225 45 52MB
English Pages 336 [328] Year 2013
EROS, MAGIC, AND
THE MURDER OF PROFESSOR CULIANU
k
On May 21, 1991, popular University of Chicago Divinity
School Professor loan Culianu was murdered execution-style on CdfTipUS* terrified students,
The crime stunned the school,
and mystified the FBI. The
case remains unsolved. In Eros, Magic, and the
Murder of Professor Culianu, Ted Anton pieces together the evidence and shows that the murder is in fact
what Culianu's friends suspected
along: the
first political
all
assassination of a
professor on American soil.
Anton, who has served as an expert on the Culianu case for ABC, PBS, NPR, Radio France International, and Chicago and television, has
since
case
its is
Romanian
been investigating the murder
occurrence. (His research into the
being used by the FBI in
its
continuing
investigations.) This book traces Culianu's
life
from his privileged childhood in Romania,
through his days at the University of Bucharest,
where he
first
encountered the methods of
Securitate surveillance, to his time at the University of Chicago, where, as a handpicked
successor to Mircea Eliade, he was becoming a
renowned scholar
how Culianu
in his
own
— an expert on
right.
Anton shows
magic and the
I-
ehos, magic INI)
THE
MUKDtiU
PKOFESSOK CIJLIANU
'"""' ••';.
.-'
'- 1 .-
' "
: -
EROS, MAGIC,
& THE
OF PROFESSOR
CULIAM Northwestern University Press Evanston
;,•
'•:•"''?'.
Northwestern University Press Evanston, (
opvright
Illinois
©
60208-42 10
1996 by Ted Anton
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
iSBNO-8101-1396-1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Anton, Ted. Eros, magic, and the p.
murder of Professor Culianu
/
Ted Anton,
cm.
isbn 0-8 101- 1 396-1
(alk.
paper)
2 Culianu, loan P. — Assassination. P. 3 Religion — Romania — — — historians Religion United States Biography. 4. historians 6. Occultism — Biography. 5 Murder victims — United States — Biography. — Study and teaching — History— 20th century. 7. Magic Study and 8. Religion — Study and teaching — teaching — History — 20th century. 1
.
Culianu, loan
.
.
.
History — 20th century. century.
I.
BL43.C84A3
9.
Romania — Politics and government — 20th
Title.
1996
2oo'.92— dc 20
96-9432 CIP
The paper used
in this publication
meets the
minimum
American National Standard for Information Sciences Printed Library Materials, ansi Z39.48-1984.
requirements of the
— Permanence 0/ Paper for
Imaginary universes are so
than
much more beautiful
this stupidly constructed
real one.
— G. H. Hardy, A Mathematician's Apology
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Note on Method
ix
xiii
Prologue 5
book one: The Crime, May 1
Religion as a System 9
2
The Aftermath
21, 1991
22
book two: Youth, 1950-1972 3
The Art of Memory
4
University Days,
5
6
1
29
967- 1 97 1 41
"Dark People, Very Clever" 50
A Dream of Paradise book three:
58
Arriviste,
1972 -1986
7
The Myth of the West:
8
Chicago, Paris, and Mircea Eliade 81
9
Holland:
Italy,
1972-1975 ji
A Rising Young Intellectual,
10
1484 and 1984 106
11
Abuses of Interpretation 114
12
Pursuit, 1985 121
13
The Emerald Game, 1986
14
The Book of Life 138
1976- 1983
9-?
124
book four: "Like Being Famous," 1987-1991 1
"All in the
World
Is
Mystery Again," 1987 149
16
Religion and Science:
17
Divination, 1989 172
18
The Fourth Dimension, 1988
"Revolution," Christmas 1989 182
162
\i
ii
Contents
19
Free World, 1990 190
20
Scoptophilia 201
21
A Forking Path
22
Memories of the Future 214
23
24
210
"Dr. Faust: Great Sodomite and Necromancer" 222
Roses
at the
Door 255
book
five:
Games of the Mind, 1991-1996
25
After-death Journeys 245
26
Under the Sign of Capricorn: Suspects 256
27
The
28
Games
Investigation 267
of the
Mind 272
Endnote 279
Works by loan Culianu 281 Index 293
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
During nearly
of research
five years
among them was
people. First
incurred debts to countless
I
the family of loan Petru Culianu.
Thereza Culianu-Petrescu and Hillary Wiesner devoted long, pahours to
tient
tremendous
this project, offering
thank Elena Bogdan and
Dan
assistance. I also
Petrescu in Romania; Nikki Wiesner
and Dorothy and Kurt Hertzfeld
in the
United
States;
and Carmen
Georgescu and her son, Andrei Westerink, in Holland. In three
homes
in three countries, I
was welcomed not only
as a researcher
I am grateful. Among the people who helped me were those who read
but also as a friend, and for this support
the manuscript or portions thereof.
Mircea Sabau,
Norman Manea,
drafts of
They include Andrei Codrescu,
Vladimir Tismaneanu, Dumitru
Radu Popa, Mircea Raceanu, Sorin Antohi, Carlin Romano, Zarifopol-Johnston,
Mac
Linscott Ricketts,
Ken
Starck,
Ilinca
Jim
Fair-
hall,
Anne Calcagno, Ara Sismanian, Andrei Oisteanu, Greg Spin-
ner,
Michael Allocca, and Gwendolyn Barnes. They offered
icism, translation skills,
and encouragement. Others
time to this book include I
offer
phy and
who
Umberto Eco and John Crowley.
tremendous thanks to
my research
to several translators.
Mac
assistant Eileen
Stefan,
Anne Frangois-Nizou,
eanu, Alexander Cepeda,
while
I
was on
and the
offer a very special thanks to Jacqueline
my Romanian
and
as well as the
its
Stan,
students
late Virgil Stefanescu. I
Renowden.
For financial support, I want to thank the United tion Service
Marian
Cristina Bellu, Viurica Secel-
Clement Mirza,
my Fulbright grant,
Mur-
Linscott Ricketts translated
Culianu's political articles. Other translators included
Olga
crit-
gave their
States Informa-
Fulbright Program, particularly Raluca Vasiliu,
Fund
for Investigative Journalism,
and the DePaul
Summer Research Program. I give the deepest thanks to my friends at DePaul who expressed encouragement at every moUniversity
ment
it
was needed, especially Gerald Mulderig, Richard Jones,
Eileen Seifert, and Stan Damberger. In the distinguished circle of loan Culianu's friends,
I
wish to
\
kkmrwledgments
.
acknowledge Miron Bogdan, §erban Anghelescu,
Silviu Angelescu,
Gustavo Casadio, Elemire Zolla, Grazia Marchiano, Gianpaolo Romanato, David Brent, Jennifer Stevenson, Michel Meslin, and Stelian Plesoiu.
also
I
want to thank David Funderburk, Jonathan
Leon
Rickert, Matei Calinescu, Cristina Ilioia, Ivanovici,
Moshe
Idel,
Horia Patapeivici, Anca Giurescu, Peter
Noomen, Cicerone
Gross, Willem
Volovici, Victor
Poghirc, Nestor Ratesh, Vasilei
Boiluanu, Ion Coja, Petre Bacanu, Ion Pacepa, Liviu Cangeopol,
Alexander Ronnett, Mircea Marghescu, Jean Ancel, Gabriella
Adame§teanu, and Cornel Dumitrescu. Others who
Dan
cluded Petre Roman,
Petreanu,
assisted
me
in-
Dana Sismanian, Carmen
Sabau, Dorothy Margraf, and Sorin Avram.
Among
historians of religion,
chael Fishbane,
Wendy
John
Collins,
I
want
to thank Jerry Brauer,
Lawrence
Doniger, Franklin Gamwell, Clark Gilpin, Alan Segal, An-
thony Yu, and David Tracy. And in the very University of Chicago students,
anu's
Mi-
Sullivan, Carol Zaleski,
I
special
owe
a
world of Culi-
huge debt to
Nathaniel Deutsch, Joel Sweek, Karen Anderson, Jim Egge, Karen de
Leon
Jones, Margaret Arndt-Caddigan, Alexander Arguelles,
Stephanie Stamm, Liz Wilson, Elise La Rose, and others. I
want
telling
especially to thank
for
me of their memories.
In law enforcement,
McGuire, Stein,
Cathy O'Leary and Erika Schluntz
I
wish to thank police detective Robert A.
retired police captain Frederick Miller, the late
Robert
and FBI special agents Paul Dimura and especially John L.
Bertulis.
To
gratitude.
all
And
I
those
who
shared their time with me,
I
offer
remind the reader that any mistakes are purely
my my
own.
For support of
this project, I
thank the magazines Chicago and
Lingua Franca, including editors Gretchen Reynolds and Margaret Talbot.
The
biggest note of appreciation goes to
Harris, with a very special thanks to Angela Ray.
Nicholas Weir- Williams,
I
offer fondest gratitude.
my agent,
acknowledgment
to
longtime mentor,
Sam Vaughan.
At home dents
who
I
my editor Susan To my publisher,
want to thank
I
offer deepest
Ellen Levine, her associates, and to a
my DePaul
read parts of the manuscript.
University graduate stu-
Acknowledgments
Most of all,
I
want
to thank the people
ing these past five years.
came felt
to
My
who put up with me
parents, Bertha
xi
dur-
and Gus Anton,
my home and helped when I left for Romania. With heartI thank my
love for her understanding, criticism, and support,
wife, Maja.
