Born in Transylvania, Northern Romania, in a town called “Satu Marie,”
I grew up like Alice in Wonderland:
On the one hand I was friends with the children of intellectuals,
and also lovely Gypsy children who I taught the Romanian language as
early as the first and second grade.
On the other hand, my family had a tough life because my
parents were always working until late hours at night. My younger
brother Alex and I read while waiting for mother, Magdalena, to arrive
turn off our lights even as she continued into the wee hours her accounting
work at home. She was compounding the lengths and width of the
wooden logs that were heading to Russia year by year.
During the day, Magdalena let us play all day long to our heart’s
content. So unique, and we felt so free exploring nature in Sighet.
In 1973, at age 10 as a fifth grader in Transylvania’s isolated
town of Sighet2
, I had to make a fateful decision about my choice of
foreign-language study: Russian or English. The pressure was on us to
1 Readers should be aware of a key acronym used when this paper reaches the 1990s: NPPO
stands for Not-for-Private Profit Organization (usually a Foundation) which differs from
the more familiar (Non-Profit Organization (NPO). Outside the United States, the latter
term tends to be wrongly understood to mean no profit can be accumulated and the NPO
must show a zero balance at year end. The former term (NPPO) is developed here to stress
that profits may be accumulated and invested to fund future activities, as long as
expenditures do not benefit private parties (except for salaries, travel, and other justified
expenses as provided in, say, a Foundation’s by-laws.) 2 Officially named Sighetu Marmației (on Romania’s northwest border facing Ukraine’s
southwestern border with Romania and Hungary.
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 222
take up Russian, thus proving that we were all students loyal to the
dictator Socialist” Nicole Ceausescu’s “Socialist Government” (read
Romanian Communism allied with Moscow), but consciously I detested
that system.
Although I wanted to learn English, I did not then how fateful
that choice would be until 1991, when at almost 27 years of age, I met
Jim Wilkie who had been advised by his brother Richard to include my
town of Sighet in his journey to assess the how Eastern Europe was faring
after the fall of the “Berlin Wall,” short for the long wall that kept the
people of Communist countries locked and unable to escape. But more
later about how Jim found me as he sought an English-speaking
intellectual and social guide to Eastern Europe.
In the meantime, growing up in Sighet with a population of only
30,000 people, we were proud to recognize Elie "Elie" Wiesel (born
1928) as our most prominent citizen long before he won the 1986 Nobel
Peace Prize. He helped us get past the terrible history of Sighet
Communist Prison where “enemies of the state” were confined until
“death due to natural cause.”
In my early years I had a hard time understanding how the green
and flowered valley of Sighet (elevation 1,000 feet, on the Tisa River at
the foot of our forested Carpathian Mountains) could be so beautiful, yet
we lived under the terribly cruel eye of the Securitate to protect from the
people the wretched Dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu. Ceausescu,3 who ruled
from 1965 to his execution in 1989, was the harshest leader of all the
countries behind Russia’s Wall against Western Europe.
Oddly enough, in the Transylvania of the late 1960s, 1970s and
1980s, supposedly I was living the “Golden Age of Romanian
Socialism,” but even to myself as a young student; I could see that the
3 In modernized spelling.
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Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 223
promised “full progress” was clearly a lie. Most adults agreed but feared
to speak so bluntly.
Even though the “English-Speaking USA” had been supposedly
always threatening to invade Romania, I continued to study English
language and literature. That I chose to study English even though the act
alone brought suspicion on me because all society was taught to believe
since 1945 that we were fighting off the Great Satin USA.4 America was
officially seen as a threat to Romania and it allies under Russia’s
COMECON,5 all of which I became only fully aware as I grew older and
had to buy the English Course textbooks on the risky, expensive Black
Market.
In the meantime, without rarely granted permission, we were
forbidden to meet and visit with foreigners, especially those who spoke
English and who wanted to hear from us about Sighet and its nearby
wooden hamlets of the Maramures Province, where I have my first
memories. The region is ethnically diverse, with a stimulating climate
ranging from very hot summers and very cold winters. Geographically,
we lived in the valleys and Mountains of Gutinul through which the rivers
of Iza and Tisa flow. Geographically, the beautiful forested Tisa River is
the natural border with Southern Ukraine.
4 As in the case of Oceania always being threatened by eternal war alternating between
Eurasia or Eastasia, portrayed in George Orwell’s 1984 (1948). Cf. my article “Orwell’s
1984 and the Case Studies of Stalin and Ceausescu,” in Elitelore Varieties (Edited by James
Wilkie et al.): http://elitelore.org/Capitulos/cap16_elitelore.pdf 5 COMECON (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance) dates from the January 1949
communiqué agreed upon in Moscow by the USSR (including its 15 Constituent Republics
of Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan) and its five
“Independent” Satellite Republics (Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and
Romania. The communiqué involved the refusal of all these countries to "subordinate
themselves to the dictates of the Marshall Plan.” Thus, they organized an “economic
cooperation” among these “new peoples’ democracies.” (USSR born 1922, died 1991). Cf.:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Comecon
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As folklore has it in the West, vampires are native to
Transylvania. We had vampires, werewolves, and wolverines, but all the
mythological characters were actually members of the Communist Party,
which everyone had to join--except for me because with my knowledge,
I was considered a security risk!
Fortunately, when in 1982 I entered the University Babes
Boljay, in Cluj-Napoca, to earn my M.A. in 1990, for my sociology
classes, I decided to conduct my field research project into the rural life
of the North of Romania, recording the folklore (especially myths)
invented and passed down by rural folks (including small merchants,
farmers, fisherman, loggers) had had used that lore to help them survive
for centuries.
Further, much of my research conducted among the outlying
farmers, delved deeply into Transylvania Folklore, which prepared me
well to understand Communist Party Lore.
Thus, for the second time, my fateful choice of a field research
project had further prepared me, unknowingly, for my future with Jim
Wilkie.
Once I had been admitted to the Babes Boljay University, which
was called “the heart and brain of Transylvania,” I also further expanded
and deepened deep studies in American language and literature. Also I
studied Romanian language and literature in the Department of Philology.
The Bolyai University Is considered the best University in Transylvania.
Upon beginning my mentoring for other students, I was happy
to find a sense of freedom. Reading and writing comprehension were my
forté during my four years at Cluj. I had always dreamt of being a
professor and a writer and seemed to be off to a great start.
But I soon realized that our professors opened the day by reading
the mounds of new Decrees just signed by Ceausescu. Thus, I began
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Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 225
laughing, and other students join me in mocking the wooden language of
Central Planning’s attempt to befuddle us with words from a wooden
language, totally bent toward twisting our brains into confused
submission. Professors and Securitate officers were acting as sweaty
bureaucrats trying to teach us how to sharpen our mental images. Not one
professor asked us, “What do each of you really think of all this
Ceausescu propaganda of decrees harming the educational process?”
Professors had their favorite students and made sure they pointed
this out in class, stifling any competition as they show openly their
favoritism or nepotism.
When I reached the age of 22 in1985, I started to be
argumentative, criticizing professors, especially the history professor
who only knew only the History of the Romanian Communist Party.
Further, as a woman in academia, I began to resent being forced
to do the military service. The Russians, having been directing Romanian
politicians since 1945, pressured the Romanians to dig useless trenches
as well as learn to disassemble and assemble the AK47!
The atmosphere was dreadful in classes. Restrictions were
plentiful and absurd. Speech was not free; one couldn’t discuss issues
freely in class, or make any real analysis or debate. One had to regurgitate
what the professors were telling us. Modern economics led by and read
whatever was there in the old books stacked in the communist library.
Until I escaped Romania in 1992, I learned that the so-called economics
classes we took taught nothing about money, credit, and such terms as
GDP. The Marxist economics involved only fuzzy nonsensical slogans
such as “We Romanians have to fight-off the ‘running dogs of
capitalism,” without the word “capitalism” ever being defined except in
unrealistic theory laced with epithets.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 226
Even as an English major, I could not speak with to foreigners
in English --answering one question was a crime, according to the
tendentious Security Decrees. Abortion was a crime punishable for up to
20 years in prison. Doctors performing it ended up in jail, and so did the
pregnant women. Punishments were ridiculous—the Anti-Abortion Law
lasted for 40 years, until 1990.
Furthermore if my uncle from Canada visited us, we were all
under surveillance, the entire family. Even today, in 2016 one has to
report to the police to declare if any visitor of family comes from the USA
(or Canada, for some bizarre security reason). Well after 25 years, not
much has changed in poor Romania.
The influence of recent Romanian history
In the meantime, the History of Transylvania weighed heavily
on population of Romania, with constant change in the emerging political
map always have left “citizens” always lost about who was really in
charge.
Thus, Transylvania was originally part of the Dacia Kingdom
between 82 BC until the Roman conquest in 106 AD. The capital of Dacia
was destroyed by the Romans, so that a new capital would serve the
Roman Province of Dacia, which lasted until 350 AD, by which time the
Romans felt so hated that it behooved them withdraw back to Rome.
During the late 9th century, western Transylvania was
conquered by the Hungarian Army to later become part of the Kingdom
of Hungary and in 1570 to devolve into the Principality of Transylvania.
During most of the 16th and 17th centuries, the Principality became an
Ottoman Empire vassal state, confusingly also governed by the Habsburg
Empire. After 1711 Transylvania was consolidated solely into the
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 227
Habsburg Empire and Transylvanian princes were replaced with
Habsburg imperial governors. After 1867, Transylvania ceased to have
separate status and was incorporated into the Kingdom of Hungary as part
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.6 After World War I, Transylvania
reverted in 1918 to be part of Romania. In 1940 Northern Transylvania
again became governed by Hungary and then Germany, but Romanian
queen Maria successfully reclaimed it after the end of World War II.
The year 1940 was important for Romania because if was seized
for its oil by Nazi Germany (1940-1944), “liberated” by the “Soviet
Union” (1944-1947), and finally “re-liberated” to become the Popular
republic of Romania (under USSR remote control), as the Cold War was
beginning to freeze the Iron Curtain into place.
At the end of World War II while the USSR and its Red Army
were the occupying powers in all Romania, in 1947 Romania forcibly and
ironically became a “People’s Republic” (1947–1989), after the rise of
the Iron Curtain.
The first “president,” Gheorghiu-Dej (1947) ruled as puppet of
Moscow, but when he died, his Secretary General of the Communist Party
of Romania, Nicolae Ceausescu, was elected as the second “president”
(1965-1989), shifting his savage dictatorship into a harsher Romanian
“Gulag” than known in the USSR.
For two decades I neither understood the dimensions of tragic
history of Transylvania, did I understand that I would have to escape the
Gulag of Romania by the “skin of my teeth.”
For peoples of the world Transylvania seems to be a far away
place, where most people know the werewolves and vampires have been
“seen” to in the imagination of Transylvanians, whose beliefs was soaked
in mystical folklore. Even today it is hardly possible to have a rational
6 This Empire existed between 1867 and 1918.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 228
conversation with most the Transylvanian folk on any subject without
recourse to try to understand where their distorted imagination has
befuddled them.
The population has consisted of Romanians, Hungarians,
Germans, and some Ukrainians. These languages are still being spoken
in Romania’s Maramures province, but because I always liked and loved
the Romanian language, I decided to become a Professor of Romanian
Language and Literature.
My backdrop to the fall of CEAUSESCU
I later told Jim how I had been admitted in 1982 to the BabesBolyai
University, in Cluj-Napoca at the heart of Transylvania, I focused
especially on Linguistics. Unfortunately, there I found that the professors,
who were under the control of sweaty Securitate officers, had to read
dozens of new Decrees issued every day as they sought to control every
one of our daily actions—all in the name of protecting the Ceausescu
government—which was selling the country’s food supplies to Russia in
order to pay down Roman’s official debt at our experts. Those Securitate
officers ate well and ominously watched us virtually starve. They said, be
calm like your parents in the face of starvation.
Thus, I furiously called out in my classes that our very existence
was being compromised by Ceausescu's abandonment of the population,
which was ordered to, as Lenin famously said, “work, work, and work.”
To protect myself as best I could, I turned to humor, seeking to
ridicule Ceausescu’s “national paradise.” But when I encouraged my
classmates to laugh at the propaganda embedded in the wooden language
of the national bureaucracy, I soon fell under the heavy scrutiny of
university authorities, who were furious that I trying to expose the fact
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 229
that all classes had been organized to befuddle the student body into
confused submission. Indeed, each professor had favorite students to help
drown out legitimate questions and stifle any competing analysis—the
university lived under nepotism, favoritism, the threat of rape (virtual and
real) by the Securitate officers, and open bribery--choose your garden
variety.
My 1986 flight from Romania backfires
By 1986, at age 23, I had decided to flee Romania—an illegal
act because Ceausescu did not want anyone (especially women of childbearing
age) to escape his plan to building his “ideal socialist industries”
on farms and ranches as well as in the cities. In June I made my way to
the border of Yugoslavia and paid a smuggler to evade the Romanian
security forces that were preventing the “nations workers” from escaping.
The smuggler, who took me across the border, turned out to be working
for Romanian Border Police. Thus, soon after crossing into Yugoslavia,
he turned his wagon around and I was again in Romania again when I
realized what had happened too late. I had been “sold” to Ceausescu’s
minions for a wagonload of salt.
That failed escape from Romania led me to a 10-month prison
sentence in Timisoara Prison, wherein the block cells were maintained so
cold (supposedly to eliminate bacteria and viruses) that it made all of us
inmates sick with the cold and the flu.
Cell bed blankets were less warm than one Kleenex tissue.
Moreover there were no pillow, and the concrete slab where inmates slept
was a back-breaker. The lights were on 24 hours a day, blinding all of us,
and there was constant observation. Every hour one was awakened to be
counted for, and sneaking up on people, under the guise of watching out
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 230
for suicides. But everyone could be clearly seen by the guards, and there
was no need to sleep-deprive inmates. There was also someone in the
higher echelon ripping off the food budget to siphon money to themselves
while serving inmates only baby carrots and spicy beans.
Almost every family in Romanian civil society had at least one
member who had been imprisoned for trying to open the political system
by denouncing the Ceausescu dictatorship. These inmates were openly
called “Political Prisoners,” and I was one of them.
Political Prisoners were not permitted to work outside the prison
walls in the fields because our crime had been the political decision to
repudiate Ceausescu’s “fantastic system.”
Out of prison in 1987 and open to change in the air
Once free in 1987, I could return to my University to finally
complete my M.A. in 1990.
Further in 1987, at the age of 24, I met the Family patriarch
Nicolae Pipas,7 who directed for the Communist government the walled
Regional Art Museum in a quiet part of Sighet. Being one of the few
highly educated persons who spoke English in the region, I began to serve
as interpreter/guide to visiting foreign Ambassadors permitted to travel
in Romania. They wanted to see the Museum with its magnificent
collection of paintings, sculptures, and rare historical pottery and coins.
Thus, I soon found myself translating for visiting English-Speaking
Ambassadors from many countries who wished to know Transylvania,
especially my village Sighet and its Merry Cemetery famous worldwide
7 Upon Ceausescu’s death, the Patriarch Pipas mysteriously became the Museum’s “owner”
and then transferred title to his son Valerian Pipas, the regions most famous violinist.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 231
for it tombstones in the form of wood sculpture of the butcher, the baker,
candlestick maker, and all professions.
Although my first languages were Romanian and Hungarian, I
could also translate into French and Italian. Indeed at that time I was
teaching Latin in the Rural School System of my Maramures Province.
By 1989, Ceausescu realized that his end was near, and he
sought to gain support by pardoning his political prisoners (such as
myself) who had tried to escape the horrendous conditions in the country.
Hence, university students and some labor unions joined forces and quite
quickly after the fall of the Berlin Wall forced Ceausescu and his
draconian wife Elena to flee. They were caught and executed on
Christmas Day, 1989, by the military that at the last moment joined the
Revolution.
As my friends and I (along with most of the population) cheered
the fall of the failed, rotten Romanian “dictatorship of the proletariat,”
my dear mother acted differently. She was so confused by the propaganda
of the only “leader” she knew much about that she wept for Ceausescu,
not fully realizing that he was the one who had wrongly had be arrested
and put me in prison.
