Societatea de Cultură Macedo-Română | |
Abbreviation | SCMR |
---|---|
Predecessor | Macedo-Romanian Committee (1860–1879) |
Formation | 23 September 1879 |
Location | |
Website | Official website |
The Macedo-Romanian Cultural Society (Romanian: Societatea de Cultură Macedo-Română, SCMR) is an Aromanian cultural organization in Romania. It was founded on 23 September 1879, succeeding the Macedo-Romanian Committee established in 1860. The SCMR has the aim of preserving and developing the Aromanian language and culture, and it has had a highly relevant impact on the history of the Aromanians. The society receives support from the Romanian state and regards the Aromanians as ethnic Romanians with specific characteristics that are to be preserved.
History and activities
The Macedo-Romanian Cultural Society was founded on 23 September 1879,[1] being the oldest Aromanian cultural organization.[2] It was recognized as a legal entity by Princely Decree No. 1289 issued by Prince of Romania Carol I on 15 April 1880. The SCMR succeeded the Macedo-Romanian Committee (Romanian: Comitetul Macedo-Român), founded in 1860 in Bucharest in the United Principalities at the initiative of the immigrant Aromanian historian Dimitrie Cozacovici[3] and under the patronage of Prince of Moldavia and Wallachia Alexandru Ioan Cuza.[4]
The SCMR aims to preserve and cultivate the Aromanian language, culture, specific traditions and identity, including among the young generation. It promotes contacts and cultural ties with Aromanian communities everywhere and with the other peoples together with whom the Aromanians live.[1] A nonprofit organization, the organization receives material and moral support from the Romanian state,[4] having been legally recognized in the country as an association of public utility on 7 May 2008.[5] The SCMR supports the traditional notion in Romania that the Aromanians are ethnic Romanians with some distinct particularities that should be preserved.[6] It has the power to issue documents certifying civil status, including nationality certificates to help Aromanians obtain Romanian citizenship with considerably less bureaucratic effort.[7]
The SCMR, together with the Romanian state itself, funded and supported the schools and publications for the Aromanians from which many renowned writers and creators of Aromanian literature emerged.[8] It also supported churches for the Aromanians and printed and distributed manuals and worship books in both Aromanian and Romanian for free to support these institutions.[1] The society published Albumul macedo-român ("The Macedo-Romanian Album"), founded in 1880 by the Romanian historian, academic and politician V. A. Urechia.[9] It also published the weekly Revista Macedoniei ("Macedonia's Magazine"), which later merged with Românul de la Pind.[10]
The society played an important role in the emission of the irâde-i seniyye ("spoken will") on 22 May 1905 by the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II that recognized the Ullah millet and thus gave the Aromanians the status of a separate ethnolinguistic group within the Ottoman Empire with its own specific rights.[1] It also initiated the Meglenia Cultural Society for the Megleno-Romanians, which had similar objectives to the SCMR.[11] The SCMR stopped its activities in 1948, without being formally disbanded.[5] It was reactivated following the Romanian revolution in December 1989 after which several other cultural organizations of the Aromanians in Romania were also established.[12] In 2019, the National Bank of Romania issued a commemorative coin for the 140th anniversary of the SCMR's founding.[1]
Notable members of the SCMR's board of directors have included Vasile Alecsandri, Dimitrie Brătianu, Ioan D. Caragiani, Ion I. Câmpineanu, Dimitrie Ghica, Ion Ghica, Titu Maiorescu, Iacob Negruzzi, C. A. Rosetti, Christian Tell and the aforementioned Urechia.[8] Also relevant for the society's founding were Mihail Kogălniceanu and Calinic Miclescu .[1] As of 2020, the president of the society was the Romanian Aromanian actor, director and politician Ion Caramitru.[5]
See also
References
Citations
- ^ a b c d e f Băiaș, Ionuț (20 September 2019). "Moment aniversar de referință: Societatea de Cultură Macedo-Română împlinește 140 de ani de la înființare. S-bâneadzâ Armânamea!". HotNews (in Romanian).
- ^ Gica 2009, p. 177.
- ^ Ilisei et al. 2010, pp. 70–71.
- ^ a b Ionescu 2012, p. 127.
- ^ a b c Simion, George (28 July 2020). "Românii, Europa și frații sud-dunăreni. Apel public: "Lăsați aromânii să-și aleagă singuri calea – nu le impuneți să fie minoritari!"". Adevărul (in Romanian).
- ^ Gica 2009, pp. 193–194.
- ^ Ilisei et al. 2010, p. 71.
- ^ a b Cândroveanu 1985, p. 12.
- ^ Gică 2006, pp. 4–5.
- ^ Gică 2006, p. 7.
- ^ Kahl 2002, p. 162.
- ^ Ilisei et al. 2010, p. 72.
Bibliography
- Cândroveanu, Hristu (1985). Iorgoveanu, Kira (ed.). Un veac de poezie aromână (PDF) (in Romanian). Cartea Românească.
- Gica, Alexandru (2009). "The recent history of the Aromanians from Romania". New Europe College Yearbook (9): 173–200.
- Gică, Gică (2006). "Ziare și reviste aromâne la sfârșitul secolului XIX și începutul secolului XX" (PDF). Doina (in Romanian). 2 (4–5): 4–8.
- Ilisei, Irina; Mezincescu, Carmen; Panait, Delia; Vrăbiescu, Ioana (2010). "Situația femeilor în comunitatea aromână din România". Noua Revistă de Drepturile Omului (in Romanian). 6 (2): 67–90.
- Ionescu, Silviu (2012). Socio-cultural identity of the Vlachos of northern Greece in the context of globalization (PDF). The International Conference 'Education and Creativity for a Knowledge-Based Society' (6 ed.). Titu Maiorescu University. pp. 126–129. ISBN 978-3-9503145-8-8. ISSN 2248-0080.
- Kahl, Thede (2002). "The ethnicity of Aromanians after 1990: the identity of a minority that behaves like a majority". Ethnologia Balkanica. 6: 145–169.
External links
- Official website (in Romanian)
- Macedo-Romanian Cultural Society on Facebook (in Romanian)