not on the banks of the Danube, was the place where his heart
stopped beating on a winter evening. His eyes were focused on the snowflakes that
covered the barbed wire with an elegant white coat. Then came the darkness. George
that I described to you probably never existed. Maybe his name was John, or Basil. We
will never know. If I tried to imagine a portrait of one of the 678 heroes we
commemorate today, it is because their stories, all different, are similar. Stories of lives
unjustly destroyed by the human madness called “war”. Our duty is not to forget them.
History is made of stories and, as Henri Lacordaire reminded us in the 19 th century,
“history is the memory of the world”. In these uncertain times, when wars rage again,
European cohesion is more crucial than ever. As far as I am concerned, as a citizen of
tomorrow, I trust this Europe rich in in lessons learned from a sometimes-tragic past. I
trust in the future, I trust that George will not have died in vain. Long live the peace!”
Dr. Ion I. Jinga
Note: The opinions expressed in this article no not bind the official position of the author.
Comments