With Ceausescu gone, in 1990 I was able to secure a passport to
ready myself to leave Romania by gaining visas for Germany and France.
The question remained, how to get there by land without a visa to
Austria—my region had no air connection to the outside world.
My fateful 1991 meeting in Sighet with Jim Wilkie
Almost age 27 in 1991, I was in the right place at the right time
when UCLA Professor Jim Wilkie arrived in Sighet September 17th with
Professor James Platler (his friend and driver). They came as part of their
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 232
trip to assess the impact of the 1989 Fall of Iron Curtain--which had
imprisoned all Romanians and made it a crime to try to escape from
Romania. The two Americans had already visited “East” Germany,
Czech,8 and Slovakia (soon to break their union, each becoming
independent), and Poland, where English speakers could provide
guidance.
In Romania the UCLA Team found itself at a loss as few of the
people who they encountered could speak English and none of them could
analyze or articulate how the System of Government and society
functioned before and after 1989.
When we met, Jim immediately contracted9 with me to advise
them as well as guide them through Eastern Europe. They were pleased
to hear the my outline of Transylvanian and Romanian history (see
above), with which I explained how constant national boundary change
meant that Transylvanians and Romanians were never able to develop
either honest civil government or active civic society. Little did I know
that the concepts of “Civic” and “Civil” Society were of utmost
importance to Jim? As I would find out later, Jim and I had been
conducting compatible research for years and would lead me to (A) my
PHD Dissertation and (B send C) two books written with Jim. 10 All these
8 “Czechia” is rarely used in English because native English speakers too often do not know
intuitively know how to pronounce it. The name Czechia has arisen as the short name for
the Czech Republic, which emerged with the breakup of “Czechoslovakia” in 1992.
9 Jim soon arranged for the contract to by paid from his grant funds from U.S. foundations
deposited for his projects sat UCLA. 10 See (A) my 2001 Decentralized Globalization: Free Markets, U.S. Foundations, and the
Rise of Civil and Civic Society from Rockefeller’s Rise in Latin America to Soros’ Eastern
Europe (Los Angeles: UCLAClassic Doctoral Thesis, forthcoming at
http://www.profmex.org/webjournal_listedbyvoldat.html
(B) Olga Magdalena Lazín, La Globalización Se Descentraliza: Libre Mercado,
Fundaciones, Sociedad Cívica y Gobierno Civil en las Regiones del Mundo, Prólogo, pp.
15-166, por James W. Wilkie (Guadalajara y Los Ángeles: Universidad de Guadalajara,
UCLA Program on Mexico, PROFMEX/World, Casa Juan Pablos Centro Cultural, 2007).
http://www.profmex.org/mexicoandtheworld/volume12/1winter07/prologoporjameswilkie
OLbook.html
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 233
works distinguish between the concepts of Civil Society (which
represents national and local governmental activity and Civic Society
(which involves active private citizens (who organize non- governmental
initiatives to develop model projects beyond the ability of official
bureaucrats to even comprehend, including the influence needed to
monitor and expose the failures and successes of governmental activity).
But before we left September 18th to visit Romania and Hungary,
I had to find a substitute for my new class teaching American English and
History in Sighet—I left a friend, Johnny Popescu, to become my
permanent substitute. Only then could our newly expanded Team set off
under my guidance.
Thus, we set out on September 18, 1991, to visit one of the most
socially and economically interesting and beautiful parts of Romania by
going up thought the green forested Carpathian Mountains via the
beautiful Prislop Pass, stopping to visit small farming families in their
folkloric clothing of which they were justifiably proud to wear on a daily
basis. Farther east in Romania, on the scenic roads, we visited the
monasteries of Moldova, the town of Cimpulung Moldovenesc, Suceava,
and then the Monasteries in Sucevita and Agapia. The gorgeous forested
mountain road eventually led to Lacul Rosu and the lake country. Then
we took the long scenic mountain road to Cluj Napoca to visit my
University.
As I briefed Jim about Romania, he was briefing me about
factors in comparing national economies. For example, he told me about
how he had reunited in Prague on September 15th with Richard Beset, his
former UCLA student and friend, to hear about his role in London as
(C) James W. Wilkie y Olga Magdalena Lazín, La globalización Se Amplia: Claroscuros
de los Nexos Globales (Guadalajara, Los Ángeles, México: Universidad de Guadalajara,
UCLA Program on Mexico, PROFMEX/World, Casa Juan Pablos Centro Cultural, 2011:
http://www.profmex.org/mexicoandtheworld/volume17/2spring2012/Laglobalizacionsea
mplia.pdf
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 234
Manger of Deutsche Bank’s New Accounts in Russia and Eastern
Europe. Richard had become famous for inviting Banking Officials and
national Treasury Ministries to deposit their financial reserves on deposit
in his bank in London. But because those who did not understand
anything about “interest payment on deposited funds, they did not ask for
nor did they gain any interest payments. Also, because most Western
Banks were not sure that these new “capitalists” could be “fully trusted”
for correct management of their deposits, his Deutsche Bank collected
large fees to keep the Eastern Europe reserves safe. This was all very eye
opening for me.
Jim and I had realized early on that we had a close affinity as we
analyzed the situation of Romania, and he said, “Call me Jim.” (In
contrast I called Professor James Platler “JP.”) As we traveled to observe
the situation of the people in different parts of the country, Jim and I
formed a deep bond of observing and analyzing; thus both of realized this
brief interlude had to continue for the long term in order to achieve our
goals.
Next stops, Budapest, Salzburg, Munich, Bordeaux (for me), and Los
Angeles (for Jim)
As a Romanian, I had the right to enter Hungary, and we did so
bypassing the miles of vehicles waiting to cross the border for the long
drive to Budapest. There JP finally relaxed after the long drives and often
poor hotels and hotels—he said that he finally found unbroken
civilization again.
Once we arrived in Budapest, JP, who had told Jim privately that
from the outset of our trip that he thought that I was a “Spy” (planted on
us by the Romanian Securitate to monitor our many “foreign” inquiries
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 235
during our travel through Romania’s north country), announced that his
concern about me had vanished as we realized the extent of my
knowledge and research abilities. In his mind, I had to be a Spy because
I had obtained access to special private dining rooms and quarter in some
fine hotels, as well as invitations for wonderful lunches at some
Monasteries, where miraculously I made immediate friends with each
Mother Superior. But by the time we reached Budapest, he realized that
at my University I had learned the Elite skills needed to survive safely
and comfortably in Eastern Europe.
My problem was to enter Austria, where I had no visa. But Jim
passed his UCLA business card through to the Consul General of Austria
in Budapest, and quickly we found ourselves whisked from the back of
the long line to the front and right into a meeting with the Consul General
himself. He was pleased to hear about the research of our UCLA Team,
but said that I did have a visa. Jim then told them that I only needed a
three-day transit visa to reach Germany, the visa for which he could see
in my passport.
With entry to Austria solved, we were on the road to the Hotel
Kobentzl and Graz, which overlook Salzburg, all the way analyzing the
comparative economic and social situations of Austria, Hungary, and
Romania.
We spent most of our time down the mountain from Kobentzl in
the valley, before returning to our sweeping Hotel view of Salzburg City.
Meanwhile I was deepening my questions about capital is leveraged to
undertake big private projects. As we took photos over from on high
looking down on the many bridges of Salzburg and Jim was explaining
how the developed world operated by using finances, credit, and interest
to help economies grow.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 236
Finally we left Salzburg to enter Germany and Munich, where
our quick look into Oktoberfest found us among nasty drunken louts each
of whom seemingly had hand four hands: one to chug-a-lug beer; one to
smoke foul smelling cigarettes; one to quaff horrible-bleeding-raw
sausages; and one to punch someone in the face. From what we saw,
Oktoberfest was a place for nasty males seeking to “get smashed on beer”
and then smash another male to break his nose. Thus, we fled for our lives
as the brutes began to threaten anyone who looked at them.
Then on September 30th, I took the plane to from Munich to Paris
to take a bus to Bordeaux to meet the family, which had invited me to
France.
Jim (and JP) also left the same day for Jim to arrive in time to
go from the airplane to open and begin teaching his Fall Quarter class at
UCLA. But he promised to call daily and return to join me again in ten
weeks.
In the meantime, I made a trip to Paris to request political asylum
in France, but a grey-faced judge rejected my request, saying that the
petitioner must file with the help of a lawyer.
To complicate matters in Bordeaux, the French Security Agent
there was investigating me, a lone woman, as a possible SPY sent by
Romania to “monitor activities at the Port of Bordeaux. When he told
that, if I pleased him in unmentionable ways, he would not deport me to
Romania but arrange my legal status in France, I immediately told Jim on
his next telephone call.
To resolve our problem, Jim called his Paris friend Gérard
Chaliand, a former visiting professor at UCLA, whose real job involved
traveling the world for French Security to report on his professorial
travels that took him to all continents. Gérard immediately called French
Security to report on the illegal approach to me by their Agent in
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 237
Bordeaux. That same day the Agent came to apologize profusely to me
in the best manner that he could muster in his pitiful condition. He begged
me not to have him fired for his proposition to me. I could see him looking
at me in truly puzzled way that implicitly said: “Who are you? How did
I make such a grave mistake in deciding that you, a lone Romanian
women could not have any power to reach my bosses in Paris?” I took
pity on him and told him that if he minded manners and watched from
affair to be sure that I was always safe, he would not be fired.
Jim returns to Europe December, 1991: His plan for advising eastern
european civic society about how to gain grants from U.S. foundations,
which hold the world’s largest pool of NGO development funds.
Even though it was December 11, 1991, when Jim returned,
France was in the midst what some in America call an “Indian Fall,”
warm with colorful fall leaves still on the trees. It was a beautifully bright
“fall day” when we left Bordeaux the next day to spend some days
visiting the Loire River with its many castles and incredible views.
Even during our photography of the Loire region, Jim began to
outline his New Plan (now our plan) to wit: PROFMEX Plan to Help
Eastern European “Foundations” become legally eligible to gain grants
from U.S. Tax Exempt Foundations following Jim’s “U.S.-Mexico Model
for Philanthropy.”
Indeed, Jim told me that recently when he had been in Mexico
City, he received an invitation to meet with Manuel Alonso Muñoz,
Executive Director of Mexico’s National Lottery,11 who when he heard
about Jim’s U.S.-Mexico Model, invited him to meet at the Lottery’s
historically famous ornate building. After an extended briefing by Jim,
Manuel told him that he had already called his own good friend Ronald
11 Mexico’s National Lottery is a Government-run Public Charity and funder of new
research.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 238
G. Hellman, Professor of Sociology in the Graduate School at the City
University of New York, to ask him for an evaluation of Jim and his
Mexico-U.S. Model for Philanthropy. Ironically, it was only then when
he realized that Ron was (and is today) Jim’s PROFMEX Vice-President
for Strategic Planning. With that news and Jim’s stellar briefing, Lic.
Alonso asked if the Lottery could make a series of generous grants to
PROFMEX in order to help fund the expansion of Jim’s Model to Eastern
Europe, 12putting Mexico into an innovative new light.
Manuel Alonso was appreciative of the fact that Jim, while
serving as Consultant to the U.S. Council on Foundations, had become
involved since 1990 with his Model for helping Mexican Foundations
(including, for example, charities, human rights organizations, hospitals,
universities, biospheres, etc.) to re-write their constitution and by-laws to
be compatible with the U.S. tax requirement that they mirror U.S. Notfor-Private
Profit Organizations (NPPOs).
The question of “mirroring” involved Jim’s explanation that: As
NPPOs, U.S. Foundations are legally responsible for controlling
expenditure of funds granted to organizations that do not mirror the U.S.
foundations do not want to be involved in the day-to-day activities of its
grantees. Indeed, “ they want to transfer “expenditure responsibility”
(including misuse or illegal use of grant funds) to the recipient foundation
to which they grant funds but can only do so if the grant recipient
organization is deemed to have an “equivalent” legal structure to that of
the U.S. donor foundation.
Here is the background, according to Jim: 13 “In order to facilitate
the U.S. philanthropic activity needed during the 1970s and 1980s to help
12 The Lottery grants to PROFMEX totaled $100,000 dollars. 13 Jim Wilkie’s statement here is quoted from my formal Interview with him, September 17,
1992, in Transylvania, based upon his experience as Consultant to the U.S. Council on
Foundations. See:
Olga Magdalena Lazín, Decentralized Globalization: Free Markets,
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 239
speed world development, the U.S. Secretary of Treasury and the IRS
formulated provisions that resulted in changing and/or interpreting the
Internal Revenue Code (IRC) to freely permit U.S. foundations to grant
funds abroad, if they meet the following special proviso:
U.S. NPPOs can themselves make a legal “determination” that
the foreign organization receiving the U.S. grant be “determined” to be
“equivalent” to an NPPO described in Section 501(c)(3)14 of the U.S.
Internal Revenue Code.”
Further, Jim pointed out that, “while this proviso has worked well
for big U.S. grant-making foundations that place costly offices and staff
around the world (such as Rockefeller and Ford Foundations), it has
worked less well for foundations that have had to send their lawyers to
meet with their legal counterparts in prospective ‘equivalent
organizations, the legal cost of making such a determination often
reaching $25,000 [or, by 2016, much, much more] for each new
organization to receive funds from the U.S. NPPO. If that determination
is favorable, the U.S. NPPO can transfer funds to the equivalent
organization, just as it can to any other approved U.S. NPPO, and along
with the transfer of funds to the recipient organization goes the transfer
of responsibility over how the funds are spent.”
U.S. Foundations and the Rise of Civil and Civic Society From Rockefeller’s Latin America
To Soros’ Eastern Europe (Los Angeles: UCLA, Classic PHD thesis, 2001), pp. 122-125.
This book scheduled in 2016 for publication by PROFMEX at
http://www.profmex.org/webjournal_listedbyvoldat.html
14 “Equivalent,” as Jim noted, means that the foreign NPPO meets (A) the test of funding at
least one of the following goals” for types of projects supported Health-Education-WelfareHuman
Rights-Science and Religion-Economy-Environment-Ecology-PublicationLiterature-Charity;
and (B) meets the test that no part of the foreign NPPOs expenditures
benefit private persons-- except for payment of reasonable expenses to cover goods and
services needed by the NPPO to legitimately conduct the operations chartered in its Articles
of Incorporation and By-Laws.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 240
Transfer of ‘Expenditure Responsibility’ from the U.S. Donor NPPO
to the Foreign Recipient NPPO.
The ability of U.S. NPPOs to avoid costly expenditure
responsibility, as Jim told, is one of the factors that have helped make
American grant-making foundations so important in the world. Thus,
U.S. NPPOs have been enabled to avoid becoming ensnarled in
accounting processes and audits, which are better done by the foreign
organization that receives and administers the U.S. NPPO grant of funds.
In this manner, said Jim, the U.S. NPPO is free to focus its
energy on evaluating the substance of its grant programs. The ability of
grant-making foundations to transfer Expenditure Responsibility to other
NPPOs is the main reason that they generally prefer (and require) that
their funds be granted only to approved organizations rather than to
individuals or to non-approved organizations.
The above views, Jim said, do not mean that U.S. NPPOs are
unable to grant funds to an organization that is not equivalent to a U.S.
NPPO (or make grants to individual scholars, artists, or writers either at
home or abroad), but to do so adds a complication to the grant-making
process. Rather than passing on the Expenditure Responsibility (as the
U.S. NPPO does when it makes grants to another NPPO or U.S.
equivalent), the Expenditure Responsibility remains with the donor
NPPO when it makes a grant to an organization that is not an NPPO (or
its U.S. equivalent) or to an individual.
In the unlikely case where the donor NPPO retains Expenditure
Responsibility, then, Jim told me in my interview with him on September
17, 1991, the donor foundation has to concern itself with costly financial
oversight involved, which may problematic whether of in or outside the
USA.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 241
On to Paris and the world to meet with NPPO leaders about new
foundations
Jim and I arrived in Paris on December 15, 1991, to meet with
Jim’s contacts at the American Embassy, who heard about our research
and suggested that Jim meet also with their counterparts at the U.S.