NOTE ON METHOD
I
began work on the story of loan Culianu
half years
views in
I
in July
1
991. In four and
tape-recorded more than 150 conversations and inter-
five different countries,
and conducted many more.
memories and quotes conversations
that uses participants'
the author was not present naturally evokes questions:
you know what conversation
I
at
which
How
could
person was thinking, or what someone said in a
a
more than twenty years before
many
Relying in
A work
cases
on personal
the interview?
interviews,
I
checked what
heard against statements of other participants and published
Though
sources.
individual recollections can be affected
garies of perception or the passage of time,
by the va-
my best response was to
many different people as I could — from government officials to family members — and to address con-
try to talk again
and again to
flicting versions
of any single event.
the memories of different people, or accounts of historical
Still,
events, conflicted
on occasion. In such
random coincidences cance,
as
I
to
cases, or of the
seeming
which Culianu or others attached
signifi-
have attempted to present here more than one possible
interpretation of an event's meaning.
I
have also changed the names
of two minor figures and some details of their lives to protect their privacy.
What
follows
is
historical, intellectual,
my
and personal forces so
mately address the question:
swer that question.
attempt to explain the intersection of
It can,
What
is
intricate they ulti-
truth? This
book cannot an-
however, invite readers to explore a story
of religion, politics, and passion and draw their
own conclusions.
There was one notable exception to my goal of speaking to everyone, that of loan Culianu himself. his
While he
left a detailed
record of
thoughts and feelings from adolescence until his death, he also
language constructs a
cautioned students to understand that,
if
world, then any story
and
my portrait
I
relied
is
on
in part
an
artifice
a seduction.
To draw
his letters, journals, scholarly writings,
autobiographical stories, as well as on the testimony of people
and
who
knew him. Such material has its strengths and its limits, but it helped that
up
to his last days loan Culianu
was writing notes he did not
xiv
Note on Method
expect others to read. of his and our
lives.
almost as clearly as I
I
He
did so playfully, to test his understanding
These writings illuminated
never met loan Culianu.
tape, listened to
his inner
journey
might speak of my own. I
watched him on video, heard him on
hundreds of accounts of him, read countless
critical
analyses of his scholarship and teaching, and read and reread his
work.
My distance from a man who seemed so different to people at
different times lens,
meant that I did not view him through one
but rather through as
ing a composite portrait I
particular
many different lenses as I found. Compilfilled
with ambiguity and contradiction,
turned to a theory of science or history called complexity that
Culianu advocated for new scholars. While a traditionalist works backward, knowing the ending and that explains
it,
a
fitting
each piece into a puzzle
complexity scholar weighs different versions from
the viewpoints of
many
different players,
working forward to see
each action as a product of chance and constantly shifting choices.
This book veals truth,
is
about the ways perceptions shape history, time re-
and forgeries can become
self-fulfilling.
loan Culianu
spent a lifetime exploring the degree to which truth and fiction can
be the opposite of what questions about
him
we
think.
My goal
here
as faithfully as I illuminate
is
to preserve the
my answers.
EROS, MAGIC,
AND THE MURDER OF PROFESSOR CIJUANIJ
PROLOGUE
October, 1989. Chicago Prince's "Dirty
Mind" played on
and wine hung in the
rettes
air.
the stereo, and the smell of ciga-
The
room
apartment's living
fea-
tured dark oak paneling in what was once a luxury building in Chi-
Hyde
cago's
Park,
now
given over to gloom and shadow.
mirror flanked by wooden
A
large
pillars reflected the partygoers' faces.
few students stood in a small knot around Professor Culianu. specialized in divination practices.
him
to
tell
their futures.
working on him.
He
Some
A
He
of them were trying to get
kept shaking his head no.
No no, he said. You won't like
They
kept
it.
Finally he agreed to demonstrate the ancient Islamic art called
geomancy.
A few
students followed
him
into the
bedroom, where
they sat on the floor or on a platform bed where people had thrown
Everyone
their coats.
cards
from
floor.
He
ing that
his
felt a little giddy.
Culianu pulled
European-cut sport jacket and
took off his
loafers.
a
deck of
sat crosslegged
on the
At the party he had been so unassum-
many of them had not realized he was
a professor.
He had found the cards in a back stall in Paris, he said, explaining that normally
geomancy was
practiced by drawing dots and lines
in the sand. Originating in the
Middle
East, the art
had been re-
discovered late in the Middle Ages and flourished during the Renaissance in
Italy.
The
cards were four inches high. Stars flickered
against a deep blue background a single black
On the front was either When the thinking behind
on the back.
dot or two black dots.
geomancy's modernist wisdom — that the cosmos was connected by invisible patterns
and human events could be predicted based on
simple, repeated mathematical steps
phers in Renaissance Florence,
it
— was
absorbed by philoso-
sparked a flowering of magic that
paralleled the rise of science.
Culianu was a shy quiet about his
life,
man
with a funny accent
who was
although he was one of the only teachers
was ready to chat with students about
their lives.
He
smile and dark eyes that seemed to look beyond you
He
unusually
had pale skin and high cheekbones and
had
a
who
dimpled
when he
spoke.
a gentle, enthusiastic,
4 Prologue
open manner. In
his lectures
members prepared
he digressed too much; other faculty
students better for exams. But to
Culianu, author of thirteen books and translations in
who
was the only scholar they knew
many five
students
languages,
studied religion as a real entity,
a driving force, in people's lives.
Once he had given a "What is
Religions Club.
people all
still
times,
buy into
show
talk to the Divinity School's
religion?" he had asked.
Why
it?
do
all
History of
"Why do rational
religions of
striking similarities to each other?"
humankind,
at
Most modern
scholars avoided such sweeping questions, seeking instead the cultural differences that influenced specific faiths.
Yet he claimed that
these broad questions "had practically called the discipline of the history of religions into being."
He said the reason for the similarity
many beliefs lay in the "unity of the operations of the human mind." One implication of his theory was that any "change in the in
system of religion would immediately affect that create history."
grammed
The mind shaped
all
the other systems
action,
and religion pro-
the mind.
Flanking him in the apartment bedroom were Greg Spinner, in shoulder-length hair, and Michael Allocca, with his beard and long black curls.
They had
on divination
asked Culianu to teach them a reading course
that quarter.
To
their surprise he
only one condition: he expected them to finish the course.
So they
thing accurate tonight.
It
in particular
tell
had agreed, setting
the future in order to
hoped he would say some-
would make the
party.
He began with the party host, who was intrigued. He asked her to concentrate on one question that was most on her mind, and to pick
out her cards. Slowly he laid out her cards on the
floor.
He
paused,
studying them. "You're concerned that someone with some power in
your
about
life is
going to hurt you," he
said.
"You don't have
to
worry
it."
Her
heart leaped. She
felt
she
knew
exactly
which professor he
was talking about. Culianu "I
need
said.
a cigarette," she said.
He read some other people's cards, some impressively, some not. When he uncovered another student's concealed panic over his graduate studies, for instance, no one was surprised. Anyone could
Prologue 5
have told you
that.
When the party was in hill swing, a new student
who had been hanging back asked him
to try for her.
Again he told
her to concentrate on the question that was most on her mind.
Spinner and Allocca as
he
laid
sat
behind him, each watching over
out her cards.
He
studied them. "You're sure
others to hear this?" he asked. She "I think
we should send
a shoulder
you want
shrugged and laughed nervously.
the others out," he said.
my life's an open book," she said. right, close the door." He turned to
"No, no, "All
Michael Allocca,
a
them: Greg Spinner,
few others. "What is said here does not leave
this
room." They smiled uncertainly. "You're humiliating yourself," he said. "It's really painful,
and
it's
getting worse."
"Whoa." "You're involved in a love triangle, and
coloring your
it's
life.
You've got to get out of it."
Her
face
went white. She looked around
"knocked the wind out of me," she
ward
to check the cards.
in panic.
later said.
His accuracy
Greg leaned
for-
But loan cut him off before he could say
anything.
At the end of the
party,
Greg spotted Culianu putting on
shoes to leave. "loan!" he called.
his
"Come on, how does it work?"
"It works because it works."
"That's not what
were
I
mean. You read those cards exactly
as
they
laid out."
"It's
mind.
It's all
in the mind."
Greg Spinner could never accept often heard
it.
His
teacher always said
that answer, it
though he had
with a smile of irony. Once,
driving with Culianu, Spinner had stumbled onto the bluntest
way
would
that
to ask his question: "Look, loan, if I shot you in the head,
be in the mind too?"
He smiled.
"Well, yes and no," he said.
They never knew when he was
playing and
what he normally was — a serious scholar ing divinity schools.
He
began
at
when he was being
one of the world's lead-
his career as a follower of school
legend Mircea Eliade, one of the world's premier historians of religions of the twentieth century. Culianu was bidding to
seminal
if
controversial thinker in his
books a paradigm
shift in the
own
right,
become
a
proposing in his
study of history and ideas. Some,
6
Prologue
especially in Europe,
proach.
)thers,
(
thought he offered an important new ap-
even on the
faculty, criticized his
vised students not to take his courses. that
no one commented on
it,
The
methods and ad-
tension was so obvious
observed one student. But
if
you
wanted to position yourself well, students learned, you did not work with Culianu.
To a
select
group of students and scholars, though, loan Culianu
was what higher education was he
you had
said,
because to him tionally.
He
it
to practice
all
about.
it.
He
To understand a field truly,
was interested
in the occult
worked more often than could be explained
wanted
to understand why, but that
part of what he wanted.
He wanted
behind prophecy and religious
its
a small
to understand the logic systems
movements and the reason
hold on believers and influence over events. that science was, in
was only
ra-
He
for their
reminded students
beginning, considered an occult
art.
