The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal

Although the Danube-Black Sea Canal had been one of Ceaușescu’s pet projects, used by the communist leader to enhance his image as a visionary prophet of the Golden Era of socialism, the idea of a canal that would connect the Danube and the Black Sea may have been as old as ancient Roman history....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roxana Elena DONCU
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Casa Cărții de Știință 2023-12-01
Series:Cultural Intertexts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://b00e8ea91c.clvaw-cdnwnd.com/4fb470e8cbb34a32a0dc1701f8d7322d/200000471-26ef826efb/33-44%20Doncu.pdf
_version_ 1797403836222013440
author Roxana Elena DONCU
author_facet Roxana Elena DONCU
author_sort Roxana Elena DONCU
collection DOAJ
description Although the Danube-Black Sea Canal had been one of Ceaușescu’s pet projects, used by the communist leader to enhance his image as a visionary prophet of the Golden Era of socialism, the idea of a canal that would connect the Danube and the Black Sea may have been as old as ancient Roman history. It is certainly along one of the lines of Trajan’s Wall (Valul lui Traian), running along the Kara Su Valley, that the canal had been imagined, in the 19th century, by various adventurers and travellers. In the 20th century, with the development of technology, the idea turned into a project: in 1922 and 1923, two Romanian engineers (Jean Stoenescu Dunăre and Aurel Bărglăzan) came up with very definite plans of how to create a fourth arm of the Danube, which would help navigation by shortening the distance travelled by commercial ships with about 400 kilometres. The actual building of the Canal, initiated by Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej at Stalin’s orders, was less intended as a technological advancement and more as a pretext to exterminate the interwar elite in the forced labour camps established along the Danube. Work at the Canal began in 1949 and ended in 1953, after Stalin’s death. Though only 20 km had been completed out of the intended 70 km, the legacy of the forced labour camps includes a large number of poems written by the detainees, detailing the inhuman treatment they received and making up a shattering testimonial of life in the Communist labour camps. My paper intends to present and analyse a selection of such poems, showing how they take up the myth of the exiled Ovid and mix it with symbols of Christian suffering. In most of the poems, the colour that is associated with life in the labour camps is black: the blackness of the Black Sea (the inhospitable Pontus, in Ovid’s poetry) is thus transferred onto the traditional ‘blue’ Danube.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T02:44:12Z
format Article
id doaj.art-58af739e0caf43f39e595b6b7e732e71
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2393-0624
2393-1078
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T02:44:12Z
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher Casa Cărții de Știință
record_format Article
series Cultural Intertexts
spelling doaj.art-58af739e0caf43f39e595b6b7e732e712023-12-05T19:11:06ZengCasa Cărții de ȘtiințăCultural Intertexts2393-06242393-10782023-12-011313344The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea CanalRoxana Elena DONCU0Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, RomaniaAlthough the Danube-Black Sea Canal had been one of Ceaușescu’s pet projects, used by the communist leader to enhance his image as a visionary prophet of the Golden Era of socialism, the idea of a canal that would connect the Danube and the Black Sea may have been as old as ancient Roman history. It is certainly along one of the lines of Trajan’s Wall (Valul lui Traian), running along the Kara Su Valley, that the canal had been imagined, in the 19th century, by various adventurers and travellers. In the 20th century, with the development of technology, the idea turned into a project: in 1922 and 1923, two Romanian engineers (Jean Stoenescu Dunăre and Aurel Bărglăzan) came up with very definite plans of how to create a fourth arm of the Danube, which would help navigation by shortening the distance travelled by commercial ships with about 400 kilometres. The actual building of the Canal, initiated by Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej at Stalin’s orders, was less intended as a technological advancement and more as a pretext to exterminate the interwar elite in the forced labour camps established along the Danube. Work at the Canal began in 1949 and ended in 1953, after Stalin’s death. Though only 20 km had been completed out of the intended 70 km, the legacy of the forced labour camps includes a large number of poems written by the detainees, detailing the inhuman treatment they received and making up a shattering testimonial of life in the Communist labour camps. My paper intends to present and analyse a selection of such poems, showing how they take up the myth of the exiled Ovid and mix it with symbols of Christian suffering. In most of the poems, the colour that is associated with life in the labour camps is black: the blackness of the Black Sea (the inhospitable Pontus, in Ovid’s poetry) is thus transferred onto the traditional ‘blue’ Danube.https://b00e8ea91c.clvaw-cdnwnd.com/4fb470e8cbb34a32a0dc1701f8d7322d/200000471-26ef826efb/33-44%20Doncu.pdfcommunismlabour campprison poetrydanube-black sea canal
spellingShingle Roxana Elena DONCU
The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal
Cultural Intertexts
communism
labour camp
prison poetry
danube-black sea canal
title The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal
title_full The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal
title_fullStr The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal
title_full_unstemmed The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal
title_short The ‘Black’ Danube: Life and Poetry in the Forced Labour Camps of the Danube-Black Sea Canal
title_sort black danube life and poetry in the forced labour camps of the danube black sea canal
topic communism
labour camp
prison poetry
danube-black sea canal
url https://b00e8ea91c.clvaw-cdnwnd.com/4fb470e8cbb34a32a0dc1701f8d7322d/200000471-26ef826efb/33-44%20Doncu.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT roxanaelenadoncu theblackdanubelifeandpoetryintheforcedlabourcampsofthedanubeblackseacanal
AT roxanaelenadoncu blackdanubelifeandpoetryintheforcedlabourcampsofthedanubeblackseacanal