Embassy in Mexico City. They agreed to help begin to our new Plan to
expand to Eastern Europe and Russia Jim’s successful Model for TaxFree
Flow of Nonprofit Funds, the example being what he negotiated
(with the U.S. Council on Foundations and the U.S. and Mexican
Treasury Departments), as analyzed above.
It is important for me to say here that George Soros and his
decentralized donations to his 41 semi-autonomous “national
foundations”15 (exemplified in Romania, Hungary, and Russia) have been
built following the IRS proviso and regulations discussed above. Also,
Soros’ “National Foundations” require that national Government charter
the independent role as NGOs.
In contrast, the flowering of thousands of independent
“Foundations” in Eastern Europe since 1989 has grown from groups
looking for funds from the many U.S. Foundations that do not have the
Soros/New York link with its Foundations in many nations, all of which
operate in Soros’ closed loop. Few of these new Foundations have the
Soros knowledge and financial resources to set up the By-Laws and Legal
Status needed for the thousands Foundations desiring to tap into funding
by U.S. Foundations.16 However, since 2013, Soros’ has organized an
15Administered by NGO Civic Activists in each country but reporting to Soros
Foundation/New York City to justify each yearly budget. 16 The Soros Open Society Foundations in 44 countries benefit from the fact that Soros
himself has lived up to his commitment since1986 (to 2016 and ongoing) to donate half of
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 242
office to work with shared Global Funds (for food, migration, etc.)
outside the non-Soros frameworks to help poor areas and countries to
stave off crises.
Before we left Paris on December 19, 1991, we met with Gérard
Chaliand to personally thank him for having made the Bordeaux Security
agent reexamine his whole approach to his life.
Further, with Gérard, we worked out a plan to arrange for me to
become a U.S. resident and obtain U.S. citizenship nine years after my
arrival in Los Angeles, October 1992. He recommended that my case by
handled in In Los Angeles by one of America’s most knowledgeable and
effective Migration Attorneys—Cynthia Juárez Lange, today Managing
Partner, Northern California, for the Fragomen Del Rey, Bernsen &
Loewy LLP Legal Office located in San Francisco. Cynthia is a
personable genius.
In our travels in December 1991 and from March to June 1992
we met NPPO leaders in the European Union to better understand how
foundations work under unique laws in each county rather than in any
rational manner for the whole EU, we went to Marseilles, Nice,
Villfranche-sur-Mer, Cap-Ferrat, Monaco, La Rochelle, Andorra, Sevilla,
Madrid, Trujillo, El Escorial, Avila, and Segovia.
On September 3. 1992, we arrived at the U.S. Consulate in Paris,
where the U.S Consulate in Mexico had arranged with Jim for my U.S.
eligibility for residence to be issued. Also, the Mexican Consulate
General in Paris issued me my residence papers to enter and leave Mexico
freely, as arranged by Jim with the Mexican Consular Office in Mexico
City.
his profits ($13 billon) for their activities, his personal wealth in 2016 estimated to be $25
billion. See https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/about/expenditures
Also, for the details of Soros $930.7 million dollar Open Society Foundations 2016 Budget,
which can be found by searching online for this title.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 243
By September 7, 1992, we were Romania for meetings with
Civic Activists in Sighet (where I finally returned after “escaped” with
Jim in December 1991).
From March to June 1993, we met with NPPO leaders in
Budapest, Sighet, and Varna (Bulgaria), Bucharest, and St. Petersburg. In
Moscow (June 21-14, 1993), Jim appointed Professor Boris Koval
(Director of the Latin American Institute of the Russian Academy of
Sciences), to be PROFMEX Representative in Russia. Koval had invited
us to Moscow and introduced us to his own Security Chief to be our
translator and guide. Thus Security Chief was a fascinating person who
had been former head of the KGB Office in Iran, 1979-1989.
Jim, who always wore his Mexican guayabera shirt with or
without a suit, was seen to be “authentically Mexican” in our meetings
and discussions about NPPOs and the Soros Open Society Foundations
in Russia success in Russia (1987-2002) and problems of the Soros
Foundations in Russia since 2003, when, under Government pressure, he
was phasing out of operation active programs.
When on November 30, 2015,17 Russia’s Prosecutor General’s
Office classified the Soros Open Society Foundation as an “undesirable”
organization, it closed the possibility of Russian individuals and
institutions from having anything to do with any Soros initiative or
programs… [Because it constituted] a threat to the foundations of
Russia’s Constitutional order and national security….
Prosecutors [then] launched a probe into Soros Foundation
activities….18 [and in July 2015], after Russian senators approved the socalled
“patriotic stop-list” of 12 groups that required immediate attention
over their supposed anti-Russian activities, [the following U.S.
17 See https://www.rt.com/politics/323919-soros-foundation-recognized-as-undesirable/ 18 Ibid.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 244
organizations] realized that they would soon be banned in Russia: [the
U.S.] National Endowment for Democracy; the International Republican
Institute; the National Democratic Institute; the MacArthur Foundation,
and Freedom House.
The American hedgefunds mogul George Soros issued from
London the following Press Release on November 30, 2015: 19
Contrary to the Russian prosecutor’s allegations, the Open
Society Foundations have, for more than a quarter-century, helped
to strengthen the rule of law in Russia and protect the rights of all. In the
past, Russian officials and citizens have welcomed our efforts, and we
regret the changes that have led the government to reject our support to
Russian civil society and ignore the aspirations of the Russian people.
Since 1987, Open Society has provided support to countless
individuals and civil society organizations, including in the fields of
science, education, and public health. Open Society has helped finance a
network of internet centers in 33 universities around the country, helped
Russian scholars to travel and study abroad, developed curricula for early
childhood education, and created a network of contemporary art centers
that are still in operation.
This record speaks for itself. We are honored to have worked
alongside pioneering citizens, educators, and civil society organizations
that embody Russian creativity, commitment, and hope.
“We are confident that this move is a temporary aberration; the
aspirations of the Russian people for a better future cannot be suppressed
and will ultimately succeed,” said George Soros, founder and chairman
of the Open Society Foundations. Despite all efforts made by Soros and
his organizations, he has been banned from Russia.
19 See: https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/press-releases/russia-cracks-down-opensociety
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 245
Once with the reset of the Cold War, in 2012, when Putin was
reelected as Russia’s President, Putin’s first movement was to ban all
Soros organizations which were impeding his expansion onto Crimeea.
Back in Mexico City for the 1994 PROFMEX Event featuring
Eastern Europeans interested in the U.S.-Mexico Model for NPPOs, we
convened, July 28-29, for our meeting on “Development of Mexico as
seen from the World,” Co-sponsored by UCLA and Mexico’s Consejo
Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología.
This Conference was held at Mexico City’s María Isabel
Sheraton, with 70 participants from Mexico and the United States, and
which I co-organized with Jim.
The following invitees from Eastern Europe came from Hungary
Zoltan Karpati, Professor of Sociology, Romania Mihai Coman,
University Dean, Roman Romulus, Consul General in Mexico,
Alexandru Lazín, PROFMEX-- England and Romania, Lia Stan, Investor
from Bristol, England.
Highlights of the event came frequently as we turned our gaze
from Salón A with his all-window view from the top floor to discuss the
anti-government protest marches up and down Reforma Avenue past the
Angel Monument below.
Further, our group enjoyed the invitation of Mexico’s Attorney
General, Jorge Madrazo Cuéllar to visit him at his headquarters where we
personally discussed and raised questions about the street blockages in
front of our María Isabella Hotel.
In December 1997, we continued to invite world scholars
especially interested in economic matters, as well as in the U.S.-Mexico
NPPO Model to participate with us at the:
IX PROFMEX-ANUIES Conference
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 246
Hosted by Governor Víctor Manuel Tinoco Rubí in Morelia,
Michoacán.
México y el Mundo
Mexico and the World
December 8-13, 1997
With hundreds of participants and Attendees from all
continents. Special Guests were invited from:
Russia: Boris Koval, who recalled with excitement the visit of Jim and I
to Moscow in June 1993.
China: Sengen Zhang, Hongzhu Huang
Korea: Kap-Young Jeong
Japan: Soichi Shinohara, Osamu Nishimura, Yasuoki Takagi
Indonesia: Lepi T. Tarmidi
Argentina: Eugenio O. Valenciano
Bolivia: Antonio J. Cisneros
Jim and I have been involved with many academic activities, but
those are beyond the scope of my analysis here of Jim’s role in extending
PROFMEX around the globe, especially to Europe and Russia.
My courses taken under Jim, and Prof Carlos Alberto Torres,
Prof. Richard Weiss, and Ivan T Be rend, at UCLA led me to the M.A. in
Latin American Studies (1996) and PHD in History (2001)
With publication of one of my books, as sole author, La
globalización se descentraliza: Libre mercado, fundaciones, sociedad
cívica y gobierno civil en las regiones del mundo (2007) Por Olga
Magdalena Lazín. Prólogo de James W. Wilkie; and the second book, coauthored
with James W Wilkie, book full of illustrations and images that
reflect my travels with Jim La globalización se amplia (2011), By James
W. Wilkie and Olga Magdalena Lazín. Preface de Rafael Rodríguez
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 247
Castañeda, with you Jim, I know that much researching and writing
awaits us in our projects around the world….
Thanks, Jim
This work has shown how U.S. Tax Exempt Organization (TEO)
law has evolved to become the most important in the world owing to its
flexibility. Where the laws of most countries require prior legal
authorization to launch in a new direction, the United States TEO law
recognizes no such limit. Thus, U.S. TEO law, unlike most other
countries, is never trying to make legal what is already underway and
working in the world. The USA and now Mexico, which together have
signed the first collaborative agreement, which is the blueprint for
NPPOs.
This field experience has been crucial for my Dissertation. Here is an
ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION
Decentralized Globalization. Free Markets, U.S. Foundations,
and The Rise of Civil and Civic Society From Rockefeller's Latin
America To Soros' Eastern Europe
By Olga Magdalena Lazin, Doctor in History, University of
California, Los Angeles, 2001.
This work has shown how U.S. Tax Exempt Organization (TEO)
Law has evolved to become the most important in the world owing to its
flexibility, where the laws of most countries require prior legal
authorization to launch in a new direction, United States TEO law
recognizes no such limit. Thus, U.S. TEO law, unlike most other
countries, is never trying to make legal what is already underway in the
world. The USA and now Mexico, which together have signed the first
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 248
Fair Trade agreement in 1994. A new Era is opening, where the
environment’s safety comes first, by the people, for the people of the
earth.
Copyright 2010 Olga Lazín
--
Born in Transylvania, Northern Romania, in a town called “Satu Marie,”
I grew up like Alice in Wonderland:
On the one hand I was friends with the children of intellectuals,
and also lovely Gypsy children who I taught the Romanian language as
early as the first and second grade.
On the other hand, my family had a tough life because my
parents were always working until late hours at night. My younger
brother Alex and I read while waiting for mother, Magdalena, to arrive
turn off our lights even as she continued into the wee hours her accounting
work at home. She was compounding the lengths and width of the
wooden logs that were heading to Russia year by year.
During the day, Magdalena let us play all day long to our heart’s
content. So unique, and we felt so free exploring nature in Sighet.
In 1973, at age 10 as a fifth grader in Transylvania’s isolated
town of Sighet2
, I had to make a fateful decision about my choice of
foreign-language study: Russian or English. The pressure was on us to
1 Readers should be aware of a key acronym used when this paper reaches the 1990s: NPPO
stands for Not-for-Private Profit Organization (usually a Foundation) which differs from
the more familiar (Non-Profit Organization (NPO). Outside the United States, the latter
term tends to be wrongly understood to mean no profit can be accumulated and the NPO
must show a zero balance at year end. The former term (NPPO) is developed here to stress
that profits may be accumulated and invested to fund future activities, as long as
expenditures do not benefit private parties (except for salaries, travel, and other justified
expenses as provided in, say, a Foundation’s by-laws.) 2 Officially named Sighetu Marmației (on Romania’s northwest border facing Ukraine’s
southwestern border with Romania and Hungary.
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 222
take up Russian, thus proving that we were all students loyal to the
dictator Socialist” Nicole Ceausescu’s “Socialist Government” (read
Romanian Communism allied with Moscow), but consciously I detested
that system.
Although I wanted to learn English, I did not then how fateful
that choice would be until 1991, when at almost 27 years of age, I met
Jim Wilkie who had been advised by his brother Richard to include my
town of Sighet in his journey to assess the how Eastern Europe was faring
after the fall of the “Berlin Wall,” short for the long wall that kept the
people of Communist countries locked and unable to escape. But more
later about how Jim found me as he sought an English-speaking
intellectual and social guide to Eastern Europe.
In the meantime, growing up in Sighet with a population of only
30,000 people, we were proud to recognize Elie "Elie" Wiesel (born
1928) as our most prominent citizen long before he won the 1986 Nobel
Peace Prize. He helped us get past the terrible history of Sighet
Communist Prison where “enemies of the state” were confined until
“death due to natural cause.”
In my early years I had a hard time understanding how the green
and flowered valley of Sighet (elevation 1,000 feet, on the Tisa River at
the foot of our forested Carpathian Mountains) could be so beautiful, yet
we lived under the terribly cruel eye of the Securitate to protect from the
people the wretched Dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu. Ceausescu,3 who ruled
from 1965 to his execution in 1989, was the harshest leader of all the
countries behind Russia’s Wall against Western Europe.
Oddly enough, in the Transylvania of the late 1960s, 1970s and
1980s, supposedly I was living the “Golden Age of Romanian
Socialism,” but even to myself as a young student; I could see that the
3 In modernized spelling.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 223
promised “full progress” was clearly a lie. Most adults agreed but feared
to speak so bluntly.
Even though the “English-Speaking USA” had been supposedly
always threatening to invade Romania, I continued to study English
language and literature. That I chose to study English even though the act
alone brought suspicion on me because all society was taught to believe
since 1945 that we were fighting off the Great Satin USA.4 America was
officially seen as a threat to Romania and it allies under Russia’s
COMECON,5 all of which I became only fully aware as I grew older and
had to buy the English Course textbooks on the risky, expensive Black
Market.
In the meantime, without rarely granted permission, we were
forbidden to meet and visit with foreigners, especially those who spoke
English and who wanted to hear from us about Sighet and its nearby
wooden hamlets of the Maramures Province, where I have my first
memories. The region is ethnically diverse, with a stimulating climate
ranging from very hot summers and very cold winters. Geographically,
we lived in the valleys and Mountains of Gutinul through which the rivers
of Iza and Tisa flow. Geographically, the beautiful forested Tisa River is
the natural border with Southern Ukraine.
4 As in the case of Oceania always being threatened by eternal war alternating between
Eurasia or Eastasia, portrayed in George Orwell’s 1984 (1948). Cf. my article “Orwell’s
1984 and the Case Studies of Stalin and Ceausescu,” in Elitelore Varieties (Edited by James
Wilkie et al.): http://elitelore.org/Capitulos/cap16_elitelore.pdf 5 COMECON (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance) dates from the January 1949
communiqué agreed upon in Moscow by the USSR (including its 15 Constituent Republics
of Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan) and its five
“Independent” Satellite Republics (Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and
Romania. The communiqué involved the refusal of all these countries to "subordinate
themselves to the dictates of the Marshall Plan.” Thus, they organized an “economic
cooperation” among these “new peoples’ democracies.” (USSR born 1922, died 1991). Cf.:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Comecon
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 224
As folklore has it in the West, vampires are native to
Transylvania. We had vampires, werewolves, and wolverines, but all the
mythological characters were actually members of the Communist Party,
which everyone had to join--except for me because with my knowledge,
I was considered a security risk!
Fortunately, when in 1982 I entered the University Babes
Boljay, in Cluj-Napoca, to earn my M.A. in 1990, for my sociology
classes, I decided to conduct my field research project into the rural life
of the North of Romania, recording the folklore (especially myths)
invented and passed down by rural folks (including small merchants,
farmers, fisherman, loggers) had had used that lore to help them survive
for centuries.