In
fact, it
was the Renaissance magicians' image of the universe, that events could be manipulated by theorems, that set the stage for Galileo.
"He was on
a quest,"
"Not an academic But did he
was
it all,
was
quest, but
how
student Karen Anderson put
really believe in that stuff?
really, just a
game?
it.
a real quest."
That was their question.
Or
/ expected
to
wake up and see my good mother
bending protectively over my bed at home.
and I will expect her cool and soft
will be to the end,
hand to
dispel evil even at the
— LP.
Culianu and H.
"The Emerald
And so it
hour of my death.
S. Wiesner,
Game"
RELIGION AS A SYSTEM
Every once in mica-bright,
warm
a
gift
while a Chicago spring offers one perfectly
of a day.
The
air will
be cool and fragrant
with smells of cotton wood, prairie wind, and whitefish off the inland sea of
Lake Michigan. The sun
will glint off the lake
with a hint of
immortality, casting such sharply geometric shadows
on the dra-
matic skyline that the city will look surreally emerald, as ing
itself
again to reclaim the great romance
it
if
rous-
once offered — of
"
III
10
nature
CRIMI
I
new
metropolis, gangsters, and
s
schools of
art, literature,
and economics. If there
was
reclaimed in
1
a place
991,
it
where one might look
was the campus of the University of Chicago.
Founded one hundred years laureates,
alumni
1
1
who
earlier, the
school boasted 64 Nobel
American Academy of Arts and Sciences members,
3
included Philip Glass and Susan Sontag, and teachers
the late Enrico Fermi and
like
for that promise to be
Leon Lederman.
Isolated
on the
city's
South Side, the campus neighborhood featured the most seminaries per square mile of any spot in the world.
The
reason for the clustering of seminaries around campus was
the university's Divinity School,
who
home
of scholars
like
Paul Tillich,
popularized a vision of Christian faith in the atomic era; Paul
Ricoeur, the French thinker Eliade, the
New
Romanian
"exile
on theological philosophy; and Mircea from
eternity," as
No one thinker had
York Times.
power of the "sacred" or the deeper
he was dubbed by the
so profoundly studied the lost level
of life in modern times as
the author of such widely read books as The Sacred and the Profane
and The Myth of the Eternal Return.
May
2
1
the annual
at the Divinity
School was marked by the excitement of
book sale and the
anticipation of term's end. Outside the
gothic Swift Hall, graduate students chatted in groups or lounged
on the stone
Leafy oak trees shaded a tour guide
steps.
cussed campus
who
dis-
safety with a group of high school juniors and their
parents.
Inside class
Room
202 of Swift Hall, loan Culianu was finishing up his
Fundamentals of Comparative Religion, in which the
subject was gnosticism.
discovered in the
He
modern
story, these scrolls
discussed the
Nag Hammadi
day's
texts, re-
era in 1945. "As if in a classic detective
had been hidden for centuries because they
of-
fered variations of the Bible, challenging the Christian church's idea
of truth," he
said.
The
gnostics saw
escape from the ignorant gods
who
life as
sabotage, rebellion, and
ruled the world.
gnostic knowledge," he concluded, "was to use
change the world." "
He
it.
It
"The point of was meant to
read aloud from the prologue of one
text:
'These are an offering to an ideal order that completely transcends
life
will
as
we know it
Whoever finds the interpretation of these
not experience death.'
texts
n
Religion as a System
After class Culianu and
book sale.
It
was
some of his
Hyde Park event,
a
bers, retired professors, scholars,
down
to the
attracting students, staff mem-
who toiled in or lived The crowd filed into the
and others
near the great university's offices and Swift
students headed
labs.
Common room, lined with oppressive oak wainscoting, where
cas toffs like
Kenneth
Clark's
The Nude or Herbert Marcuse's One-
Dimensional Man lay stacked on tables and chairs, and on the
On
floor.
stereo speakers Ice-T blared, rattling the dust off portraits of
past deans.
At the Culianu.
graduate student Alexander Arguelles approached
sale
That afternoon Arguelles was from
the faculty, so he sought advice professors. "I'm nervous about "It's just a rite
back.
"It's
this,"
do
fear. You'll
Arguelles watched
him walk to
Culianu bounded up the main a
first thesis talk
his closest friend
he
among
to
the
said.
of passage." Culianu smiled and patted him on the
nothing to
been juggling
to give his
dozen different
fine.
the
See you in a couple hours."
stairs,
stairwell.
trying to feel reassured.
For several weeks he had
projects. Earlier in the
week he had
sponsored an international scholarly conference on "after-death journeys," the
first
religion conference
on campus in years. Entitled
Other Realms: Death, Ecstasy, and Otherworldly Journeys cent Scholarship,
it
featured speakers
from Barnard College, He-
brew University, Princeton, Notre Dame, and other talks
had
titles
Re-
in
schools.
The
such as "The Ascent of the Visionary" and "Tran-
scendence of Death." His students Greg Spinner and Michael Al-
"He demonstrated
locca catered the final dinner.
continuities in reports of otherworldly journeys
explanation," said a reviewer of Culianu's later
the worldwide
and demanded an
book on the
subject.
A university press wanted to publish the conference papers. He
had three books in press
journeys, another
at
once — the book on otherworldly
on gnosticism, and
a dictionary of religions.
He
had several more close to contract, including
a
clopedia of magic for Oxford University Press.
He was teaching two
courses, Otherworldly Journeys
multivolume ency-
and Out-of-Body Experiences and
Fundamentals of Comparative Religions, supervising several doctoral students,
his
and planning
his first trip in nineteen years
back to
home country of Romania. He was also planning to get married.
:
1
1
CRIME
I
1
His fiancee was I
larvard.
Ills
Hilary Wiesner, a graduate divinity student at
I
Quiet and
distant, she
had blossomed
in their relationship.
two of the forthcoming books and
coauthor on
of short fiction, she was planning to travel with
summer and have such
about the
a party!" trip.
where
Ia§i,
meet
to
his
numerous pieces
him
his family for the first time.
Europe
to
that
"We're going to
he would exclaim when he was feeling good
They would
see Transylvania
and
hometown of
his
grandfather and great-grandfather had directed the
country's oldest university. loan and Hillary had discussed such a trip often since the country's
1989 revolution.
Culianu made long telephone
him
pressed
to return.
before, he told her he
He
calls to his sister late at night.
She
kept changing his mind. Three days
was being threatened by
a far rightist
group
with which a former professor of his was closely associated. She
downplayed the danger: people were threatened kept his plane tickets.
"We
concluding remarks
said in his
still
mistake the space of the
we
inative realms. is
and
let on.
is
at the conference.
"Although we
in these tales for the space out-
no
historical truth
less
powerful than the
latter.
have their roots in these imag-
Every individual thinks part of a tradition and there-
thought by
history
mind
are learning the former
Identity, power,
fore
the time. So he
cannot say where these after-death journeys take place," he
had
side,
all
But he was more worried than he
it,
allowing us to perceive the obscure roots of
which go back to the dawn of Homo
exploration of our
mind space
is
sapiens.
And
yet, the
only at the beginning."
Culianu was also having some fun. Earlier in the month he had
been the featured scholar
at a national science fiction
the Hilton in Schaumburg, Illinois.
and participated in bad magic?"
He
disorder," he said.
conference at
He lectured on the
a panel exploring questions
such
Renaissance
as "Is all
defended magical practice: "Magic
is
"On the contrary, it reestablishes a peaceful coex-
istence
between the conscious and unconscious when
tence
under
is
The
magic
not about
this coexis-
attack."
conference's featured author, science fiction writer
John
Crowley, had asked Culianu to be the Special Scholar Guest. Crowley
had read Culianu's Eros and Magic in
eager to meet
its
author.
the Renaissance
The book was
dense and
and had been
difficult,
but
it
Religion as a System
"He
captured Crowley's imagination. nosis was possible, call
13
suggested a kind of mass hyp-
by means the Renaissance
called magical but
we
psychological, through the use of erotically charged images,"
Crowley
said.
friends. "I
Crowley
The two had met
a year earlier,
becoming
never had such an intense, sudden friendship in
said.
close
my life,"
For Culianu, who secretly wanted most of all to be
a
fantasy writer, the conference was a great inspiration. Participants in his conference sessions felt the
same way about him. Conference
organizer Jennifer Stevenson said that Culianu "hit you with such
somehow much richer and more
an impact, he made the world seem
mysterious than you ever imagined."
On
the last night of the conference, Culianu read his fiction for
time in America to a packed audience in a suite nicknamed
the
first
the
Dharma Buns Cafe. Cowritten with Hillary,
"The Language of Creation" and was
the story was called
to be published in National
Public Radio columnist Andrei Codrescu's magazine, Exquisite Corpse. It describes a scholar very
much
a "grey
on
a Lake," teaching at
whom many
and renowned Midwestern University," to
strange coincidences occur, almost real life.
Culianu, "forty years
like
old, living in a high-rise security building
The
story's
all
of which were based on his
main character comes
to possess an ancient
music box, which he believes contains a key to the language spoken
by God: the Language of Creation. Yet the three former owners of the box each
met with murder.
Although the narrator ually,
tries to
however, he begins to
break the code, he cannot. Grad-
feel
threatened by the strange oc-
currences or "charismata" he associates with the box, wondering
whether they signal some greater meaning than he
realizes.
