Romanian extremists: Hungarians, go home to Mongolia! – PHOTOS, VIDEOS

Romanian nationalist organisations protested against Hungary and Hungarians in the Úzvölgye cemetery, where they claim Romanian soldiers rest. Even though the Romanian defence ministry said there were no Romanian soldiers buried in the cemetery in 2019, they scolded the Hungarians, the Jews, and the migrants.

According to index.hu, two Romanian extremist organisations commemorated the Day of the Romanian Army (25 October) three days earlier in the cemetery of the unpopulated Úzvölgye. Members of the Nation’s Way (Calea Neamului) and the Orthodoxian Brotherhood (Fratia Ortodoxa) swarmed the cemetery, painted some wood crosses, hoisted a Romanian flag, and put out some Romanian inscriptions on small plates saying that there were Romanian heroes.

According to local newspapers, people came from Bucharest and Moldovan counties by bus. Thus, it was an organised “trip”, not something spontaneous. There were a lot of police officers, but there were no disorders because nobody was there apart from the “protestors”.

Romanian extremists verbally attacked the Hungarian community

The partakers verbally attacked the Hungarian community, saying they should go home to Mongolia and that Hungary is no longer on the map of Europe. Furthermore, they expressed that the barbaric Hungarians arrived in the Carpathian Basin only in 1290 instead of 895-896, the time of the Conquest of the Carpathian Basin by Árpád and the seven Hungarian tribes. Furthermore, the extremists highlighted that Transylvania was entirely Romanian soil (despite the more than one million Hungarians living there).

The 200 “protestors” said Romania belonged to Romanians and should remain their homeland instead of a place where foreign migrants come. Furthermore, Romanian schools should not teach about the History of the Jews or the Holocaust. They believe the students should hear about Romania’s history there.

Here are some photos and videos:

The plate, the cross and the flag:

Here is how they painted the newly placed crosses there, commemorating the Romanian soldiers not buried there:

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