Further, much of my research conducted among the outlying
farmers, delved deeply into Transylvania Folklore, which prepared me
well to understand Communist Party Lore.
Thus, for the second time, my fateful choice of a field research
project had further prepared me, unknowingly, for my future with Jim
Wilkie.
Once I had been admitted to the Babes Boljay University, which
was called “the heart and brain of Transylvania,” I also further expanded
and deepened deep studies in American language and literature. Also I
studied Romanian language and literature in the Department of Philology.
The Bolyai University Is considered the best University in Transylvania.
Upon beginning my mentoring for other students, I was happy
to find a sense of freedom. Reading and writing comprehension were my
forté during my four years at Cluj. I had always dreamt of being a
professor and a writer and seemed to be off to a great start.
But I soon realized that our professors opened the day by reading
the mounds of new Decrees just signed by Ceausescu. Thus, I began
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 225
laughing, and other students join me in mocking the wooden language of
Central Planning’s attempt to befuddle us with words from a wooden
language, totally bent toward twisting our brains into confused
submission. Professors and Securitate officers were acting as sweaty
bureaucrats trying to teach us how to sharpen our mental images. Not one
professor asked us, “What do each of you really think of all this
Ceausescu propaganda of decrees harming the educational process?”
Professors had their favorite students and made sure they pointed
this out in class, stifling any competition as they show openly their
favoritism or nepotism.
When I reached the age of 22 in1985, I started to be
argumentative, criticizing professors, especially the history professor
who only knew only the History of the Romanian Communist Party.
Further, as a woman in academia, I began to resent being forced
to do the military service. The Russians, having been directing Romanian
politicians since 1945, pressured the Romanians to dig useless trenches
as well as learn to disassemble and assemble the AK47!
The atmosphere was dreadful in classes. Restrictions were
plentiful and absurd. Speech was not free; one couldn’t discuss issues
freely in class, or make any real analysis or debate. One had to regurgitate
what the professors were telling us. Modern economics led by and read
whatever was there in the old books stacked in the communist library.
Until I escaped Romania in 1992, I learned that the so-called economics
classes we took taught nothing about money, credit, and such terms as
GDP. The Marxist economics involved only fuzzy nonsensical slogans
such as “We Romanians have to fight-off the ‘running dogs of
capitalism,” without the word “capitalism” ever being defined except in
unrealistic theory laced with epithets.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 226
Even as an English major, I could not speak with to foreigners
in English --answering one question was a crime, according to the
tendentious Security Decrees. Abortion was a crime punishable for up to
20 years in prison. Doctors performing it ended up in jail, and so did the
pregnant women. Punishments were ridiculous—the Anti-Abortion Law
lasted for 40 years, until 1990.
Furthermore if my uncle from Canada visited us, we were all
under surveillance, the entire family. Even today, in 2016 one has to
report to the police to declare if any visitor of family comes from the USA
(or Canada, for some bizarre security reason). Well after 25 years, not
much has changed in poor Romania.
The influence of recent Romanian history
In the meantime, the History of Transylvania weighed heavily
on population of Romania, with constant change in the emerging political
map always have left “citizens” always lost about who was really in
charge.
Thus, Transylvania was originally part of the Dacia Kingdom
between 82 BC until the Roman conquest in 106 AD. The capital of Dacia
was destroyed by the Romans, so that a new capital would serve the
Roman Province of Dacia, which lasted until 350 AD, by which time the
Romans felt so hated that it behooved them withdraw back to Rome.
During the late 9th century, western Transylvania was
conquered by the Hungarian Army to later become part of the Kingdom
of Hungary and in 1570 to devolve into the Principality of Transylvania.
During most of the 16th and 17th centuries, the Principality became an
Ottoman Empire vassal state, confusingly also governed by the Habsburg
Empire. After 1711 Transylvania was consolidated solely into the
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 227
Habsburg Empire and Transylvanian princes were replaced with
Habsburg imperial governors. After 1867, Transylvania ceased to have
separate status and was incorporated into the Kingdom of Hungary as part
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.6 After World War I, Transylvania
reverted in 1918 to be part of Romania. In 1940 Northern Transylvania
again became governed by Hungary and then Germany, but Romanian
queen Maria successfully reclaimed it after the end of World War II.
The year 1940 was important for Romania because if was seized
for its oil by Nazi Germany (1940-1944), “liberated” by the “Soviet
Union” (1944-1947), and finally “re-liberated” to become the Popular
republic of Romania (under USSR remote control), as the Cold War was
beginning to freeze the Iron Curtain into place.
At the end of World War II while the USSR and its Red Army
were the occupying powers in all Romania, in 1947 Romania forcibly and
ironically became a “People’s Republic” (1947–1989), after the rise of
the Iron Curtain.
The first “president,” Gheorghiu-Dej (1947) ruled as puppet of
Moscow, but when he died, his Secretary General of the Communist Party
of Romania, Nicolae Ceausescu, was elected as the second “president”
(1965-1989), shifting his savage dictatorship into a harsher Romanian
“Gulag” than known in the USSR.
For two decades I neither understood the dimensions of tragic
history of Transylvania, did I understand that I would have to escape the
Gulag of Romania by the “skin of my teeth.”
For peoples of the world Transylvania seems to be a far away
place, where most people know the werewolves and vampires have been
“seen” to in the imagination of Transylvanians, whose beliefs was soaked
in mystical folklore. Even today it is hardly possible to have a rational
6 This Empire existed between 1867 and 1918.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 228
conversation with most the Transylvanian folk on any subject without
recourse to try to understand where their distorted imagination has
befuddled them.
The population has consisted of Romanians, Hungarians,
Germans, and some Ukrainians. These languages are still being spoken
in Romania’s Maramures province, but because I always liked and loved
the Romanian language, I decided to become a Professor of Romanian
Language and Literature.
My backdrop to the fall of CEAUSESCU
I later told Jim how I had been admitted in 1982 to the BabesBolyai
University, in Cluj-Napoca at the heart of Transylvania, I focused
especially on Linguistics. Unfortunately, there I found that the professors,
who were under the control of sweaty Securitate officers, had to read
dozens of new Decrees issued every day as they sought to control every
one of our daily actions—all in the name of protecting the Ceausescu
government—which was selling the country’s food supplies to Russia in
order to pay down Roman’s official debt at our experts. Those Securitate
officers ate well and ominously watched us virtually starve. They said, be
calm like your parents in the face of starvation.
Thus, I furiously called out in my classes that our very existence
was being compromised by Ceausescu's abandonment of the population,
which was ordered to, as Lenin famously said, “work, work, and work.”
To protect myself as best I could, I turned to humor, seeking to
ridicule Ceausescu’s “national paradise.” But when I encouraged my
classmates to laugh at the propaganda embedded in the wooden language
of the national bureaucracy, I soon fell under the heavy scrutiny of
university authorities, who were furious that I trying to expose the fact
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 229
that all classes had been organized to befuddle the student body into
confused submission. Indeed, each professor had favorite students to help
drown out legitimate questions and stifle any competing analysis—the
university lived under nepotism, favoritism, the threat of rape (virtual and
real) by the Securitate officers, and open bribery--choose your garden
variety.
My 1986 flight from Romania backfires
By 1986, at age 23, I had decided to flee Romania—an illegal
act because Ceausescu did not want anyone (especially women of childbearing
age) to escape his plan to building his “ideal socialist industries”
on farms and ranches as well as in the cities. In June I made my way to
the border of Yugoslavia and paid a smuggler to evade the Romanian
security forces that were preventing the “nations workers” from escaping.
The smuggler, who took me across the border, turned out to be working
for Romanian Border Police. Thus, soon after crossing into Yugoslavia,
he turned his wagon around and I was again in Romania again when I
realized what had happened too late. I had been “sold” to Ceausescu’s
minions for a wagonload of salt.
That failed escape from Romania led me to a 10-month prison
sentence in Timisoara Prison, wherein the block cells were maintained so
cold (supposedly to eliminate bacteria and viruses) that it made all of us
inmates sick with the cold and the flu.
Cell bed blankets were less warm than one Kleenex tissue.
Moreover there were no pillow, and the concrete slab where inmates slept
was a back-breaker. The lights were on 24 hours a day, blinding all of us,
and there was constant observation. Every hour one was awakened to be
counted for, and sneaking up on people, under the guise of watching out
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 230
for suicides. But everyone could be clearly seen by the guards, and there
was no need to sleep-deprive inmates. There was also someone in the
higher echelon ripping off the food budget to siphon money to themselves
while serving inmates only baby carrots and spicy beans.
Almost every family in Romanian civil society had at least one
member who had been imprisoned for trying to open the political system
by denouncing the Ceausescu dictatorship. These inmates were openly
called “Political Prisoners,” and I was one of them.
Political Prisoners were not permitted to work outside the prison
walls in the fields because our crime had been the political decision to
repudiate Ceausescu’s “fantastic system.”
Out of prison in 1987 and open to change in the air
Once free in 1987, I could return to my University to finally
complete my M.A. in 1990.
Further in 1987, at the age of 24, I met the Family patriarch
Nicolae Pipas,7 who directed for the Communist government the walled
Regional Art Museum in a quiet part of Sighet. Being one of the few
highly educated persons who spoke English in the region, I began to serve
as interpreter/guide to visiting foreign Ambassadors permitted to travel
in Romania. They wanted to see the Museum with its magnificent
collection of paintings, sculptures, and rare historical pottery and coins.
Thus, I soon found myself translating for visiting English-Speaking
Ambassadors from many countries who wished to know Transylvania,
especially my village Sighet and its Merry Cemetery famous worldwide
7 Upon Ceausescu’s death, the Patriarch Pipas mysteriously became the Museum’s “owner”
and then transferred title to his son Valerian Pipas, the regions most famous violinist.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 231
for it tombstones in the form of wood sculpture of the butcher, the baker,
candlestick maker, and all professions.
Although my first languages were Romanian and Hungarian, I
could also translate into French and Italian. Indeed at that time I was
teaching Latin in the Rural School System of my Maramures Province.
By 1989, Ceausescu realized that his end was near, and he
sought to gain support by pardoning his political prisoners (such as
myself) who had tried to escape the horrendous conditions in the country.
Hence, university students and some labor unions joined forces and quite
quickly after the fall of the Berlin Wall forced Ceausescu and his
draconian wife Elena to flee. They were caught and executed on
Christmas Day, 1989, by the military that at the last moment joined the
Revolution.
As my friends and I (along with most of the population) cheered
the fall of the failed, rotten Romanian “dictatorship of the proletariat,”
my dear mother acted differently. She was so confused by the propaganda
of the only “leader” she knew much about that she wept for Ceausescu,
not fully realizing that he was the one who had wrongly had be arrested
and put me in prison.
With Ceausescu gone, in 1990 I was able to secure a passport to
ready myself to leave Romania by gaining visas for Germany and France.
The question remained, how to get there by land without a visa to
Austria—my region had no air connection to the outside world.
My fateful 1991 meeting in Sighet with Jim Wilkie
Almost age 27 in 1991, I was in the right place at the right time
when UCLA Professor Jim Wilkie arrived in Sighet September 17th with
Professor James Platler (his friend and driver). They came as part of their
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 232
trip to assess the impact of the 1989 Fall of Iron Curtain--which had
imprisoned all Romanians and made it a crime to try to escape from
Romania. The two Americans had already visited “East” Germany,
Czech,8 and Slovakia (soon to break their union, each becoming
independent), and Poland, where English speakers could provide
guidance.
In Romania the UCLA Team found itself at a loss as few of the
people who they encountered could speak English and none of them could
analyze or articulate how the System of Government and society
functioned before and after 1989.
When we met, Jim immediately contracted9 with me to advise
them as well as guide them through Eastern Europe. They were pleased
to hear the my outline of Transylvanian and Romanian history (see
above), with which I explained how constant national boundary change
meant that Transylvanians and Romanians were never able to develop
either honest civil government or active civic society. Little did I know
that the concepts of “Civic” and “Civil” Society were of utmost
importance to Jim? As I would find out later, Jim and I had been
conducting compatible research for years and would lead me to (A) my
PHD Dissertation and (B send C) two books written with Jim. 10 All these
8 “Czechia” is rarely used in English because native English speakers too often do not know
intuitively know how to pronounce it. The name Czechia has arisen as the short name for
the Czech Republic, which emerged with the breakup of “Czechoslovakia” in 1992.
9 Jim soon arranged for the contract to by paid from his grant funds from U.S. foundations
deposited for his projects sat UCLA. 10 See (A) my 2001 Decentralized Globalization: Free Markets, U.S. Foundations, and the
Rise of Civil and Civic Society from Rockefeller’s Rise in Latin America to Soros’ Eastern
Europe (Los Angeles: UCLAClassic Doctoral Thesis, forthcoming at
http://www.profmex.org/webjournal_listedbyvoldat.html
(B) Olga Magdalena Lazín, La Globalización Se Descentraliza: Libre Mercado,
Fundaciones, Sociedad Cívica y Gobierno Civil en las Regiones del Mundo, Prólogo, pp.
15-166, por James W. Wilkie (Guadalajara y Los Ángeles: Universidad de Guadalajara,
UCLA Program on Mexico, PROFMEX/World, Casa Juan Pablos Centro Cultural, 2007).
http://www.profmex.org/mexicoandtheworld/volume12/1winter07/prologoporjameswilkie
OLbook.html
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 233
works distinguish between the concepts of Civil Society (which
represents national and local governmental activity and Civic Society
(which involves active private citizens (who organize non- governmental
initiatives to develop model projects beyond the ability of official
bureaucrats to even comprehend, including the influence needed to
monitor and expose the failures and successes of governmental activity).
But before we left September 18th to visit Romania and Hungary,
I had to find a substitute for my new class teaching American English and
History in Sighet—I left a friend, Johnny Popescu, to become my
permanent substitute. Only then could our newly expanded Team set off
under my guidance.
Thus, we set out on September 18, 1991, to visit one of the most
socially and economically interesting and beautiful parts of Romania by
going up thought the green forested Carpathian Mountains via the
beautiful Prislop Pass, stopping to visit small farming families in their
folkloric clothing of which they were justifiably proud to wear on a daily
basis. Farther east in Romania, on the scenic roads, we visited the
monasteries of Moldova, the town of Cimpulung Moldovenesc, Suceava,
and then the Monasteries in Sucevita and Agapia. The gorgeous forested
mountain road eventually led to Lacul Rosu and the lake country. Then
we took the long scenic mountain road to Cluj Napoca to visit my
University.
As I briefed Jim about Romania, he was briefing me about
factors in comparing national economies. For example, he told me about
how he had reunited in Prague on September 15th with Richard Beset, his
former UCLA student and friend, to hear about his role in London as
(C) James W. Wilkie y Olga Magdalena Lazín, La globalización Se Amplia: Claroscuros
de los Nexos Globales (Guadalajara, Los Ángeles, México: Universidad de Guadalajara,
UCLA Program on Mexico, PROFMEX/World, Casa Juan Pablos Centro Cultural, 2011:
http://www.profmex.org/mexicoandtheworld/volume17/2spring2012/Laglobalizacionsea
mplia.pdf
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 234
Manger of Deutsche Bank’s New Accounts in Russia and Eastern
Europe. Richard had become famous for inviting Banking Officials and
national Treasury Ministries to deposit their financial reserves on deposit
in his bank in London. But because those who did not understand
anything about “interest payment on deposited funds, they did not ask for
nor did they gain any interest payments. Also, because most Western
Banks were not sure that these new “capitalists” could be “fully trusted”
for correct management of their deposits, his Deutsche Bank collected
large fees to keep the Eastern Europe reserves safe. This was all very eye
opening for me.
Jim and I had realized early on that we had a close affinity as we
analyzed the situation of Romania, and he said, “Call me Jim.” (In
contrast I called Professor James Platler “JP.”) As we traveled to observe
the situation of the people in different parts of the country, Jim and I
formed a deep bond of observing and analyzing; thus both of realized this
brief interlude had to continue for the long term in order to achieve our
goals.