The
"charisms" included the ability to divine events, but only petty ones like
whether
his
love charism,"
doorman will shave
his
mustache, and a "misplaced
which caused certain female students to develop un-
wanted crushes on him. Culianu read: "After
a certain
moment my
conviction of an occult connection between the charismata and the
box had become so powers against a I
solid that I
was tempted to make
distasteful political
might imminently resume the
fate
regime
a test of
its
The hypothesis that
of [the former owners] came to
haunt me." After much indecision, the narrator leaves the music box
THE CRIME
14
at a
yard sale and escapes to freedom from what had become an
intellectual prison
posed by
its
secret.
At the end of the conference, Hillary Wiesner noticed that her fiance
seemed
He
locked the keys in their rented
running.
He could not remember when
terribly distracted.
red Toyota while
it
was
still
they were to see each other next.
When
return to Cambridge.
He kept pressing her to stay, not to
he saw her
off"
at
O'Hare
airport,
he
looked sadder than she had ever seen him, as though he carried the
What
weight of the world on his shoulders.
he desperately needed,
she thought, was a good vacation.
At about quarter to one on
— a small,
Hall canteen
May
crowded, stuffy basement coffee shop with
Danish but good Kona
plastic-sealed
Culianu was in the Swift
21,
coffee, falafel,
and
a
buzz of
heated conversation. There he chatted with students, then took the
main
stairwell
He
up two
steps at a time back to the third floor.
stopped in his secretary's office at the end of the
quieter
up here. Classes were
He
were closed.
and walked to
asked
if
his office a
hall. It
and seminar room doors
in session,
he had any messages, picked up
Sitting at her desk, secretary
Gwen
member
Barnes listened to the dron-
dictating his
book chapter on
her headphones. She often worked through lunch because only way to stay ahead of her assignments. served, loan Culianu
black South Side Chicago, she had
him when they bright league.
first
met.
He
was by felt
far
had made her an
Of
it
was the
the three faculty
her favorite. Raised in
an instinctive empathy with
greeted her in the morning with
"Good morning, Gwendolyn!" and
He
his mail,
few yards away.
ing voice of another faculty
members she
was
a
treated her as a col-
editorial associate
on
his scholarly
quarterly, Incognita: International Journal for Cognitive Studies in the
Humanities.
He took her to lunch and remembered her birthday. He
encouraged her to earn her masters' degree. for twelve years, she
A university secretary
knew the academic world well enough to recog-
nize that his attitude toward his secretary
was not
typical.
Across from her another secretary was mouthing something at her.
Gwen
Barnes looked up and pulled off the headphones.
Religion as a System
15
"What?" "Did you hear that?" "Car backfiring," "It
sounded
room.
said the third secretary in the
Only more high-pitched."
like a firecracker.
Professor Jerry Brauer sat in his corner office, wearing his trade-
mark bow tie
he prepared for
windows
lead glass
and
as
his seminar.
to look out over the
a specialist in Puritanism,
he had
that he
was going to have to go to the
A former dean
sunny quad.
his
out and was reviewing it, concentrating.
He had opened his tall,
yellowed lecture outline
He gradually became aware men's room. He decided to
finish what he was working on.
was
It
a little after
one o'clock when he heard the loud pop.
kept working, but a part of his mind went off on
its
couldn't wait.
No. Can't
Gunshot? No. Can't be. Swift Hall, one
was not more than
It
He tried to
own.
decide what could cause such a sound: Car backfire? road's too far away.
five
minutes
later
He be,
o'clock.
when he decided he
He had to use the men's room. He headed up through
the swinging doors, taking the steep service
The
stairs.
steps
echoed. Downstairs an overflowing dumpster stood beside a door that
opened into the lobby; up above was another
doors.
The
stairs
were deserted.
He came
directly opposite the men's room.
A tall,
set of
swinging
out on the third
lanky young
floor,
man whom
Brauer did not recognize stood out in front. Brauer pushed the
bathroom door. The student grabbed
his arm.
"Don't go
in,
Pro-
fessor Brauer."
Brauer had already pushed in tory with
its
blue
stalls,
peered at the second
yellow
stall
hand dangled beneath the
far
enough
tile,
fluorescent lights.
from the window. stall
ing out from a turquoise shirt
to see the familiar lava-
It
A
was deathly
student quiet.
A
door, with curled white fingers pokcuff.
Blood made
a small pool
on the
floor.
"Something terrible's happened," "I
can see
that!
said the student.
We gotta help!" Brauer said.
"We already called for help." The student turned toward Brauer. He was short, blond, and very
THE CRIME
16
was Jim Egge.
scared. It
he
He
looked white as a sheet. "Dr. Brauer!"
"He's dead."
said.
"Who?
Who's dead?
"I'm not sure."
Suddenly
congregation of firemen, campus security
a
and paramedics came running down the
hall.
At
first
officers,
there were per-
haps five people, followed quickly by another group that included a
Chicago police sergeant and two beat cops. Everything happened
Within minutes
quickly. a
moment two Chicago
a
melee
in the hall.
"Jerry!" he said.
a
paramedic wheeled
in a stretcher. After
detectives stepped in.
By then
"What is
it?"
Brauer pushed him toward the detective. "This said.
there was
Clark Gilpin, the current dean, had arrived.
"What's going on?
is
our dean," he
We have to know who it is."
"Sure, but not right now. We're too busy."
Following them out came the paramedics with the stretcher.
oxygen mask covered the victim's the face.
The
The paramedic removed
victim's face
like a fifty-
wound
face.
the mask. Gilpin peered down.
had swollen gray and expressionless.
or sixty-year-old man.
He
looked
No blood-soaked cavity or glaring
revealed the violence of the death. Gilpin turned to Brauer.
"I don't
know him," he
"Well then,
said.
who does?" Brauer asked.
Jerry Brauer returned to the seminar waited, but
no one wanted
to discuss
room where
American
his students
revivalism.
kept hearing footsteps moving outside and a low hubbub. sale continued.
Afterward Brauer would think:
come running when the shot was fired? long to cordon off the building's
complete
his review
Why
They
The book
had no one
Why did it take the police so
exits? If
only he had not waited to
of his notes, he might have seen the
could not stop thinking about
Gwen
An
Clark Gilpin asked to look at
killer.
He
it.
Barnes never heard the shot. She
first
learned of
it
from
another secretary. Only two yards from the bathroom, they never
thought of it
as a
gunshot.
A young man came running in, telling her
to call the university police. It
seemed
to her that the security of-
Religion as a System
ficers
took forever to come. She called again. After hanging up she
went
hesitated, then
room
to look. In the men's
from the courtyard window, bathing the 1950s spreading from the fourth a
long
tile,
17
moment
stall,
sunlight streamed
floor
tile.
Blood was
shining in the fluorescent light. For
the scene held her
— the yellow and
black specked
the hand, and an unusual opal watch that looked
familiar. Just
then
loud rushing sound
a
somehow
made her jump out of her
skin — the urinals' automatic flush. She left.
Later she too saw the body on the stretcher. Despite the khaki trousers, turquoise striped shirt, yellow
and watch, she did not know
when
a
who
it
tie,
was.
maroon-bordered It
socks,
was almost 2:00 p.m.
Chicago patrolman asked to use her phone. As she talked
with another secretary, she overheard him spelling a name. "C-u-1-i-a, n-o,
A
a,
n-u-u, no, U!"
down
wave swept her up and carried her forward. She ran
main
steps, tears
streaming
down her
face,
the
not hearing herself
"Oh God, oh God. It's Mr. Culianu! No, no, not Mr. Not Mr. Culianu!" In the hall conversations stopped.
screaming: Culianu!
Gwen
rushed into
wail. "It's
it is!
it's
said.
not."
Yes
At 3:30 when
it is!"
his
the dean's office.
seminar had a break, Jerry Brauer strode
maybe loan Culianu, had committed
students could not believe
it.
Culianu?
One
to
The book sale crowd
still
moved
freely in
on the front
and out; the stereo
belted out concert announcements for the month.
A few policemen
patrolled the building while detectives Ellen Weiss and Al
questioned a student who had
suicide.
of the happiest
professors there? Small groups milled in the lobby and steps.
down
By then the rumor was spreading around the build-
ing that someone,
Most
Gilpin's office, her cries rising in a loud
Mr. Culianu!" she
"No, no, "Yes
Dean
McGuire
made the error of telephoning, hyper-
ventilating in his fear, to find out if the
rumor was true.
In his somber office Gilpin sat quietly in a swivel chair. Ashen, he
took a minute between telephone loan Culianu, Jerry," he
said.
calls.
"And
I
He stared at Brauer.
didn't even recognize
was
"It
him
." .
.
18
THE CRIME
"What happened?" "Well, the police think
"Did
they find the
"No, no,
there's
gun :
it
might be
suicide."
"
no gun."
"Where do they think the gun is?" who took it away." "They say maybe he had a friend "And implicate oneself in something like this? Suicide? He's .
.
.
just
got his green card, he's going back to see his family, he's getting
married
.
.
.
Wasn't he
sitting
on the
toilet?"
"Yeah."
"Come
on, what
take a gun, and stick
human being would go it
in the
in, pull his
back of his head?
pants down,
Where are
these guys
coming from?" "Well,
it
might be murder."
"Might be}"
The
initial suicide
television. After
aminer's report
report was in the newspapers, and
twenty-four hours, though,
came
in,
there was
when
no question.
it
was on
the medical ex-
was murder.
It
Greg Spinner and Michael Allocca noticed an ambulance outside Swift Hall when they unpacked groceries for the weekly Wednesday lunch for divinity students and
was to cover the theology of the
faculty.
