18 January 2020

Dear Comrade Novák, by Silvia Hildebrandt


Silvia Hildebrandt’s 2018 novel Dear Comrade Novák follows the careers during the 1980s of two young men (and to a much lesser an extent a young woman) who grow up in the same village in western Romania.  In 1979, teenagers Attila and Tiberius are best friends.  Novák Attila, brought up in a warm family, is an ethnic Hungarian, which makes him a second-class citizen; worse, he is gay in a country where homosexuality is a criminal act severely punished.  Romanian Tiberius Nicolescu is the son of a Securitate officer, and his family is as rigid as that suggests.  Gypsy Viorica is a member of a caste despised by everybody else, and despite being secretly in love with Tiberius has been promised in an arranged marriage since the age of 4.

The novel opens on the 1 December 1989 with Attila interrogating Tiberius to the strains of Ravel’s Bolero and Tiberius mocking Attila.  We know something they do not: that the Socialist Republic of Romania has less than a month left; and we wonder quite how these characters came to this situation.  The answer lies both in the complexities of their relationship and the complexities of life under Nicolae Ceaușescu’s rule.

At school, Attila has an affair with his teacher, who is a member of an underground anti-government movement called White Winter.  When the teacher is murdered by the Securitate, Attila is terrified he will be arrested, and Tiberius suggests he joins the Securitate himself as the best cover.  Tiberius joins the army, and while Attila reaches the rank of general – a significant feat for a Hungarian – by dint of his ruthlessness, Tiberius has a middling career and only achieves the rank of captain.  Tiberius harbours a sense of injustice that Attila has done so much better than he has, in a job Attila fell into by accident.

Viorica has a miserable marriage to a violent drunken bully, her life one of lost teeth and miscarriages, until she runs away to Timișoara and meets up with Tiberius and Attila again, and Attila’s sister Ánná who is in a relationship with Tiberius.  But their ways part, with Tiberius marrying a relative of Ceaușescu, until the tide of revolution brings them all together once more, though not in a way they would have predicted.  At the end they find themselves on the right side of history, but that does not guarantee a happy ending.

This is a novel full of secrets, individuals not knowing who to trust, and having to live a hidden life politically and sexually.  We see Tiberius and Attila become cynical, and Attila’s shocking indifference to life as he becomes the regime’s executioner with the fearsome nickname Attila the Hun, hypocritically hunting homosexuals (supposedly a decadent western vice unknown in Romania) while he cruises gay bars and has casual sex.

There are conflicts between political, ethnic, sexual identities, with the state denying that there is any such thing as a private life.  Family is no defence: Tiberius’s father does not care whether he sacrifices Attila or his son in order to curry favour with Ceaușescu.  Attila even finds his lover, for whom he has a deep passion, is a plant spying on him.  When saying or doing the wrong thing can get you into trouble, people keep their heads down to survive in a country characterised by shortages, repression and a dearth of civic virtue.

Just as individuals have to hide their authentic selves, the regime is good at concealing inconvenient truths, a failure to confront reality which can only hasten its downfall.  When the accident at Chernobyl occurs it is considered unimportant.  When instances of AIDS begin to show up among Romanian men it is treated as a dirty secret, and Attila shows just how efficient he can be in keeping the problem hidden.

Unfortunately ignorance is the worst possible way to deal with problems, and unsurprisingly Attila finds his lifestyle has left him infected too.  Eventually the political situation cannot be kept from the people, and the fall of the Berlin Wall in early November 1989 is a clear sign that massive change in the Eastern Bloc is possible.

The novel races to a climax, showing the buildup of opposition in Timișoara and the final days of the regime.  These are gripping events vividly described.  Hildebrandt indicates that the uprising in Bucharest, far from being spontaneous, was to a large extent orchestrated by the army.  Rather than a popular revolution, it was a coup, though the spontaneous protests in Timișoara take Tiberius by surprise because they are not part of the White Winter plan.

And what of Attila and Tiberius, sparring over the interrogation table at the opening of the novel a few weeks before?  In the end friendship wins despite the different paths their lives have taken, as they are reconciled and drive to Bucharest to participate in the overthrow of the dictator.  They go to Palace Square on 21 December for Ceaușescu’s final speech, but Attila has little time left as disease wastes his body.

Unfortunately, as the crowed surges forward in excitement and Ceaușescu flees, Attila, bleeding from the mouth, is mistaken for a strigoi by the crowd and shot, dying in Tiberius’s arms.  Tiberius participates in the execution of Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu on Christmas Day (despite being related by marriage which fortunately nobody seems to remember) and is pallbearer to Attila back in the village.

The strigoi reference jars (as occasionally does the novel’s awkward translation) but, being part of the political apparatus, Attila in a sense is a vampire battening on the Romanian people, his privileges bought at their expense.  As a member of the Securitate the transition was never likely to end well for him.  Pregnant Viorica, dead in the massacre at Timișoara, becomes a symbol of the sacrifice made by ordinary people in 1989.  Only Tiberius is left to confront the new world made possible once Ceaușescu has left the stage.