Next stops, Budapest, Salzburg, Munich, Bordeaux (for me), and Los
Angeles (for Jim)
As a Romanian, I had the right to enter Hungary, and we did so
bypassing the miles of vehicles waiting to cross the border for the long
drive to Budapest. There JP finally relaxed after the long drives and often
poor hotels and hotels—he said that he finally found unbroken
civilization again.
Once we arrived in Budapest, JP, who had told Jim privately that
from the outset of our trip that he thought that I was a “Spy” (planted on
us by the Romanian Securitate to monitor our many “foreign” inquiries
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 235
during our travel through Romania’s north country), announced that his
concern about me had vanished as we realized the extent of my
knowledge and research abilities. In his mind, I had to be a Spy because
I had obtained access to special private dining rooms and quarter in some
fine hotels, as well as invitations for wonderful lunches at some
Monasteries, where miraculously I made immediate friends with each
Mother Superior. But by the time we reached Budapest, he realized that
at my University I had learned the Elite skills needed to survive safely
and comfortably in Eastern Europe.
My problem was to enter Austria, where I had no visa. But Jim
passed his UCLA business card through to the Consul General of Austria
in Budapest, and quickly we found ourselves whisked from the back of
the long line to the front and right into a meeting with the Consul General
himself. He was pleased to hear about the research of our UCLA Team,
but said that I did have a visa. Jim then told them that I only needed a
three-day transit visa to reach Germany, the visa for which he could see
in my passport.
With entry to Austria solved, we were on the road to the Hotel
Kobentzl and Graz, which overlook Salzburg, all the way analyzing the
comparative economic and social situations of Austria, Hungary, and
Romania.
We spent most of our time down the mountain from Kobentzl in
the valley, before returning to our sweeping Hotel view of Salzburg City.
Meanwhile I was deepening my questions about capital is leveraged to
undertake big private projects. As we took photos over from on high
looking down on the many bridges of Salzburg and Jim was explaining
how the developed world operated by using finances, credit, and interest
to help economies grow.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 236
Finally we left Salzburg to enter Germany and Munich, where
our quick look into Oktoberfest found us among nasty drunken louts each
of whom seemingly had hand four hands: one to chug-a-lug beer; one to
smoke foul smelling cigarettes; one to quaff horrible-bleeding-raw
sausages; and one to punch someone in the face. From what we saw,
Oktoberfest was a place for nasty males seeking to “get smashed on beer”
and then smash another male to break his nose. Thus, we fled for our lives
as the brutes began to threaten anyone who looked at them.
Then on September 30th, I took the plane to from Munich to Paris
to take a bus to Bordeaux to meet the family, which had invited me to
France.
Jim (and JP) also left the same day for Jim to arrive in time to
go from the airplane to open and begin teaching his Fall Quarter class at
UCLA. But he promised to call daily and return to join me again in ten
weeks.
In the meantime, I made a trip to Paris to request political asylum
in France, but a grey-faced judge rejected my request, saying that the
petitioner must file with the help of a lawyer.
To complicate matters in Bordeaux, the French Security Agent
there was investigating me, a lone woman, as a possible SPY sent by
Romania to “monitor activities at the Port of Bordeaux. When he told
that, if I pleased him in unmentionable ways, he would not deport me to
Romania but arrange my legal status in France, I immediately told Jim on
his next telephone call.
To resolve our problem, Jim called his Paris friend Gérard
Chaliand, a former visiting professor at UCLA, whose real job involved
traveling the world for French Security to report on his professorial
travels that took him to all continents. Gérard immediately called French
Security to report on the illegal approach to me by their Agent in
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 237
Bordeaux. That same day the Agent came to apologize profusely to me
in the best manner that he could muster in his pitiful condition. He begged
me not to have him fired for his proposition to me. I could see him looking
at me in truly puzzled way that implicitly said: “Who are you? How did
I make such a grave mistake in deciding that you, a lone Romanian
women could not have any power to reach my bosses in Paris?” I took
pity on him and told him that if he minded manners and watched from
affair to be sure that I was always safe, he would not be fired.
Jim returns to Europe December, 1991: His plan for advising eastern
european civic society about how to gain grants from U.S. foundations,
which hold the world’s largest pool of NGO development funds.
Even though it was December 11, 1991, when Jim returned,
France was in the midst what some in America call an “Indian Fall,”
warm with colorful fall leaves still on the trees. It was a beautifully bright
“fall day” when we left Bordeaux the next day to spend some days
visiting the Loire River with its many castles and incredible views.
Even during our photography of the Loire region, Jim began to
outline his New Plan (now our plan) to wit: PROFMEX Plan to Help
Eastern European “Foundations” become legally eligible to gain grants
from U.S. Tax Exempt Foundations following Jim’s “U.S.-Mexico Model
for Philanthropy.”
Indeed, Jim told me that recently when he had been in Mexico
City, he received an invitation to meet with Manuel Alonso Muñoz,
Executive Director of Mexico’s National Lottery,11 who when he heard
about Jim’s U.S.-Mexico Model, invited him to meet at the Lottery’s
historically famous ornate building. After an extended briefing by Jim,
Manuel told him that he had already called his own good friend Ronald
11 Mexico’s National Lottery is a Government-run Public Charity and funder of new
research.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 238
G. Hellman, Professor of Sociology in the Graduate School at the City
University of New York, to ask him for an evaluation of Jim and his
Mexico-U.S. Model for Philanthropy. Ironically, it was only then when
he realized that Ron was (and is today) Jim’s PROFMEX Vice-President
for Strategic Planning. With that news and Jim’s stellar briefing, Lic.
Alonso asked if the Lottery could make a series of generous grants to
PROFMEX in order to help fund the expansion of Jim’s Model to Eastern
Europe, 12putting Mexico into an innovative new light.
Manuel Alonso was appreciative of the fact that Jim, while
serving as Consultant to the U.S. Council on Foundations, had become
involved since 1990 with his Model for helping Mexican Foundations
(including, for example, charities, human rights organizations, hospitals,
universities, biospheres, etc.) to re-write their constitution and by-laws to
be compatible with the U.S. tax requirement that they mirror U.S. Notfor-Private
Profit Organizations (NPPOs).
The question of “mirroring” involved Jim’s explanation that: As
NPPOs, U.S. Foundations are legally responsible for controlling
expenditure of funds granted to organizations that do not mirror the U.S.
foundations do not want to be involved in the day-to-day activities of its
grantees. Indeed, “ they want to transfer “expenditure responsibility”
(including misuse or illegal use of grant funds) to the recipient foundation
to which they grant funds but can only do so if the grant recipient
organization is deemed to have an “equivalent” legal structure to that of
the U.S. donor foundation.
Here is the background, according to Jim: 13 “In order to facilitate
the U.S. philanthropic activity needed during the 1970s and 1980s to help
12 The Lottery grants to PROFMEX totaled $100,000 dollars. 13 Jim Wilkie’s statement here is quoted from my formal Interview with him, September 17,
1992, in Transylvania, based upon his experience as Consultant to the U.S. Council on
Foundations. See:
Olga Magdalena Lazín, Decentralized Globalization: Free Markets,
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 239
speed world development, the U.S. Secretary of Treasury and the IRS
formulated provisions that resulted in changing and/or interpreting the
Internal Revenue Code (IRC) to freely permit U.S. foundations to grant
funds abroad, if they meet the following special proviso:
U.S. NPPOs can themselves make a legal “determination” that
the foreign organization receiving the U.S. grant be “determined” to be
“equivalent” to an NPPO described in Section 501(c)(3)14 of the U.S.
Internal Revenue Code.”
Further, Jim pointed out that, “while this proviso has worked well
for big U.S. grant-making foundations that place costly offices and staff
around the world (such as Rockefeller and Ford Foundations), it has
worked less well for foundations that have had to send their lawyers to
meet with their legal counterparts in prospective ‘equivalent
organizations, the legal cost of making such a determination often
reaching $25,000 [or, by 2016, much, much more] for each new
organization to receive funds from the U.S. NPPO. If that determination
is favorable, the U.S. NPPO can transfer funds to the equivalent
organization, just as it can to any other approved U.S. NPPO, and along
with the transfer of funds to the recipient organization goes the transfer
of responsibility over how the funds are spent.”
U.S. Foundations and the Rise of Civil and Civic Society From Rockefeller’s Latin America
To Soros’ Eastern Europe (Los Angeles: UCLA, Classic PHD thesis, 2001), pp. 122-125.
This book scheduled in 2016 for publication by PROFMEX at
http://www.profmex.org/webjournal_listedbyvoldat.html
14 “Equivalent,” as Jim noted, means that the foreign NPPO meets (A) the test of funding at
least one of the following goals” for types of projects supported Health-Education-WelfareHuman
Rights-Science and Religion-Economy-Environment-Ecology-PublicationLiterature-Charity;
and (B) meets the test that no part of the foreign NPPOs expenditures
benefit private persons-- except for payment of reasonable expenses to cover goods and
services needed by the NPPO to legitimately conduct the operations chartered in its Articles
of Incorporation and By-Laws.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 240
Transfer of ‘Expenditure Responsibility’ from the U.S. Donor NPPO
to the Foreign Recipient NPPO.
The ability of U.S. NPPOs to avoid costly expenditure
responsibility, as Jim told, is one of the factors that have helped make
American grant-making foundations so important in the world. Thus,
U.S. NPPOs have been enabled to avoid becoming ensnarled in
accounting processes and audits, which are better done by the foreign
organization that receives and administers the U.S. NPPO grant of funds.
In this manner, said Jim, the U.S. NPPO is free to focus its
energy on evaluating the substance of its grant programs. The ability of
grant-making foundations to transfer Expenditure Responsibility to other
NPPOs is the main reason that they generally prefer (and require) that
their funds be granted only to approved organizations rather than to
individuals or to non-approved organizations.
The above views, Jim said, do not mean that U.S. NPPOs are
unable to grant funds to an organization that is not equivalent to a U.S.
NPPO (or make grants to individual scholars, artists, or writers either at
home or abroad), but to do so adds a complication to the grant-making
process. Rather than passing on the Expenditure Responsibility (as the
U.S. NPPO does when it makes grants to another NPPO or U.S.
equivalent), the Expenditure Responsibility remains with the donor
NPPO when it makes a grant to an organization that is not an NPPO (or
its U.S. equivalent) or to an individual.
In the unlikely case where the donor NPPO retains Expenditure
Responsibility, then, Jim told me in my interview with him on September
17, 1991, the donor foundation has to concern itself with costly financial
oversight involved, which may problematic whether of in or outside the
USA.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 241
On to Paris and the world to meet with NPPO leaders about new
foundations
Jim and I arrived in Paris on December 15, 1991, to meet with
Jim’s contacts at the American Embassy, who heard about our research
and suggested that Jim meet also with their counterparts at the U.S.
Embassy in Mexico City. They agreed to help begin to our new Plan to
expand to Eastern Europe and Russia Jim’s successful Model for TaxFree
Flow of Nonprofit Funds, the example being what he negotiated
(with the U.S. Council on Foundations and the U.S. and Mexican
Treasury Departments), as analyzed above.
It is important for me to say here that George Soros and his
decentralized donations to his 41 semi-autonomous “national
foundations”15 (exemplified in Romania, Hungary, and Russia) have been
built following the IRS proviso and regulations discussed above. Also,
Soros’ “National Foundations” require that national Government charter
the independent role as NGOs.
In contrast, the flowering of thousands of independent
“Foundations” in Eastern Europe since 1989 has grown from groups
looking for funds from the many U.S. Foundations that do not have the
Soros/New York link with its Foundations in many nations, all of which
operate in Soros’ closed loop. Few of these new Foundations have the
Soros knowledge and financial resources to set up the By-Laws and Legal
Status needed for the thousands Foundations desiring to tap into funding
by U.S. Foundations.16 However, since 2013, Soros’ has organized an
15Administered by NGO Civic Activists in each country but reporting to Soros
Foundation/New York City to justify each yearly budget. 16 The Soros Open Society Foundations in 44 countries benefit from the fact that Soros
himself has lived up to his commitment since1986 (to 2016 and ongoing) to donate half of
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 242
office to work with shared Global Funds (for food, migration, etc.)
outside the non-Soros frameworks to help poor areas and countries to
stave off crises.
Before we left Paris on December 19, 1991, we met with Gérard
Chaliand to personally thank him for having made the Bordeaux Security
agent reexamine his whole approach to his life.
Further, with Gérard, we worked out a plan to arrange for me to
become a U.S. resident and obtain U.S. citizenship nine years after my
arrival in Los Angeles, October 1992. He recommended that my case by
handled in In Los Angeles by one of America’s most knowledgeable and
effective Migration Attorneys—Cynthia Juárez Lange, today Managing
Partner, Northern California, for the Fragomen Del Rey, Bernsen &
Loewy LLP Legal Office located in San Francisco. Cynthia is a
personable genius.
In our travels in December 1991 and from March to June 1992
we met NPPO leaders in the European Union to better understand how
foundations work under unique laws in each county rather than in any
rational manner for the whole EU, we went to Marseilles, Nice,
Villfranche-sur-Mer, Cap-Ferrat, Monaco, La Rochelle, Andorra, Sevilla,
Madrid, Trujillo, El Escorial, Avila, and Segovia.
On September 3. 1992, we arrived at the U.S. Consulate in Paris,
where the U.S Consulate in Mexico had arranged with Jim for my U.S.
eligibility for residence to be issued. Also, the Mexican Consulate
General in Paris issued me my residence papers to enter and leave Mexico
freely, as arranged by Jim with the Mexican Consular Office in Mexico
City.
his profits ($13 billon) for their activities, his personal wealth in 2016 estimated to be $25
billion. See https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/about/expenditures
Also, for the details of Soros $930.7 million dollar Open Society Foundations 2016 Budget,
which can be found by searching online for this title.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 243
By September 7, 1992, we were Romania for meetings with
Civic Activists in Sighet (where I finally returned after “escaped” with
Jim in December 1991).
From March to June 1993, we met with NPPO leaders in
Budapest, Sighet, and Varna (Bulgaria), Bucharest, and St. Petersburg. In
Moscow (June 21-14, 1993), Jim appointed Professor Boris Koval
(Director of the Latin American Institute of the Russian Academy of
Sciences), to be PROFMEX Representative in Russia. Koval had invited
us to Moscow and introduced us to his own Security Chief to be our
translator and guide. Thus Security Chief was a fascinating person who
had been former head of the KGB Office in Iran, 1979-1989.
Jim, who always wore his Mexican guayabera shirt with or
without a suit, was seen to be “authentically Mexican” in our meetings
and discussions about NPPOs and the Soros Open Society Foundations
in Russia success in Russia (1987-2002) and problems of the Soros
Foundations in Russia since 2003, when, under Government pressure, he
was phasing out of operation active programs.
When on November 30, 2015,17 Russia’s Prosecutor General’s
Office classified the Soros Open Society Foundation as an “undesirable”
organization, it closed the possibility of Russian individuals and
institutions from having anything to do with any Soros initiative or
programs… [Because it constituted] a threat to the foundations of
Russia’s Constitutional order and national security….
Prosecutors [then] launched a probe into Soros Foundation
activities….18 [and in July 2015], after Russian senators approved the socalled
“patriotic stop-list” of 12 groups that required immediate attention
over their supposed anti-Russian activities, [the following U.S.
17 See https://www.rt.com/politics/323919-soros-foundation-recognized-as-undesirable/ 18 Ibid.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 244
organizations] realized that they would soon be banned in Russia: [the
U.S.] National Endowment for Democracy; the International Republican
Institute; the National Democratic Institute; the MacArthur Foundation,
and Freedom House.
The American hedgefunds mogul George Soros issued from
London the following Press Release on November 30, 2015: 19
Contrary to the Russian prosecutor’s allegations, the Open
Society Foundations have, for more than a quarter-century, helped
to strengthen the rule of law in Russia and protect the rights of all. In the
past, Russian officials and citizens have welcomed our efforts, and we
regret the changes that have led the government to reject our support to
Russian civil society and ignore the aspirations of the Russian people.