ABC
That week's lunch
television series
After they finished, Patty Mitchell approached
Twm
Greg out
talk
Peaks.
in front of
building.
"Greg? Did you hear?"
"Hear what?" "loan committed suicide." "loan? Don't be ridiculous. last
person in the world
I
just
saw him
this
morning. He's the
who would commit suicide."
Mitchell gave him a funny look.
Greg walked
across the leafy quad to the Regenstein Library,
hardly giving a thought to Patty s rumor. his calendar a
reminder to
call
He remembered to note in
loan; they had a longstanding date to
get together as soon as his teacher's hectic settling into his study carrel,
friend,
life
calmed down. After
Greg saw another
Divinity School
Jason Gerber, approaching him. Jason's eyes were red.
"Greg," he burst out. "loan's committed suicide!"
Religion as a System
"Who's spreading this rumor? ridiculous. loan did not,
It's
suicide."
I just
would
heard
it
from Patty Mitchell.
not, could not, ever
But slowly Greg rose and headed
1
commit
back to find out exactly
what was going on.
Out on
the quad the spring air carried something soft, like the
mind
breath of memory. His
started to race.
Without knowing it he
ran a series of deductions, just as loan claimed the history of an idea or religion would follow.
Number
one: loan
would not commit
Number two: here were ambulance and, now, squad cars. Number three: two people had repeated a rumor loan was dead. If it suicide.
was
true, if
murder
.
.
.
Greg he was
loan was dead, then
Who
it
had to be murder.
would murder loan?
A year
earlier
getting into "dangerous territory" in
But what writing? Greg was running over now.
If it
was
he had told
some writing
One
look at
.
.
.
Gwen
Barnes's stricken face and his neat train of thought abruptly ended.
Later that day Culianu's students gathered on the steps of Swift Hall, crying, trying to console each other.
ging each other.
We
"We
just sat there,
hug-
couldn't speak," said Greg. Other students
came up, each pressing the other for news. There was little.
No gun,
no money stolen, no sign of struggle. In the evening the group headed over to Jimmy's, a favorite stu-
dent bar where loan had often gone with them after apart tables
from them
in the dark, seedy front
and some broken
editor of Incognita.
He
tioning. Nathaniel's
chairs,
class. Sitting
room, amid the scattered
was Nathaniel Deutsch,
assistant
did not join in their reminiscing and ques-
mother was East European, and
partly for that
reason loan Culianu had shared a special relationship with him. In the darkness Nathaniel listened to the others and stared blankly at the dusty editions of baseball encyclopedias and almanacs kept
on
He rested his head on his arms and began crying for relatives lost in the Holocaust. He did not, exactly, the shelf to settle bar arguments.
know why.
In Cambridge, Massachusetts, Culianu's twenty-seven -year-old
fi-
ancee, Hillary Wiesner, was in a deep afternoon sleep. Often loan
TH
20
CRIM
E
E
would telephone her that
he woke from
after
nap, describing a dream
a
would be exactly what she was doing, or explaining something
move or some obscure
significant about his next publishing
mology.
was part of the
It
fabric of
Hillary had hardly held hands with a man.
Her
friends described
women at Rad-
her as intense, otherworldly, and one of the smartest
men? No, none, not before
College. Incredibly funny. But
cliffe
cos-
with him. Before loan,
life
loan.
The phone She
rang, and she jumped.
sat bolt upright, frozen.
league, holder of the
Wendy
dreamless.
Doniger, loan's col-
in the faculty of the Di-
department member. "Hillary?
down. Are you
sit
Her sleep had been
was
Mircea Eliade chair
vinity School, a powerful
you better
It
sitting
Hillary,
down?"
"What?" There was been
a silence.
"I'm afraid
I
have to
tell
you
.
.
loan has
.
killed."
"What?" "I
.
.
.
I
.
.
.
Hillary, the police are asking if
who would do such a thing.
you know of anyone
I'm so terribly sorry ..."
For about one minute she couldn't breathe. Maybe
was ten
it
minutes. Oh, she finally thought. Tears couldn't come. She looked at
her wall, covered with pictures of him
Cairo, from the
mayeur and
Metra
Paris.
— from
train in Chicago,
from
Milan, Madrid,
Rome
and Cour-
He was grinning in front of the big American flag
she had bought him, "flown over the Capitol!" he liked to tors.
He was
giving her the
V for Victory sign he
was probably America's biggest patriot
.
.
.
liked to
tell visi-
make.
He
Slowly, methodically, she
began taking the pictures down.
Trustees office at Amherst College. again, her
By
work
in the
Board of
the time she had
hung up
She hung up and telephoned her mother
at
mother saying she was on her way, Hillary was already
thinking about packing her bags. She pulled out her suitcase,
with the O'Hare destination tag from her very
easily,
very
clearly, as
matics problem and
know
one might figure out
a difficult
it
mathe-
was right and
She had thought about
even discussed
still
dawned on her
instantly that the solution
true and something more, fated. tried to prepare herself,
last visit. It
it
before,
with her friends. You
Religion as a System 21
had to have
a
myth
for
your
life,
he once told
her,
some
discover to live by and turn to at your darkest moments. all this
time, just
when
derful for them, she find one.
everything seemed to have
story
Now,
become
so
you
after
won-
remembered. She had never taken the time to
Mnemosyne, said
the Greeks,
is
the
mother of
the Muses; the history of the training of this most
fundamental and elusive of human powers will plunge us into deep waters.
— Frances Yates, The Art of Memory
THE AFTERMATH
Every day students
left:
roses,
lilies,
scattered petals at Culianu's office door.
fresh bouquets, and
Chicago detectives Ellen
Weiss and Al McGuire stayed past midnight the sifting
through the evidence and conflicting rumors.
had apparently walked past Culianu's perched on sor's
first
head.
a toilet seat,
exit
The
entered the next
and pointed the gun down
From the entry and
left-handed.
stall,
few nights,
wounds, the
killer
killer stall,
at the profes-
appeared to be
The Aftermath 23
The
known
police district
as
Area
One on
Chicago's South Side
averaged some two hundred murders a year, mostly drug and gang
This one was unlike any other the police had encountered.
killings. It
yielded virtually
no
questing that no one
them
solid evidence. Detectives
that the professor
They found
found
note re-
a
lock Culianu's office door; his secretary told
had commissioned
a close
change in door
locks.
his family yard in
Ro-
emotional link with events
five
in his desk three walnuts
mania — evidence only of
a
from
thousand miles away. In Culianu's apartment a fax arrived from the office
of the exiled king of Romania. Your box arrived, the fax
but
was opened and empty.
it
The
What did you send? The autopsy
found no
coroner's report offered few clues.
"stippling" or
said,
gunpowder burns on the entrance wound, suggesting
that the unusually small gun, a .25 caliber Beretta,
was shot from
point at least eighteen inches from Culianu's head.
"To kill with one
shot from a .25 at that distance, that's not easy," said
medical examiner Robert Stein.
He
called
it
a
Cook County
"an expert shot,
like a
gangland execution."
On
network
New
bune to the
television
the killing was the
American
on
BBC
and in newspapers from the Chicago Tri-
York Times, Culianu's friends and family maintained first political
assassination of a professor
on
In articles and short stories in Italy and America and
soil.
broadcasts, they said, Culianu had called the 1989 revolu-
home country a bitter failure. He attacked the new Roma-
tion in his
He
nian government with almost prophetic insight. threats, as did other writers,
received death
and he attributed these to
right in his country, linked to the old
a
new
far
Communist security police, or
Securitate.
But investigators found no record of the reported them to the FBI or the police.
any
letters.
trip
home
students,
intact.
While the
and stumped
speaking agent
named
police, the
assassination, but not like
would have chosen
uous
site.
He would a "he."
killing
stunned the school,
FBI flew
Gabriella Burger.
killer
purse.
never showed anyone
Detectives found his airplane and car reservations for a
still
even been
Culianu never
threats.
He
in a special
The murder
any the FBI had ever seen.
a higher-caliber
gun and
.25
was small enough to
Romanian-
looked like an
A professional
a far less conspic-
He
have fired more than once.
The
terrified
fit
might not have into a
woman's
THE CRIME
24
If
the killing was a political crime, then the biggest question was
Why?
known
loan Culianu was becoming well
he was not
tional circle of scholars, but
The crime seemed
to pose
a
in a special interna-
major player
what Culianu would have
in politics.
called a lu-
dibrium, a high Renaissance riddle that reveals a mystery of the universe in
unraveling.
its
Why would a historian of religions and a
would-be fantasy writer who had arrived
dream of making the
best-seller
list
United States with
in the
a
have seemed so dangerous to
someone?
While the FBI focused on the detectives
idea of a political murder, Chicago
McGuire and Weiss worked on
theories of a disgrunded
student or colleague, an occult fanatic, a homosexual lover, an interrupted mugging, or a drug deal gone sour. Right before loan
Culianu was
they discovered, he placed a
killed,
Hall office to someone in Medellfn, Colombia.
call
from
The
his Swift
call lasted
one
minute.
Culianu was an enthusiastic and sympathetic friend, detectives learned, and a groundbreaking thinker astral religion,
and the Renaissance magic
monics" refined by
a sixteenth-century
dano Bruno. Scholars praised
command. "He had
how
his
and
who
arts
in the outside world."
of memory or "mne-
philosopher
his creativity, boldness,
a rare ability," recalled
his students'
specialized in dualism,
Dean
named Giorand
linguistic
Gilpin, "to
work could be connected
show
to larger events
His courses on such subjects were extremely
"He was one of the few faculty members who actually just talked to students," said Karen Anderson. "He popular. Students adored him.
met us
at the
Allocca.
seminar door and greeted us by name," said Michael
Greg Spinner added,
"I'll just
never
know anyone
again." Recalling his teacher's willingness to
Nathaniel Deutsch
As
a teacher
said,
"He was
a
buy him
like
him
breakfast,
mensch."
he was open, funny, and controversial. As a friend,
however, he was secretive and insular.
He seemed as if he was hiding
"He was very complicated really, very difficult to know," one faculty member, who saw him as a consummate academic
something. said
husder.
He was
suspected of seducing female students, or of trying
the drug-induced ecstasies he wrote about.
"A couple of
faculty
The Aftermath 25
really hated
had
just
Well,
him," said a student who did not want to be named.
been tenured.
My
thought when he was
first
killed
"He was
now they'll be happy."
Criticized as a "yuppie exile" and a self-promoter, he left behind totally conflicting impressions
of who, exactly, he was.
a charismatic forty-one-year-old
who had
emigre fluent in
brilliant, origi-
erlands,
and the United
patterns in daily
Umberto Eco. His
him from Romania
itual quest, taking
life.
He
States, as
was
a spir-
to Italy, France, the
Neth-
he sought
a
themes
at the university memorial service
students, friends,
life
key to universal
claimed to have found that key in the
imagination. Divinity School dean Clark Gilpin
As
languages
seminal contribution on the history of hermetic (magical)
thought," according to his friend
crime's
was
earned three Ph.D.'s, including the doctorat d'etat from the
Sorbonne. His supporters considered his work to be nal, "a
six
He
summed up on June
3,
the
1991.
and university administrators packed into
Rockefeller Chapel, Gilpin spoke not of politics or motives but of the relation of ideas to the world:
"The university's reason for being
displays helplessness before a violent foresee, could
not
deflect,
power
that ideas could not
could not comprehend.
.
.
.
The
relation
of human thought to the mysterious power at the heart of creation takes on new urgency. Is there any enduring connection between the human ideas to which universities are accountable and some eternal wisdom present at the primordium, when God 'set a compass upon
the face of the deep'?"
Around the world the crime set off a wave of telephone calls between Culianu's friends and fellow exiles, including Andrei Codrescu and
Saul Bellow. Their suspicions rested police, a force so vicious
pean countries did not cists,
who may
secret
trust
them. Others suspected Romania's
fas-
have once counted Mircea Eliade, Culianu's gentle,
renowned mentor,
Guard had
on the ex-Communist
even their counterparts in other East Euro-
as
settled in
one of them.
Many members
of the Iron
North America's Midwest, evading respon-
sibility for
one of
lectured
over the world about the power of the past, while acting
as
all
history's
least-known holocausts. loan Culianu
though someone from the past was always
at his heels.
Whatever
THE crimp:
i6
motive, his murder sounded most of all like the plot of one of the
its
was writing, an enigma
fantasy novels he
eerily foreseen
by the
victim himself.
Like his mentor, or the mystics, or the romantic poets, Culianu
and coincidences
our
felt
that the details
the
most fundamental questions of who we and
quality of his fiction
dimension to
est
rialized
like his
cared to look
lives offer
are. It
an answer to
was the prophetic
political
statements that added the strang-
He
wrote of
political events that
later,
of secret
his story.
months or years
markably
in
sects,
mate-
and of murders
re-
own. This legacy offered clues to anyone who
— to
the logic of our universe, to our psyches, and,
perhaps, to the identity of his
killers.
In the last chapters he wrote before his death, he almost seemed to explain the proliferation of theories about his murder. In
"Games
People Play," from The Tree of Gliosis, he began with the story of a
Chicago gangster
who
Culianu compared his idea of historical
more permutations
He
move by flipping a coin. movements branching into
decided his next
to the decisions of the gangster flipping his coin.
called the process the "multiplication of theories."
He
claimed
that the twentieth century's fascination with "archetypes, formalism
and structuralism" demonstrated upheaval, such as a revolution, cesses operating in history.
He
a conviction that in
we can most
moments of
clearly see deeper pro-
wrote that such convulsions reveal
systems of thought, each functioning almost as "an object coming
from
outside
and crossing our space
way, in which there are able
to
is
a
in an apparently disconnected
hidden logic which we can reveal
move out of our space.
only ifwe
"
Other scholars found such formulations
either exciting and pro-
found or unproved and bizarre. In the space of a few months investigators
the
later, a
young man, with
same birthday as loan Culianu, offering evidence from
series life
would have two suspects and, much
of experiences.
No
a strange
one, though, could see the background of a
that cut across boundaries of time and geography, the experience
from which Culianu's thought sprang.
*
The world is a chiaroscuro:
there are enough traces
and signs ofa superior presence
—LP.
Culianu, Eros and
to
make
it
bearable.
Magic in the Renaissance
THE ART OF MEMORY
Culianu was born in a once-beautiful eastern Moldavia. boyar,
He came
or noble, family in
Ia§i,
from the most or Jassy, a
home on
intellectual
cultural and
a hill in
branch of
near the Soviet border. If the most striking thing about his its
extraordinary unity, then
its
themes were
a
scientific center
set in a region
life
was
"where
streams sprang up and swift rivers poured down, whispering secrets," as the
Moldavian author Ion Creanga wrote.
Spanning part of Europe's eastern
frontier,
Romania
is
a fertile
30
vol
11
i
land long pressed by empires, from the
Roman
to the Soviet.
"The
history of Romania," reads an official guide brochure, "is undoubt-
edly one of the most tormented parts of European history." Enclosed by Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary, Ukraine, and Moldovia, the
an outpost — a Latin people set the farthest north of any
country
is
Latin, a
European land
set the farthest east
of any European. With
Romanians "can
culture poised between the Orient and the West,
be counted
among the
a
great practitioners of the ... art of survival,"
observed historian Istvan Deak.
Dominated by foreign power and subjected ship, first foreign
and then
native,
to corrupt leader-
Romanians survived
people
as a
primarily through the shared experience of telling stories.
weapons of sabotage were ambiguity, humor, mystery,
"Our
poetry, song,
and magic," wrote Andrei Codrescu. The most famous Romanian the West, Dracula,
is
a fictional character based
fifteenth-century prince Vlad
Te P e
§>
on the
or Vlad the Impaler.
emblematic national symbol to many Romanians sheep, Miori^a,
in
named
aptly
The most
an enchanted
is
who foresees the murder of her beloved
shepherd
at
the hands of his brothers. Instead of resisting his fate, the shepherd
triumph through
instructs Miorit.a to transform his tragedy into
myth. "Tell
my
really a
wedding presided
The Romanian
poet Lucian Blaga
mother the murder was
over by the sun and the moon."
adopted the shepherd for a national "mioritic space,"
a
world of the
imagination no conqueror can violate. Mircea Eliade saw in him a national escape
Culianu's
from
history.
A Westerner would see him as mad.
home town of Ia§i was a provincial
capital
and center of
"the holy land of nationalism," with cobblestone boulevards and
domed synagogue, and
trolley cars, a
the Great (145 7- 1504).
statues of heroes like §tefan
Dominated by the
stately white
politan cathedral, the intricately carved Trei Ierarhi, or
archs church, and the fantastic,
featured
some
Metro-
Three Hier-
enormous Palace of Culture,
of the country's great institutions of literature
oldest university, presided over
Ia§i
and
its
by Culianu's grandfather and great-
grandfather.
The Culianu 172
1,
boyars
fleeing
family had escaped to
Ottoman
Romania from Greece
in
persecution. In Ia§i they entered a world of
and peasants, of church privilege and deep
narrow rutted roads, shrouded
valleys, steep
class divisions,
of
mountains, and broad
The Art ofMemory 31
melancholy
plains.
four-fifths of the population
Nearly
were peas-
and most of them were uneducated. Out of the mountains their
ants,
along as they had for centuries, driven by
carts puttered
ing fur hats and layers of wool coats, their
them in bundles of wool.
women
The surrounding plains
of wind, snow, and charcoal
men wear-
seated beside
in winter smelled
fires.
In the nineteenth century Culianu's great-grandfather Neculai
Culianu helped found the Junimea Society, or Young Conservatives.
These
privileged
young men joined the pressing debate about
their country should follow the East or
whether
West
as a cultural
The Junimeists voted for the West, donning tight-collared many of their fathers still wore Turkish pashas' robes. They proposed a democratic program promoting the nation's model.
Parisian shirts while
arts
while preserving their privileges. As the University of
last's
president from 1880 to 1898, Neculai ("Papa") Culianu ceremoni-
ously rode his horsedrawn carriage the five blocks from his
home
to
the university, wearing a black greatcoat and top hat, demonstrating
and power of higher learning.
to a primitive region the perquisites It
was
a good time to be a
with gypsy or
Roma men
boyar.
melody on an
A pretty six-year-old Roma girl
inn, plant her feet firmly,
and play
exquisite miniature violin. Carolers
to the door, singing songs like
that
streets filled
playing drums, accordions, and saxo-
phones, pushing real dancing bears.
might come into the
At Christmas the
a haunting
came frequently
"Mo§ Craciun" (Old Man Christmas)
sounded otherworldly. There were big barrels of pickled cab-
bage, peppers, and cucumbers.
might
fall as
smells of roast
church incense and hearth
By the
On
Christmas Eve a beautiful snow
lamb and pork,
fires,
tsuica
or
plum brandy,
rose beneath the stars.
early years of the twentieth century the Culianus featured
prominently in physics, chemistry, mathematics, and law. their children to the best universities in
They sent
Bonn and Paris. They ruled
comfortable estates, farming, horse trading, and helping to build a
modern
infrastructure in science
friendly with
Zarifopol,
and
law.