Since 1987, Open Society has provided support to countless
individuals and civil society organizations, including in the fields of
science, education, and public health. Open Society has helped finance a
network of internet centers in 33 universities around the country, helped
Russian scholars to travel and study abroad, developed curricula for early
childhood education, and created a network of contemporary art centers
that are still in operation.
This record speaks for itself. We are honored to have worked
alongside pioneering citizens, educators, and civil society organizations
that embody Russian creativity, commitment, and hope.
“We are confident that this move is a temporary aberration; the
aspirations of the Russian people for a better future cannot be suppressed
and will ultimately succeed,” said George Soros, founder and chairman
of the Open Society Foundations. Despite all efforts made by Soros and
his organizations, he has been banned from Russia.
19 See: https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/press-releases/russia-cracks-down-opensociety
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 245
Once with the reset of the Cold War, in 2012, when Putin was
reelected as Russia’s President, Putin’s first movement was to ban all
Soros organizations which were impeding his expansion onto Crimeea.
Back in Mexico City for the 1994 PROFMEX Event featuring
Eastern Europeans interested in the U.S.-Mexico Model for NPPOs, we
convened, July 28-29, for our meeting on “Development of Mexico as
seen from the World,” Co-sponsored by UCLA and Mexico’s Consejo
Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología.
This Conference was held at Mexico City’s María Isabel
Sheraton, with 70 participants from Mexico and the United States, and
which I co-organized with Jim.
The following invitees from Eastern Europe came from Hungary
Zoltan Karpati, Professor of Sociology, Romania Mihai Coman,
University Dean, Roman Romulus, Consul General in Mexico,
Alexandru Lazín, PROFMEX-- England and Romania, Lia Stan, Investor
from Bristol, England.
Highlights of the event came frequently as we turned our gaze
from Salón A with his all-window view from the top floor to discuss the
anti-government protest marches up and down Reforma Avenue past the
Angel Monument below.
Further, our group enjoyed the invitation of Mexico’s Attorney
General, Jorge Madrazo Cuéllar to visit him at his headquarters where we
personally discussed and raised questions about the street blockages in
front of our María Isabella Hotel.
In December 1997, we continued to invite world scholars
especially interested in economic matters, as well as in the U.S.-Mexico
NPPO Model to participate with us at the:
IX PROFMEX-ANUIES Conference
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 246
Hosted by Governor Víctor Manuel Tinoco Rubí in Morelia,
Michoacán.
México y el Mundo
Mexico and the World
December 8-13, 1997
With hundreds of participants and Attendees from all
continents. Special Guests were invited from:
Russia: Boris Koval, who recalled with excitement the visit of Jim and I
to Moscow in June 1993.
China: Sengen Zhang, Hongzhu Huang
Korea: Kap-Young Jeong
Japan: Soichi Shinohara, Osamu Nishimura, Yasuoki Takagi
Indonesia: Lepi T. Tarmidi
Argentina: Eugenio O. Valenciano
Bolivia: Antonio J. Cisneros
Jim and I have been involved with many academic activities, but
those are beyond the scope of my analysis here of Jim’s role in extending
PROFMEX around the globe, especially to Europe and Russia.
My courses taken under Jim, and Prof Carlos Alberto Torres,
Prof. Richard Weiss, and Ivan T Be rend, at UCLA led me to the M.A. in
Latin American Studies (1996) and PHD in History (2001)
With publication of one of my books, as sole author, La
globalización se descentraliza: Libre mercado, fundaciones, sociedad
cívica y gobierno civil en las regiones del mundo (2007) Por Olga
Magdalena Lazín. Prólogo de James W. Wilkie; and the second book, coauthored
with James W Wilkie, book full of illustrations and images that
reflect my travels with Jim La globalización se amplia (2011), By James
W. Wilkie and Olga Magdalena Lazín. Preface de Rafael Rodríguez
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 247
Castañeda, with you Jim, I know that much researching and writing
awaits us in our projects around the world….
Thanks, Jim
This work has shown how U.S. Tax Exempt Organization (TEO)
law has evolved to become the most important in the world owing to its
flexibility. Where the laws of most countries require prior legal
authorization to launch in a new direction, the United States TEO law
recognizes no such limit. Thus, U.S. TEO law, unlike most other
countries, is never trying to make legal what is already underway and
working in the world. The USA and now Mexico, which together have
signed the first collaborative agreement, which is the blueprint for
NPPOs.
This field experience has been crucial for my Dissertation. Here is an
ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION
Decentralized Globalization. Free Markets, U.S. Foundations,
and The Rise of Civil and Civic Society From Rockefeller's Latin
America To Soros' Eastern Europe
By Olga Magdalena Lazin, Doctor in History, University of
California, Los Angeles, 2001.
This work has shown how U.S. Tax Exempt Organization (TEO)
Law has evolved to become the most important in the world owing to its
flexibility, where the laws of most countries require prior legal
authorization to launch in a new direction, United States TEO law
recognizes no such limit. Thus, U.S. TEO law, unlike most other
countries, is never trying to make legal what is already underway in the
world. The USA and now Mexico, which together have signed the first
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 248
Fair Trade agreement in 1994. A new Era is opening, where the
environment’s safety comes first, by the people, for the people of the
earth.
Copyright 2010 Olga Lazín
How I Escaped Romania To The West: PROFMEX Openings To The European Union:
I was born Born in Transylvania, Northern Romania, in a town called “Satu Marie,”
I grew up like Alice in Wonderland:
On the one hand I was friends with the children of intellectuals,
and also lovely Gypsy children who I taught the Romanian language as
early as the first and second grade.
On the other hand, my family had a tough life because my
parents were always working until late hours at night. My younger
brother Alex and I read while waiting for mother, Magdalena, to arrive
turn off our lights even as she continued into the wee hours her accounting
work at home. She was compounding the lengths and width of the
wooden logs that were heading to Russia year by year.
During the day, Magdalena let us play all day long to our heart’s
content. So unique, and we felt so free exploring nature in Sighet.
In 1973, at age 10 as a fifth grader in Transylvania’s isolated
town of Sighet2
, I had to make a fateful decision about my choice of
foreign-language study: Russian or English. The pressure was on us to
1 Readers should be aware of a key acronym used when this paper reaches the 1990s: NPPO
stands for Not-for-Private Profit Organization (usually a Foundation) which differs from
the more familiar (Non-Profit Organization (NPO). Outside the United States, the latter
term tends to be wrongly understood to mean no profit can be accumulated and the NPO
must show a zero balance at year end. The former term (NPPO) is developed here to stress
that profits may be accumulated and invested to fund future activities, as long as
expenditures do not benefit private parties (except for salaries, travel, and other justified
expenses as provided in, say, a Foundation’s by-laws.) 2 Officially named Sighetu Marmației (on Romania’s northwest border facing Ukraine’s
southwestern border with Romania and Hungary.
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 222
take up Russian, thus proving that we were all students loyal to the
dictator Socialist” Nicole Ceausescu’s “Socialist Government” (read
Romanian Communism allied with Moscow), but consciously I detested
that system.
Although I wanted to learn English, I did not then how fateful
that choice would be until 1991, when at almost 27 years of age, I met
Jim Wilkie who had been advised by his brother Richard to include my
town of Sighet in his journey to assess the how Eastern Europe was faring
after the fall of the “Berlin Wall,” short for the long wall that kept the
people of Communist countries locked and unable to escape. But more
later about how Jim found me as he sought an English-speaking
intellectual and social guide to Eastern Europe.
In the meantime, growing up in Sighet with a population of only
30,000 people, we were proud to recognize Elie "Elie" Wiesel (born
1928) as our most prominent citizen long before he won the 1986 Nobel
Peace Prize. He helped us get past the terrible history of Sighet
Communist Prison where “enemies of the state” were confined until
“death due to natural cause.”
In my early years I had a hard time understanding how the green
and flowered valley of Sighet (elevation 1,000 feet, on the Tisa River at
the foot of our forested Carpathian Mountains) could be so beautiful, yet
we lived under the terribly cruel eye of the Securitate to protect from the
people the wretched Dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu. Ceausescu,3 who ruled
from 1965 to his execution in 1989, was the harshest leader of all the
countries behind Russia’s Wall against Western Europe.
Oddly enough, in the Transylvania of the late 1960s, 1970s and
1980s, supposedly I was living the “Golden Age of Romanian
Socialism,” but even to myself as a young student; I could see that the
3 In modernized spelling.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 223
promised “full progress” was clearly a lie. Most adults agreed but feared
to speak so bluntly.
Even though the “English-Speaking USA” had been supposedly
always threatening to invade Romania, I continued to study English
language and literature. That I chose to study English even though the act
alone brought suspicion on me because all society was taught to believe
since 1945 that we were fighting off the Great Satin USA.4 America was
officially seen as a threat to Romania and it allies under Russia’s
COMECON,5 all of which I became only fully aware as I grew older and
had to buy the English Course textbooks on the risky, expensive Black
Market.
In the meantime, without rarely granted permission, we were
forbidden to meet and visit with foreigners, especially those who spoke
English and who wanted to hear from us about Sighet and its nearby
wooden hamlets of the Maramures Province, where I have my first
memories. The region is ethnically diverse, with a stimulating climate
ranging from very hot summers and very cold winters. Geographically,
we lived in the valleys and Mountains of Gutinul through which the rivers
of Iza and Tisa flow. Geographically, the beautiful forested Tisa River is
the natural border with Southern Ukraine.
4 As in the case of Oceania always being threatened by eternal war alternating between
Eurasia or Eastasia, portrayed in George Orwell’s 1984 (1948). Cf. my article “Orwell’s
1984 and the Case Studies of Stalin and Ceausescu,” in Elitelore Varieties (Edited by James
Wilkie et al.): http://elitelore.org/Capitulos/cap16_elitelore.pdf 5 COMECON (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance) dates from the January 1949
communiqué agreed upon in Moscow by the USSR (including its 15 Constituent Republics
of Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan) and its five
“Independent” Satellite Republics (Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and
Romania. The communiqué involved the refusal of all these countries to "subordinate
themselves to the dictates of the Marshall Plan.” Thus, they organized an “economic
cooperation” among these “new peoples’ democracies.” (USSR born 1922, died 1991). Cf.:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Comecon
Olga Magdalena Lazín
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As folklore has it in the West, vampires are native to
Transylvania. We had vampires, werewolves, and wolverines, but all the
mythological characters were actually members of the Communist Party,
which everyone had to join--except for me because with my knowledge,
I was considered a security risk!
Fortunately, when in 1982 I entered the University Babes
Boljay, in Cluj-Napoca, to earn my M.A. in 1990, for my sociology
classes, I decided to conduct my field research project into the rural life
of the North of Romania, recording the folklore (especially myths)
invented and passed down by rural folks (including small merchants,
farmers, fisherman, loggers) had had used that lore to help them survive
for centuries.
Further, much of my research conducted among the outlying
farmers, delved deeply into Transylvania Folklore, which prepared me
well to understand Communist Party Lore.
Thus, for the second time, my fateful choice of a field research
project had further prepared me, unknowingly, for my future with Jim
Wilkie.
Once I had been admitted to the Babes Boljay University, which
was called “the heart and brain of Transylvania,” I also further expanded
and deepened deep studies in American language and literature. Also I
studied Romanian language and literature in the Department of Philology.
The Bolyai University Is considered the best University in Transylvania.
Upon beginning my mentoring for other students, I was happy
to find a sense of freedom. Reading and writing comprehension were my
forté during my four years at Cluj. I had always dreamt of being a
professor and a writer and seemed to be off to a great start.
But I soon realized that our professors opened the day by reading
the mounds of new Decrees just signed by Ceausescu. Thus, I began
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 225
laughing, and other students join me in mocking the wooden language of
Central Planning’s attempt to befuddle us with words from a wooden
language, totally bent toward twisting our brains into confused
submission. Professors and Securitate officers were acting as sweaty
bureaucrats trying to teach us how to sharpen our mental images. Not one
professor asked us, “What do each of you really think of all this
Ceausescu propaganda of decrees harming the educational process?”
Professors had their favorite students and made sure they pointed
this out in class, stifling any competition as they show openly their
favoritism or nepotism.
When I reached the age of 22 in1985, I started to be
argumentative, criticizing professors, especially the history professor
who only knew only the History of the Romanian Communist Party.
Further, as a woman in academia, I began to resent being forced
to do the military service. The Russians, having been directing Romanian
politicians since 1945, pressured the Romanians to dig useless trenches
as well as learn to disassemble and assemble the AK47!
The atmosphere was dreadful in classes. Restrictions were
plentiful and absurd. Speech was not free; one couldn’t discuss issues
freely in class, or make any real analysis or debate. One had to regurgitate
what the professors were telling us. Modern economics led by and read
whatever was there in the old books stacked in the communist library.
Until I escaped Romania in 1992, I learned that the so-called economics
classes we took taught nothing about money, credit, and such terms as
GDP. The Marxist economics involved only fuzzy nonsensical slogans
such as “We Romanians have to fight-off the ‘running dogs of
capitalism,” without the word “capitalism” ever being defined except in
unrealistic theory laced with epithets.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 226
Even as an English major, I could not speak with to foreigners
in English --answering one question was a crime, according to the
tendentious Security Decrees. Abortion was a crime punishable for up to
20 years in prison. Doctors performing it ended up in jail, and so did the
pregnant women. Punishments were ridiculous—the Anti-Abortion Law
lasted for 40 years, until 1990.
Furthermore if my uncle from Canada visited us, we were all
under surveillance, the entire family. Even today, in 2016 one has to
report to the police to declare if any visitor of family comes from the USA
(or Canada, for some bizarre security reason). Well after 25 years, not
much has changed in poor Romania.
The influence of recent Romanian history
In the meantime, the History of Transylvania weighed heavily
on population of Romania, with constant change in the emerging political
map always have left “citizens” always lost about who was really in
charge.
Thus, Transylvania was originally part of the Dacia Kingdom
between 82 BC until the Roman conquest in 106 AD. The capital of Dacia
was destroyed by the Romans, so that a new capital would serve the
Roman Province of Dacia, which lasted until 350 AD, by which time the
Romans felt so hated that it behooved them withdraw back to Rome.
During the late 9th century, western Transylvania was
conquered by the Hungarian Army to later become part of the Kingdom
of Hungary and in 1570 to devolve into the Principality of Transylvania.
During most of the 16th and 17th centuries, the Principality became an
Ottoman Empire vassal state, confusingly also governed by the Habsburg
Empire. After 1711 Transylvania was consolidated solely into the
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 227
Habsburg Empire and Transylvanian princes were replaced with
Habsburg imperial governors. After 1867, Transylvania ceased to have
separate status and was incorporated into the Kingdom of Hungary as part
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.6 After World War I, Transylvania
reverted in 1918 to be part of Romania. In 1940 Northern Transylvania
again became governed by Hungary and then Germany, but Romanian
queen Maria successfully reclaimed it after the end of World War II.
The year 1940 was important for Romania because if was seized
for its oil by Nazi Germany (1940-1944), “liberated” by the “Soviet
Union” (1944-1947), and finally “re-liberated” to become the Popular
republic of Romania (under USSR remote control), as the Cold War was
beginning to freeze the Iron Curtain into place.
At the end of World War II while the USSR and its Red Army
were the occupying powers in all Romania, in 1947 Romania forcibly and
ironically became a “People’s Republic” (1947–1989), after the rise of
the Iron Curtain.
The first “president,” Gheorghiu-Dej (1947) ruled as puppet of
Moscow, but when he died, his Secretary General of the Communist Party
of Romania, Nicolae Ceausescu, was elected as the second “president”
(1965-1989), shifting his savage dictatorship into a harsher Romanian
“Gulag” than known in the USSR.
For two decades I neither understood the dimensions of tragic
history of Transylvania, did I understand that I would have to escape the
Gulag of Romania by the “skin of my teeth.”
For peoples of the world Transylvania seems to be a far away
place, where most people know the werewolves and vampires have been
“seen” to in the imagination of Transylvanians, whose beliefs was soaked
in mystical folklore. Even today it is hardly possible to have a rational
6 This Empire existed between 1867 and 1918.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 228
conversation with most the Transylvanian folk on any subject without
recourse to try to understand where their distorted imagination has
befuddled them.
The population has consisted of Romanians, Hungarians,
Germans, and some Ukrainians. These languages are still being spoken
in Romania’s Maramures province, but because I always liked and loved
the Romanian language, I decided to become a Professor of Romanian
Language and Literature.
My backdrop to the fall of CEAUSESCU
I later told Jim how I had been admitted in 1982 to the BabesBolyai
University, in Cluj-Napoca at the heart of Transylvania, I focused
especially on Linguistics. Unfortunately, there I found that the professors,
who were under the control of sweaty Securitate officers, had to read
dozens of new Decrees issued every day as they sought to control every
one of our daily actions—all in the name of protecting the Ceausescu
government—which was selling the country’s food supplies to Russia in
order to pay down Roman’s official debt at our experts. Those Securitate
officers ate well and ominously watched us virtually starve. They said, be
calm like your parents in the face of starvation.
Thus, I furiously called out in my classes that our very existence
was being compromised by Ceausescu's abandonment of the population,
which was ordered to, as Lenin famously said, “work, work, and work.”
To protect myself as best I could, I turned to humor, seeking to
ridicule Ceausescu’s “national paradise.” But when I encouraged my
classmates to laugh at the propaganda embedded in the wooden language
of the national bureaucracy, I soon fell under the heavy scrutiny of
university authorities, who were furious that I trying to expose the fact
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 229
that all classes had been organized to befuddle the student body into
confused submission. Indeed, each professor had favorite students to help
drown out legitimate questions and stifle any competing analysis—the
university lived under nepotism, favoritism, the threat of rape (virtual and
real) by the Securitate officers, and open bribery--choose your garden
variety.
My 1986 flight from Romania backfires
By 1986, at age 23, I had decided to flee Romania—an illegal
act because Ceausescu did not want anyone (especially women of childbearing
age) to escape his plan to building his “ideal socialist industries”
on farms and ranches as well as in the cities. In June I made my way to
the border of Yugoslavia and paid a smuggler to evade the Romanian
security forces that were preventing the “nations workers” from escaping.
The smuggler, who took me across the border, turned out to be working
for Romanian Border Police. Thus, soon after crossing into Yugoslavia,
he turned his wagon around and I was again in Romania again when I
realized what had happened too late. I had been “sold” to Ceausescu’s
minions for a wagonload of salt.
That failed escape from Romania led me to a 10-month prison
sentence in Timisoara Prison, wherein the block cells were maintained so
cold (supposedly to eliminate bacteria and viruses) that it made all of us
inmates sick with the cold and the flu.
Cell bed blankets were less warm than one Kleenex tissue.
Moreover there were no pillow, and the concrete slab where inmates slept
was a back-breaker. The lights were on 24 hours a day, blinding all of us,
and there was constant observation. Every hour one was awakened to be
counted for, and sneaking up on people, under the guise of watching out
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 230
for suicides. But everyone could be clearly seen by the guards, and there
was no need to sleep-deprive inmates. There was also someone in the
higher echelon ripping off the food budget to siphon money to themselves
while serving inmates only baby carrots and spicy beans.
Almost every family in Romanian civil society had at least one
member who had been imprisoned for trying to open the political system
by denouncing the Ceausescu dictatorship. These inmates were openly
called “Political Prisoners,” and I was one of them.
Political Prisoners were not permitted to work outside the prison
walls in the fields because our crime had been the political decision to
repudiate Ceausescu’s “fantastic system.”
Out of prison in 1987 and open to change in the air
Once free in 1987, I could return to my University to finally
complete my M.A. in 1990.
Further in 1987, at the age of 24, I met the Family patriarch
Nicolae Pipas,7 who directed for the Communist government the walled
Regional Art Museum in a quiet part of Sighet. Being one of the few
highly educated persons who spoke English in the region, I began to serve
as interpreter/guide to visiting foreign Ambassadors permitted to travel
in Romania. They wanted to see the Museum with its magnificent
collection of paintings, sculptures, and rare historical pottery and coins.
Thus, I soon found myself translating for visiting English-Speaking
Ambassadors from many countries who wished to know Transylvania,
especially my village Sighet and its Merry Cemetery famous worldwide
7 Upon Ceausescu’s death, the Patriarch Pipas mysteriously became the Museum’s “owner”
and then transferred title to his son Valerian Pipas, the regions most famous violinist.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 231
for it tombstones in the form of wood sculpture of the butcher, the baker,
candlestick maker, and all professions.
Although my first languages were Romanian and Hungarian, I
could also translate into French and Italian. Indeed at that time I was
teaching Latin in the Rural School System of my Maramures Province.
By 1989, Ceausescu realized that his end was near, and he
sought to gain support by pardoning his political prisoners (such as
myself) who had tried to escape the horrendous conditions in the country.
Hence, university students and some labor unions joined forces and quite
quickly after the fall of the Berlin Wall forced Ceausescu and his
draconian wife Elena to flee. They were caught and executed on
Christmas Day, 1989, by the military that at the last moment joined the
Revolution.
As my friends and I (along with most of the population) cheered
the fall of the failed, rotten Romanian “dictatorship of the proletariat,”
my dear mother acted differently. She was so confused by the propaganda
of the only “leader” she knew much about that she wept for Ceausescu,
not fully realizing that he was the one who had wrongly had be arrested
and put me in prison.
With Ceausescu gone, in 1990 I was able to secure a passport to
ready myself to leave Romania by gaining visas for Germany and France.
The question remained, how to get there by land without a visa to
Austria—my region had no air connection to the outside world.
My fateful 1991 meeting in Sighet with Jim Wilkie
Almost age 27 in 1991, I was in the right place at the right time
when UCLA Professor Jim Wilkie arrived in Sighet September 17th with
Professor James Platler (his friend and driver). They came as part of their
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 232
trip to assess the impact of the 1989 Fall of Iron Curtain--which had
imprisoned all Romanians and made it a crime to try to escape from
Romania. The two Americans had already visited “East” Germany,
Czech,8 and Slovakia (soon to break their union, each becoming
independent), and Poland, where English speakers could provide
guidance.
In Romania the UCLA Team found itself at a loss as few of the
people who they encountered could speak English and none of them could
analyze or articulate how the System of Government and society
functioned before and after 1989.
When we met, Jim immediately contracted9 with me to advise
them as well as guide them through Eastern Europe. They were pleased
to hear the my outline of Transylvanian and Romanian history (see
above), with which I explained how constant national boundary change
meant that Transylvanians and Romanians were never able to develop
either honest civil government or active civic society. Little did I know
that the concepts of “Civic” and “Civil” Society were of utmost
importance to Jim? As I would find out later, Jim and I had been
conducting compatible research for years and would lead me to (A) my
PHD Dissertation and (B send C) two books written with Jim. 10 All these
8 “Czechia” is rarely used in English because native English speakers too often do not know
intuitively know how to pronounce it. The name Czechia has arisen as the short name for
the Czech Republic, which emerged with the breakup of “Czechoslovakia” in 1992.
9 Jim soon arranged for the contract to by paid from his grant funds from U.S. foundations
deposited for his projects sat UCLA. 10 See (A) my 2001 Decentralized Globalization: Free Markets, U.S. Foundations, and the
Rise of Civil and Civic Society from Rockefeller’s Rise in Latin America to Soros’ Eastern
Europe (Los Angeles: UCLAClassic Doctoral Thesis, forthcoming at
http://www.profmex.org/webjournal_listedbyvoldat.html
(B) Olga Magdalena Lazín, La Globalización Se Descentraliza: Libre Mercado,
Fundaciones, Sociedad Cívica y Gobierno Civil en las Regiones del Mundo, Prólogo, pp.
15-166, por James W. Wilkie (Guadalajara y Los Ángeles: Universidad de Guadalajara,
UCLA Program on Mexico, PROFMEX/World, Casa Juan Pablos Centro Cultural, 2007).
http://www.profmex.org/mexicoandtheworld/volume12/1winter07/prologoporjameswilkie
OLbook.html
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 233
works distinguish between the concepts of Civil Society (which
represents national and local governmental activity and Civic Society
(which involves active private citizens (who organize non- governmental
initiatives to develop model projects beyond the ability of official
bureaucrats to even comprehend, including the influence needed to
monitor and expose the failures and successes of governmental activity).
But before we left September 18th to visit Romania and Hungary,
I had to find a substitute for my new class teaching American English and
History in Sighet—I left a friend, Johnny Popescu, to become my
permanent substitute. Only then could our newly expanded Team set off
under my guidance.
Thus, we set out on September 18, 1991, to visit one of the most
socially and economically interesting and beautiful parts of Romania by
going up thought the green forested Carpathian Mountains via the
beautiful Prislop Pass, stopping to visit small farming families in their
folkloric clothing of which they were justifiably proud to wear on a daily
basis. Farther east in Romania, on the scenic roads, we visited the
monasteries of Moldova, the town of Cimpulung Moldovenesc, Suceava,
and then the Monasteries in Sucevita and Agapia. The gorgeous forested
mountain road eventually led to Lacul Rosu and the lake country. Then
we took the long scenic mountain road to Cluj Napoca to visit my
University.
As I briefed Jim about Romania, he was briefing me about
factors in comparing national economies. For example, he told me about
how he had reunited in Prague on September 15th with Richard Beset, his
former UCLA student and friend, to hear about his role in London as
(C) James W. Wilkie y Olga Magdalena Lazín, La globalización Se Amplia: Claroscuros
de los Nexos Globales (Guadalajara, Los Ángeles, México: Universidad de Guadalajara,
UCLA Program on Mexico, PROFMEX/World, Casa Juan Pablos Centro Cultural, 2011:
http://www.profmex.org/mexicoandtheworld/volume17/2spring2012/Laglobalizacionsea
mplia.pdf
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 234
Manger of Deutsche Bank’s New Accounts in Russia and Eastern
Europe. Richard had become famous for inviting Banking Officials and
national Treasury Ministries to deposit their financial reserves on deposit
in his bank in London. But because those who did not understand
anything about “interest payment on deposited funds, they did not ask for
nor did they gain any interest payments. Also, because most Western
Banks were not sure that these new “capitalists” could be “fully trusted”
for correct management of their deposits, his Deutsche Bank collected
large fees to keep the Eastern Europe reserves safe. This was all very eye
opening for me.
Jim and I had realized early on that we had a close affinity as we
analyzed the situation of Romania, and he said, “Call me Jim.” (In
contrast I called Professor James Platler “JP.”) As we traveled to observe
the situation of the people in different parts of the country, Jim and I
formed a deep bond of observing and analyzing; thus both of realized this
brief interlude had to continue for the long term in order to achieve our
goals.
Next stops, Budapest, Salzburg, Munich, Bordeaux (for me), and Los
Angeles (for Jim)
As a Romanian, I had the right to enter Hungary, and we did so
bypassing the miles of vehicles waiting to cross the border for the long
drive to Budapest. There JP finally relaxed after the long drives and often
poor hotels and hotels—he said that he finally found unbroken
civilization again.
Once we arrived in Budapest, JP, who had told Jim privately that
from the outset of our trip that he thought that I was a “Spy” (planted on
us by the Romanian Securitate to monitor our many “foreign” inquiries
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 235
during our travel through Romania’s north country), announced that his
concern about me had vanished as we realized the extent of my
knowledge and research abilities. In his mind, I had to be a Spy because
I had obtained access to special private dining rooms and quarter in some
fine hotels, as well as invitations for wonderful lunches at some
Monasteries, where miraculously I made immediate friends with each
Mother Superior. But by the time we reached Budapest, he realized that
at my University I had learned the Elite skills needed to survive safely
and comfortably in Eastern Europe.
My problem was to enter Austria, where I had no visa. But Jim
passed his UCLA business card through to the Consul General of Austria
in Budapest, and quickly we found ourselves whisked from the back of
the long line to the front and right into a meeting with the Consul General
himself. He was pleased to hear about the research of our UCLA Team,
but said that I did have a visa. Jim then told them that I only needed a
three-day transit visa to reach Germany, the visa for which he could see
in my passport.
With entry to Austria solved, we were on the road to the Hotel
Kobentzl and Graz, which overlook Salzburg, all the way analyzing the
comparative economic and social situations of Austria, Hungary, and
Romania.
We spent most of our time down the mountain from Kobentzl in
the valley, before returning to our sweeping Hotel view of Salzburg City.
Meanwhile I was deepening my questions about capital is leveraged to
undertake big private projects. As we took photos over from on high
looking down on the many bridges of Salzburg and Jim was explaining
how the developed world operated by using finances, credit, and interest
to help economies grow.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 236
Finally we left Salzburg to enter Germany and Munich, where
our quick look into Oktoberfest found us among nasty drunken louts each
of whom seemingly had hand four hands: one to chug-a-lug beer; one to
smoke foul smelling cigarettes; one to quaff horrible-bleeding-raw
sausages; and one to punch someone in the face. From what we saw,
Oktoberfest was a place for nasty males seeking to “get smashed on beer”
and then smash another male to break his nose. Thus, we fled for our lives
as the brutes began to threaten anyone who looked at them.
Then on September 30th, I took the plane to from Munich to Paris
to take a bus to Bordeaux to meet the family, which had invited me to
France.
Jim (and JP) also left the same day for Jim to arrive in time to
go from the airplane to open and begin teaching his Fall Quarter class at
UCLA. But he promised to call daily and return to join me again in ten
weeks.
In the meantime, I made a trip to Paris to request political asylum
in France, but a grey-faced judge rejected my request, saying that the
petitioner must file with the help of a lawyer.
To complicate matters in Bordeaux, the French Security Agent
there was investigating me, a lone woman, as a possible SPY sent by
Romania to “monitor activities at the Port of Bordeaux. When he told
that, if I pleased him in unmentionable ways, he would not deport me to
Romania but arrange my legal status in France, I immediately told Jim on
his next telephone call.
To resolve our problem, Jim called his Paris friend Gérard
Chaliand, a former visiting professor at UCLA, whose real job involved
traveling the world for French Security to report on his professorial
travels that took him to all continents. Gérard immediately called French
Security to report on the illegal approach to me by their Agent in
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 237
Bordeaux. That same day the Agent came to apologize profusely to me
in the best manner that he could muster in his pitiful condition. He begged
me not to have him fired for his proposition to me. I could see him looking
at me in truly puzzled way that implicitly said: “Who are you? How did
I make such a grave mistake in deciding that you, a lone Romanian
women could not have any power to reach my bosses in Paris?” I took
pity on him and told him that if he minded manners and watched from
affair to be sure that I was always safe, he would not be fired.
Jim returns to Europe December, 1991: His plan for advising eastern
european civic society about how to gain grants from U.S. foundations,
which hold the world’s largest pool of NGO development funds.
Even though it was December 11, 1991, when Jim returned,
France was in the midst what some in America call an “Indian Fall,”
warm with colorful fall leaves still on the trees. It was a beautifully bright
“fall day” when we left Bordeaux the next day to spend some days
visiting the Loire River with its many castles and incredible views.
Even during our photography of the Loire region, Jim began to
outline his New Plan (now our plan) to wit: PROFMEX Plan to Help
Eastern European “Foundations” become legally eligible to gain grants
from U.S. Tax Exempt Foundations following Jim’s “U.S.-Mexico Model
for Philanthropy.”
Indeed, Jim told me that recently when he had been in Mexico
City, he received an invitation to meet with Manuel Alonso Muñoz,
Executive Director of Mexico’s National Lottery,11 who when he heard
about Jim’s U.S.-Mexico Model, invited him to meet at the Lottery’s
historically famous ornate building. After an extended briefing by Jim,
Manuel told him that he had already called his own good friend Ronald
11 Mexico’s National Lottery is a Government-run Public Charity and funder of new
research.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 238
G. Hellman, Professor of Sociology in the Graduate School at the City
University of New York, to ask him for an evaluation of Jim and his
Mexico-U.S. Model for Philanthropy. Ironically, it was only then when
he realized that Ron was (and is today) Jim’s PROFMEX Vice-President
for Strategic Planning. With that news and Jim’s stellar briefing, Lic.