They were
prominent people, including the
King
literary critic Paul
Carol's controversial mistress and first wife, Zizi
Lambrino, and the novelist Mihail Sadoveanu. As in the
related to or
Communist
a
boy growing up
world, loan Culianu learned early that he be-
YOUTH
}2
longed to
a
high tradition in a country where intellectuals served as
political leaders.
In contrast, his mother's father, the physicist and chemist Petru
Bogdan, was risk-taking,
a
an orthodox
who
peasant orphan
and savvy
built his career
through
priest, a beautiful Paris-trained pianist.
seven children,
all
of
whom
talent,
Bogdan married the daughter of
socializing.
They
raised
went on to become medical doctors,
scientists,
or attorneys. Sporting a busy white mustache and patri-
cian belly,
Bogdan rose
to the position of university rector in 1927.
His fourth child was graceful,
a funny, talented girl. Slight, dark,
and
Elena Bogdan was fiercely loyal to friends and family. She
earned a doctorate and professorship in inorganic chemistry, also
captured a world of picnics in the
Her photograph albums meadows of the Jiu Valley, at the
medieval castle at Hunnedoara, or
at the
developing a keen interest in photography.
girlfriends
posed with dresses
lifted
some young men wearing white plored the family house, with rinthine
its
beaches of Constanza.
Her
high or arm in arm with hand-
flannels. In half-lit prints she ex-
winding porch balustrade and laby-
rooms shaded by oak and walnut trees.
It
was
said to be the
home of the poet Veronica Micle, illicit lover of the national Mihai Eminescu. The garden where the literary couple met
former poet
secretly,
The
immortalized in their love poems, stood a few streets away.
1920s offered a period of freedom, unrest, and rising wealth.
After the breakup of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Greater Ro-
mania increased role
and
it
by almost
had long expected.
factories,
bank
in size
rates.
cusj, the
An
a third, poised to play the leading
oligarchy helped subsidize railroads
while newly landed peasants suffered under onerous
Avant-garde
artists like
the sculptor Constantin Bran-
playwright Eugene Ionesco, and the young novelist Mircea
Eliade vaulted the culture into the twentieth century while extolling the best of its unique, wild past.
Yet democratic traditions never really took root. Anti-Semitism
who joined the nation in new territories. At the University of Ia§i, a charismatic student named Corneliu Codreanu founded a fascist movement called the rose with the millions of ethnic minorities its
Legion of the Archangel Michael,
later the Iron
Guard.
One
of the
The Art ofMemory 33
oldest of
European
new politics and
a
fascist
movements, the Iron Guard
"new man" of moral, and
Guard's mystical nationalism appealed to lectuals dissatisfied
E.
called for a
ethnic, purity.
The Iron
many of the young
M. Cioran and Mircea Eliade. Evolving into what political
tist
intel-
with social corruption, including young writers scien-
Vladimir Tismaneanu called "the most straightforward expres-
sion of national anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe," the Iron
drew on a volatile and "temporary alliance between the
Guard
mob and the
elite."
As university ence in his
rector,
Petru Bogdan faced the Iron Guard's influ-
faculty and student body, and he brokered increasingly
violent clashes between Codreanu's followers and student socialists
and Communists. Twice the university had to be closed. As the country tilted toward alliance with the Axis powers, Bogdan became
known
for defending
some of
Ia§i's
Jews one day by wielding
his
marble-handled cane against their tormentors. Against this backdrop of fear Elena Bogdan began dating the son
of
last's
leading family. Sergiu Culianu had a fragile physique, a
military bearing, and owlish glasses. Because of
ill
health he had
returned from his studies of advanced differential calculus at the
Sorbonne munist
him
in Paris.
He suffered from asthma and later, under Com-
rule, tuberculosis. In Ia§i
he drove an old Citroen that made
neighborhood.
a character in the
When
it
stopped
its
engine
loudly sputtered and died unless his brother Henri jumped out to
crank still
it.
Arriving home, Henri or Sergiu leaped out while the car
moved, rousing chickens
as
they flung open their driveway gate.
During the summer of 1938 Sergiu and Elena took to swimming together in a nearby stream.
One day they stayed late with her sister home in the dark. The cab much shifting, Elena ended up on Ser-
and had to take a small horsedrawn cab
was
built for two,
and
after
giu 's lap. "I'm not hurting you?" she asked, laughing.
"Not yet!" he
called.
Two years later they were married.
In 1938 King Carol had the handsome young Corneliu Codreanu assassinated. In the public backlash Romania's Iron
moment.
It allied
Guard found
with the military dictator Ion Antonescu,
its
who
vol
34
I
II
took over from Carol in 1940. Within
new
tonescu
I33.I5M55
19,192-93,222-25
return to University of
reelection of, 177
Chicago
and revolution, 181-86, 202-
5,222-25,270-71 Chimera II conference, 233-34 Church History,
1
as lecturer,
126
with Hillary Wiesner, 126-62
149-51
in Italy,
tenure at University of
10
Chicago, 163
Cioran, E. M., 33, 66
Lumea Libera, 1 79. Lumea Libera
Codreanu, Corneliu, 32,33,116, 262
See also
and revolution, 182-89
Codresoi, Andrei, 25, 30, 89, 135, 186, 196, 208, 225-53, 2 73> 2 7 6
277
"Scoptophilia," >
202-9
Other Realms: Death, Ecstasy and Otherworldly 7
,
Exquisite Corpse,
1
Journeys in Recent
Coja, Ion, 45, 49, 62-63, 192, 259,
266
Scholarship Conference,
11,225,234-37
Collins, John, 180, 273
conference
titles, 11,
236-
Constantin, Nicolae, 212-13,
37
260-61
murder
Copernicus, 221
of,
9-28, 240-42
Works
Creanga, Ion, 29 Crowley, John, 12-13, 206, 23233> 2 48
Love and Sleep, 273 Culianu, Alexandru loan Petru
154-57,203 The Emerald
Collection,
173
Encyclopedia ofMagic, 215,
221
in Ia§i
family,
Dictionnaire des religions,
Eros and Magic in the
29-34
childhood, 35-40
Renaissance, 12,45,91, 112,
Varatic Monastery, 39-40
134, 154, 160,206,224,
University of Bucharest, 41-
233
magie a
67
Eros
Atlantida (Atlantis; literary
Renaissance,
group), 45, 62
Magic in
Communist
party,
51-54
et
la
1484 (Eros and
the Renaissance
1484), 107-10,
1
—
12-13,
Index 295
Modern
120, 129,134, 150-51, 154,
Christianity to
160, 206, 224, 264
Nihilism, 26, 142-43, 195,
221,234,239
Experiences de Vextase:
with Eliade
Extase, ascension et recit
World
visionnaire, de VHellenisme
Eliade Guide
au Moyen-Age
Religions, 112, 125, 167,
(Ecstatic
195,216,227,230
Experiences: Ecstasy,
Ascension
and
Encyclopedia ofReligions,
Visionary
Accountsfrom Hellenism
to the
Middle Ages), 106,
229
1 1 1,
112, 125,215
with Wiesner
"Freejormania," 273
Eliade Guide
Les Gnoses dualistes
Religions,
103, 152
d''Occident,
Incognita: International
Journalfor Cognitive Studies in the Humanities, 12, 19,
187,215
to
World
227
"The Emerald Game," 157 "The Late Repentance of Horemheb," 165, 194 "The Secret Sequence," 209,233
"The Intervention of the Zorabis in Jormania," 173,
198,273 Iter in silvis: Saggi scelti sulla
gnosi
to
e altri
studi (The
Road
Culianu, Sergiu, 33, 35 Culianu, Tess (Mrs. Dan Pretrescu)
childhood with loan, 36-37,
104
in Silver),
Culianu, Henri, 33 Culianu, Neculai, 3
"The Language of
56,66
Creation," 220, 233
marriage to Petrescu, 105
Libra,
visit to
104
La
nostalgie des origines
Quest),
(The