Alonso asked if the Lottery could make a series of generous grants to
PROFMEX in order to help fund the expansion of Jim’s Model to Eastern
Europe, 12putting Mexico into an innovative new light.
Manuel Alonso was appreciative of the fact that Jim, while
serving as Consultant to the U.S. Council on Foundations, had become
involved since 1990 with his Model for helping Mexican Foundations
(including, for example, charities, human rights organizations, hospitals,
universities, biospheres, etc.) to re-write their constitution and by-laws to
be compatible with the U.S. tax requirement that they mirror U.S. Notfor-Private
Profit Organizations (NPPOs).
The question of “mirroring” involved Jim’s explanation that: As
NPPOs, U.S. Foundations are legally responsible for controlling
expenditure of funds granted to organizations that do not mirror the U.S.
foundations do not want to be involved in the day-to-day activities of its
grantees. Indeed, “ they want to transfer “expenditure responsibility”
(including misuse or illegal use of grant funds) to the recipient foundation
to which they grant funds but can only do so if the grant recipient
organization is deemed to have an “equivalent” legal structure to that of
the U.S. donor foundation.
Here is the background, according to Jim: 13 “In order to facilitate
the U.S. philanthropic activity needed during the 1970s and 1980s to help
12 The Lottery grants to PROFMEX totaled $100,000 dollars. 13 Jim Wilkie’s statement here is quoted from my formal Interview with him, September 17,
1992, in Transylvania, based upon his experience as Consultant to the U.S. Council on
Foundations. See:
Olga Magdalena Lazín, Decentralized Globalization: Free Markets,
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 239
speed world development, the U.S. Secretary of Treasury and the IRS
formulated provisions that resulted in changing and/or interpreting the
Internal Revenue Code (IRC) to freely permit U.S. foundations to grant
funds abroad, if they meet the following special proviso:
U.S. NPPOs can themselves make a legal “determination” that
the foreign organization receiving the U.S. grant be “determined” to be
“equivalent” to an NPPO described in Section 501(c)(3)14 of the U.S.
Internal Revenue Code.”
Further, Jim pointed out that, “while this proviso has worked well
for big U.S. grant-making foundations that place costly offices and staff
around the world (such as Rockefeller and Ford Foundations), it has
worked less well for foundations that have had to send their lawyers to
meet with their legal counterparts in prospective ‘equivalent
organizations, the legal cost of making such a determination often
reaching $25,000 [or, by 2016, much, much more] for each new
organization to receive funds from the U.S. NPPO. If that determination
is favorable, the U.S. NPPO can transfer funds to the equivalent
organization, just as it can to any other approved U.S. NPPO, and along
with the transfer of funds to the recipient organization goes the transfer
of responsibility over how the funds are spent.”
U.S. Foundations and the Rise of Civil and Civic Society From Rockefeller’s Latin America
To Soros’ Eastern Europe (Los Angeles: UCLA, Classic PHD thesis, 2001), pp. 122-125.
This book scheduled in 2016 for publication by PROFMEX at
http://www.profmex.org/webjournal_listedbyvoldat.html
14 “Equivalent,” as Jim noted, means that the foreign NPPO meets (A) the test of funding at
least one of the following goals” for types of projects supported Health-Education-WelfareHuman
Rights-Science and Religion-Economy-Environment-Ecology-PublicationLiterature-Charity;
and (B) meets the test that no part of the foreign NPPOs expenditures
benefit private persons-- except for payment of reasonable expenses to cover goods and
services needed by the NPPO to legitimately conduct the operations chartered in its Articles
of Incorporation and By-Laws.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 240
Transfer of ‘Expenditure Responsibility’ from the U.S. Donor NPPO
to the Foreign Recipient NPPO.
The ability of U.S. NPPOs to avoid costly expenditure
responsibility, as Jim told, is one of the factors that have helped make
American grant-making foundations so important in the world. Thus,
U.S. NPPOs have been enabled to avoid becoming ensnarled in
accounting processes and audits, which are better done by the foreign
organization that receives and administers the U.S. NPPO grant of funds.
In this manner, said Jim, the U.S. NPPO is free to focus its
energy on evaluating the substance of its grant programs. The ability of
grant-making foundations to transfer Expenditure Responsibility to other
NPPOs is the main reason that they generally prefer (and require) that
their funds be granted only to approved organizations rather than to
individuals or to non-approved organizations.
The above views, Jim said, do not mean that U.S. NPPOs are
unable to grant funds to an organization that is not equivalent to a U.S.
NPPO (or make grants to individual scholars, artists, or writers either at
home or abroad), but to do so adds a complication to the grant-making
process. Rather than passing on the Expenditure Responsibility (as the
U.S. NPPO does when it makes grants to another NPPO or U.S.
equivalent), the Expenditure Responsibility remains with the donor
NPPO when it makes a grant to an organization that is not an NPPO (or
its U.S. equivalent) or to an individual.
In the unlikely case where the donor NPPO retains Expenditure
Responsibility, then, Jim told me in my interview with him on September
17, 1991, the donor foundation has to concern itself with costly financial
oversight involved, which may problematic whether of in or outside the
USA.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 241
On to Paris and the world to meet with NPPO leaders about new
foundations
Jim and I arrived in Paris on December 15, 1991, to meet with
Jim’s contacts at the American Embassy, who heard about our research
and suggested that Jim meet also with their counterparts at the U.S.
Embassy in Mexico City. They agreed to help begin to our new Plan to
expand to Eastern Europe and Russia Jim’s successful Model for TaxFree
Flow of Nonprofit Funds, the example being what he negotiated
(with the U.S. Council on Foundations and the U.S. and Mexican
Treasury Departments), as analyzed above.
It is important for me to say here that George Soros and his
decentralized donations to his 41 semi-autonomous “national
foundations”15 (exemplified in Romania, Hungary, and Russia) have been
built following the IRS proviso and regulations discussed above. Also,
Soros’ “National Foundations” require that national Government charter
the independent role as NGOs.
In contrast, the flowering of thousands of independent
“Foundations” in Eastern Europe since 1989 has grown from groups
looking for funds from the many U.S. Foundations that do not have the
Soros/New York link with its Foundations in many nations, all of which
operate in Soros’ closed loop. Few of these new Foundations have the
Soros knowledge and financial resources to set up the By-Laws and Legal
Status needed for the thousands Foundations desiring to tap into funding
by U.S. Foundations.16 However, since 2013, Soros’ has organized an
15Administered by NGO Civic Activists in each country but reporting to Soros
Foundation/New York City to justify each yearly budget. 16 The Soros Open Society Foundations in 44 countries benefit from the fact that Soros
himself has lived up to his commitment since1986 (to 2016 and ongoing) to donate half of
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 242
office to work with shared Global Funds (for food, migration, etc.)
outside the non-Soros frameworks to help poor areas and countries to
stave off crises.
Before we left Paris on December 19, 1991, we met with Gérard
Chaliand to personally thank him for having made the Bordeaux Security
agent reexamine his whole approach to his life.
Further, with Gérard, we worked out a plan to arrange for me to
become a U.S. resident and obtain U.S. citizenship nine years after my
arrival in Los Angeles, October 1992. He recommended that my case by
handled in In Los Angeles by one of America’s most knowledgeable and
effective Migration Attorneys—Cynthia Juárez Lange, today Managing
Partner, Northern California, for the Fragomen Del Rey, Bernsen &
Loewy LLP Legal Office located in San Francisco. Cynthia is a
personable genius.
In our travels in December 1991 and from March to June 1992
we met NPPO leaders in the European Union to better understand how
foundations work under unique laws in each county rather than in any
rational manner for the whole EU, we went to Marseilles, Nice,
Villfranche-sur-Mer, Cap-Ferrat, Monaco, La Rochelle, Andorra, Sevilla,
Madrid, Trujillo, El Escorial, Avila, and Segovia.
On September 3. 1992, we arrived at the U.S. Consulate in Paris,
where the U.S Consulate in Mexico had arranged with Jim for my U.S.
eligibility for residence to be issued. Also, the Mexican Consulate
General in Paris issued me my residence papers to enter and leave Mexico
freely, as arranged by Jim with the Mexican Consular Office in Mexico
City.
his profits ($13 billon) for their activities, his personal wealth in 2016 estimated to be $25
billion. See https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/about/expenditures
Also, for the details of Soros $930.7 million dollar Open Society Foundations 2016 Budget,
which can be found by searching online for this title.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 243
By September 7, 1992, we were Romania for meetings with
Civic Activists in Sighet (where I finally returned after “escaped” with
Jim in December 1991).
From March to June 1993, we met with NPPO leaders in
Budapest, Sighet, and Varna (Bulgaria), Bucharest, and St. Petersburg. In
Moscow (June 21-14, 1993), Jim appointed Professor Boris Koval
(Director of the Latin American Institute of the Russian Academy of
Sciences), to be PROFMEX Representative in Russia. Koval had invited
us to Moscow and introduced us to his own Security Chief to be our
translator and guide. Thus Security Chief was a fascinating person who
had been former head of the KGB Office in Iran, 1979-1989.
Jim, who always wore his Mexican guayabera shirt with or
without a suit, was seen to be “authentically Mexican” in our meetings
and discussions about NPPOs and the Soros Open Society Foundations
in Russia success in Russia (1987-2002) and problems of the Soros
Foundations in Russia since 2003, when, under Government pressure, he
was phasing out of operation active programs.
When on November 30, 2015,17 Russia’s Prosecutor General’s
Office classified the Soros Open Society Foundation as an “undesirable”
organization, it closed the possibility of Russian individuals and
institutions from having anything to do with any Soros initiative or
programs… [Because it constituted] a threat to the foundations of
Russia’s Constitutional order and national security….
Prosecutors [then] launched a probe into Soros Foundation
activities….18 [and in July 2015], after Russian senators approved the socalled
“patriotic stop-list” of 12 groups that required immediate attention
over their supposed anti-Russian activities, [the following U.S.
17 See https://www.rt.com/politics/323919-soros-foundation-recognized-as-undesirable/ 18 Ibid.
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 244
organizations] realized that they would soon be banned in Russia: [the
U.S.] National Endowment for Democracy; the International Republican
Institute; the National Democratic Institute; the MacArthur Foundation,
and Freedom House.
The American hedgefunds mogul George Soros issued from
London the following Press Release on November 30, 2015: 19
Contrary to the Russian prosecutor’s allegations, the Open
Society Foundations have, for more than a quarter-century, helped
to strengthen the rule of law in Russia and protect the rights of all. In the
past, Russian officials and citizens have welcomed our efforts, and we
regret the changes that have led the government to reject our support to
Russian civil society and ignore the aspirations of the Russian people.
Since 1987, Open Society has provided support to countless
individuals and civil society organizations, including in the fields of
science, education, and public health. Open Society has helped finance a
network of internet centers in 33 universities around the country, helped
Russian scholars to travel and study abroad, developed curricula for early
childhood education, and created a network of contemporary art centers
that are still in operation.
This record speaks for itself. We are honored to have worked
alongside pioneering citizens, educators, and civil society organizations
that embody Russian creativity, commitment, and hope.
“We are confident that this move is a temporary aberration; the
aspirations of the Russian people for a better future cannot be suppressed
and will ultimately succeed,” said George Soros, founder and chairman
of the Open Society Foundations. Despite all efforts made by Soros and
his organizations, he has been banned from Russia.
19 See: https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/press-releases/russia-cracks-down-opensociety
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 245
Once with the reset of the Cold War, in 2012, when Putin was
reelected as Russia’s President, Putin’s first movement was to ban all
Soros organizations which were impeding his expansion onto Crimeea.
Back in Mexico City for the 1994 PROFMEX Event featuring
Eastern Europeans interested in the U.S.-Mexico Model for NPPOs, we
convened, July 28-29, for our meeting on “Development of Mexico as
seen from the World,” Co-sponsored by UCLA and Mexico’s Consejo
Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología.
This Conference was held at Mexico City’s María Isabel
Sheraton, with 70 participants from Mexico and the United States, and
which I co-organized with Jim.
The following invitees from Eastern Europe came from Hungary
Zoltan Karpati, Professor of Sociology, Romania Mihai Coman,
University Dean, Roman Romulus, Consul General in Mexico,
Alexandru Lazín, PROFMEX-- England and Romania, Lia Stan, Investor
from Bristol, England.
Highlights of the event came frequently as we turned our gaze
from Salón A with his all-window view from the top floor to discuss the
anti-government protest marches up and down Reforma Avenue past the
Angel Monument below.
Further, our group enjoyed the invitation of Mexico’s Attorney
General, Jorge Madrazo Cuéllar to visit him at his headquarters where we
personally discussed and raised questions about the street blockages in
front of our María Isabella Hotel.
In December 1997, we continued to invite world scholars
especially interested in economic matters, as well as in the U.S.-Mexico
NPPO Model to participate with us at the:
IX PROFMEX-ANUIES Conference
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 246
Hosted by Governor Víctor Manuel Tinoco Rubí in Morelia,
Michoacán.
México y el Mundo
Mexico and the World
December 8-13, 1997
With hundreds of participants and Attendees from all
continents. Special Guests were invited from:
Russia: Boris Koval, who recalled with excitement the visit of Jim and I
to Moscow in June 1993.
China: Sengen Zhang, Hongzhu Huang
Korea: Kap-Young Jeong
Japan: Soichi Shinohara, Osamu Nishimura, Yasuoki Takagi
Indonesia: Lepi T. Tarmidi
Argentina: Eugenio O. Valenciano
Bolivia: Antonio J. Cisneros
Jim and I have been involved with many academic activities, but
those are beyond the scope of my analysis here of Jim’s role in extending
PROFMEX around the globe, especially to Europe and Russia.
My courses taken under Jim, and Prof Carlos Alberto Torres,
Prof. Richard Weiss, and Ivan T Be rend, at UCLA led me to the M.A. in
Latin American Studies (1996) and PHD in History (2001)
With publication of one of my books, as sole author, La
globalización se descentraliza: Libre mercado, fundaciones, sociedad
cívica y gobierno civil en las regiones del mundo (2007) Por Olga
Magdalena Lazín. Prólogo de James W. Wilkie; and the second book, coauthored
with James W Wilkie, book full of illustrations and images that
reflect my travels with Jim La globalización se amplia (2011), By James
W. Wilkie and Olga Magdalena Lazín. Preface de Rafael Rodríguez
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 247
Castañeda, with you Jim, I know that much researching and writing
awaits us in our projects around the world….
Thanks, Jim
This work has shown how U.S. Tax Exempt Organization (TEO)
law has evolved to become the most important in the world owing to its
flexibility. Where the laws of most countries require prior legal
authorization to launch in a new direction, the United States TEO law
recognizes no such limit. Thus, U.S. TEO law, unlike most other
countries, is never trying to make legal what is already underway and
working in the world. The USA and now Mexico, which together have
signed the first collaborative agreement, which is the blueprint for
NPPOs.
This field experience has been crucial for my Dissertation. Here is an
ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION
Decentralized Globalization. Free Markets, U.S. Foundations,
and The Rise of Civil and Civic Society From Rockefeller's Latin
America To Soros' Eastern Europe
By Olga Magdalena Lazin, Doctor in History, University of
California, Los Angeles, 2001.
This work has shown how U.S. Tax Exempt Organization (TEO)
Law has evolved to become the most important in the world owing to its
flexibility, where the laws of most countries require prior legal
authorization to launch in a new direction, United States TEO law
recognizes no such limit. Thus, U.S. TEO law, unlike most other
countries, is never trying to make legal what is already underway in the
world. The USA and now Mexico, which together have signed the first
Olga Magdalena Lazín
Wilkie: historia, economía y elitelore 248
Fair Trade agreement in 1994. A new Era is opening, where the
environment’s safety comes first, by the people, for the people of the
earth.
Copyright 2010 Olga Lazín
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