Otherworldly Journeys from
112, 167,
freed
arrest, 178,
from house
arrest,
in Poitiers, 209, 219,
99
Out of This World: Gilgamesh
Holland, 142
under house
Mircea Eliade, 99
to
Albert Einstein,
after the
183 183
226-28
murder, 248-49,
266, 274, 277
Cuza, Alexandru loan, 35
195,229-31,239, da Vinci, Leonardo, 85
251,264 Psychanodia:
A Survey of the
Dabezies, Andre, 226
Evidence Concerning
Davis, John, 271
Ascension of the Soul and Its
Death, Ecstasy, and Otherworldly
Relevence, 103, 128, 133,
229 Religione epotere (Religion
Journeys (ed. Collins), 273
Deutsch, Nathaniel,
19, 24, 167,
187,237
and Power; with Lombardo
Dick, Philip K., 239
and Romanato), 102, 104
Dictionary ofImaginary Places, 240
Tree of Gnosis: Gnostic
Doniger, Wendy, 20, 107,
Mythology from Early
125, 156, 160,
1 1 1,
174,247,252
1
,
296 Index
Dracula, 30
Sacred and the Profane, The,
Dragan, Constantin Dima, 263 Dragan, Iosif Constantin, 87, 223,
"Secret of Dr. Honiger,
10
224
The," 59-60, 99
Dreamtime (Duerr), 107 Duerr, Hans Peter, 107, ill, 175
Zalmoxis, 43 with Culianu. See Culianu,
Dulocq, Julia, 167
loan Petru: Works, with
Dumas, Alexandre, 39
Eliade
-12
Dumitrescu, Cornel, 219
Eliade, Christinel, 90,
Eco, Umberto, 25, 115, 143, 151,
130,154,175,233,239,248 Eminescu, Mihai, 32, 55, 96, 227,
160, 178, 188, 191, 208, 278
Economou-Zarifopol, Maria, 233 Edwards, Peggy, 241-42
Eggejim, 16
2 55 Escher,
M. C,
1 1 1
169, 187
Facon, Nina, 61
Einstein, Albert, 152, 167, 229
Fassbinder, Werner, 248
Eliade, Mircea, 10, 43-47, 59-60,
Faust, 54,
225-26
66, 141, 143, 152, 154-57, 163,
Fermi, Enrico, 10
227-32,238, 259,274, 277 with Culianu in Paris, 85-92
Ficciones
friendship with Culianu,
96-
100, 108-12 fire
Feyerabend, Paul, 107,
no
See Borges, Jorge Luis Ficino, Marsilio, 55, 81, 107-9,
atMeadville
library,
125-
128, 151, 158, 165
The Book ofLife, 46
26
Fishbane, Michael, 215, 250, 273
stroke, 130
Culianu
as
executor of papers,
Flacara,
254
Flatland (Abbott), 167, 169, 173,
134-36 1930s journalism, 173-74,
202-4
Foreign Correspondent (St. John), 98
Iron Guard accusations, 25,
Foucault, Michel, 41, 43
30-33,52,89,96-100,
Foucaults Penduhmi,
in, 116-19, 203-4,
Fourth Dimension (Rucker), 167
18, 259,
Buna
2I 7~
262-63
Vestire,
1
2
Funderburk, David, 270
157
Works
Galileo, 6, 109, 149, 221
Aspects ofMyth
and
Mythology, 43
Gamwell, Chris, 126, 130, 160, 162, 187, 228
"Boy with Eyeglasses,
Gamwell, Frances, 187, 228, 274
The," 96 Le chamanisme, 230
Gavriliu, Leonard, 255, 266
Myth of the Eternal Return,
Georgescu, Andrei, 102-3, 126
The, 10, 43
Georgescu, Carmen, 44, 101-4,
"Nights
59-60
in
Serampore,"
Geertz, Clifford, 113, 132
in, 164
118, 120, 129, 141, 156,
Index 297
Georgescu, Emil, 118
Jedlicka, Sandy, 256-60, 264-65,
Georgescu, Vlad, 34, 52 Gilpin, Clark, 16-18, 24, 250-52,
Jews, 32-35
268-69, 275—76
as mystics, 60,
277 Giurescu, Anca, 72-75, 78 Glass, Philip, 10
associate),
Gnosticism, 10, 39, 45, 80, 104,
166
"Johnny" ("Adrian Szabo"
's
211-12, 258-63, 269
Jonas, Hans, 91, 160, 207
Jones, Karen de Leon, 177
126 Culianu's research, 143, 152,
Jung, Gustav Carl, 43, 153
239-40,277 Kabbalah, 47, 165-66, 176
Gray, Hanna, 252
Kairos,
Harvey, William, 221 Hertzfeld, Kurt, 159, 178, 185,
219,225,247 Hinton, Edward,
1
Kligman, Gail, 196-97
70
Science (Thorndike),
no
34 Hockenos, Paul, 193, 223 2
Kremer, Charlie, 115
215
Hitler, Adolf,
Horia, Natalia,
(Behr), 184
Kitagawa, Joseph, 160
History ofMagic and Experimental
History of Science,
96
Kerouac, Jack, 44 Kiss the Hand You Cannot Bite
Harvard Review, 195
Lambrino, Mario, 84 Lambrino, Zizi, 3 Lanternari, Vittorio, 157
La Rose,
70
Elise,
247
Laurent, Marcel, 48 Idel,
Moshe, 165-66,
178, 208,
Lawrence, Judy, 241-42, 247, 260,
202-3, 207,
Lazzati, Giuseppe, 80
264-65,274
215-16,232,248 Iliescu, Ion, 185, 198,
223,236,253-54,259,265,271,
Lederman, Leon, 10
276-77
Leggere,
209
loan Culianu (Zolla), 273
Lenin, Vladimir, 167
Ionesco, Eugene, 32, 43, 184
Levi,
Ionescu, Nae, 98, 117, 157
Levi-Strauss, Claude, 43, 45, 208
n 6- 17
Iorga, Nicolae,
Iron Guard, 25, 87, 24, 228,
1
14-17, 223-
262-65
Legion of Archangel Michael, 32
~35>
2
54 1 17-19, 255, 259 Eliade, Mircea
Lewis, Jim, 250 Libertatea,
253
Lombardo, Mario,
53, 62,
76
Religione e potere {Religion
and
power), 102, 104
Securitate,
Lovinescu, Monica, 118, 263
See also
Lullus, Raymundus, 220 Lumea Libera, 179, 200-202, 205-
Ivanovici, Victor, 44-49, 51-55, 2
Edward, 130, 233
54-55
Jedlicka, David, 256-60, 264-65,
268-69, 275—76
8,212,218,238,274 "A Unique Chance," 115, 208 "Viitorul Romaniei in 1 puncte," 188
1
1
298 Index
"A Lecture on
Politics,"
196
Scoptophilia, 201-2
9,
"Dialogue of the Dead, Part
I,"
Mirandola, Pico
(Ricketts), 135
"The Fourth of July," 203
Mitchell, Patty, 18-19
"Filme de groaza" (Horror
Money
films),
the
218
"The Most Important Romanian in the World," "The Most Stupid 204
22-24, 245-47,
249, 258-59, 260,
Magureanu,
1
97
3
National Salvation Front, 191,
194,233,265
262-63
Nazis, 98,
Virgil, 186, 193, 266,
276
in,
1
15-16
Necromancer (Fassbinder), 248 Neophilogus, 96
Mali^a, Mircea, 62
Malutan, Colonel
1
Nation, 193
McGinn, Bernard, 252 Al, 17,
Laundered (Possamai),
Morin, Edgar,
How
Profits Are
Mussolini, Benito, 87
Luther, Martin, 109
McGuire,
on the Run: Canada and
Worlds Dirty
Moro, Aldo, 72, 91, 175 Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, 270 Munteanu, Marian, 197, 259
208
Intelligence,"
107-
Mircea Eliade: The Romanian Roots
1907-1945
202
della, 46, 81,
166
New Vasilei, 2 70
York Review of Science Fiction,
Manea, Norman, 198
209 Nicholas of Autrecourt, 221
Manzoni, Bruno, 77 Marchiano, Grazia, 172-73, 176,
Nicholas of Cusa, 109, 22
191, 194,219
1984 (Orwell), 51
Noomen, Willem, 94-95,
Margareta, princess of Romania,
232,230 Marghescu, Mircea, 74-75,
78,
85-90
Occult, 6, 13, 176
Oi§teanu, Andrei, 44, 61,
Markov, Georgi, 175 The Truth That Killed, 179 Materialism and Empirio-Criticism
103-4,
164
1
18-19,
122-23,230,272 Oi§teanu, Valery (Valery Galley)
"Wall Patrol," 123 O'Leary, Cathy, 164, 166, 170-71,
(Lenin), 167
Mazilu, Dumitru, 199, 233 Meslin, Michel, 96, 103, 151-52,
207,217 the Road (Kerouac), 44
On
Orwell, George
155,157,160 Michael, king of Romania, 23, 34-
39,231-32,239,291,261-62,
1984, 5 1
Ouspensky,
P.
D., 170
269 Pacepa, Ion, 193, 250
Michnik, Adam, 223 Micle, Veronica,
Red Horizons,
32
Militaru, Nicolae, 185, 199 Miller, Fred, 246
Mind Tools (Rucker),
153
1
18,
295
Panorama, 87, 194, 199 Party of Romanian National Unity
(PUNR),
192
Index 299
Penthouse, 225
Ricoeur, Paul, 10
Petreanu, Dan, 266
Riesebrodt, Martin, 227
Petrescu, Dan, 105, 193, 219, 228,
Roman,
Paris,
Petre, 225, 254, 273
Romanato, Gianpaolo, 83-84, 86-
234,236,266, 274 meeting with Culianu in
91,95-97,120,143,155-56 Religione epotere (with
156
Culianu
and Lombardo), 102, 104
266
Securitate, 119, 142,
Liberation interview, 163, 178
Romania
anti-Ceau§escu, 177-79
Romania Mare, 192-93, 218, 224,
under house
arrest, 178,
freed from house
arrest,
183 1
84
ministry appointment, 188,
206-7 in Poitiers,
197,212,223
2 33, 2 54-55 Romanian Nationalism: The
Legionary Movement (Ronnett), 17
208-9
Ronnett, Alexander, 117
Pidoux-Payot, Francois Jean-Luc, 97, 106,
Libera,
in
Rosen, Moses, 224 Rucker, Rudy, 153, 167
Plato, 78, 202
Ple§u, Andrei, 92, 179, 188,
206-7
Sabau, Mircea, 202, 203, 219
Podina, Mircea, 253
Sadoveanu, Mihail,
Poe, Edgar Allan, 39, 168
Salinger, J. D., 43
Poghirc, Cicerone, 55, 61-62, 125
Sanskrit, 46, 54-55,
Pop, Traian, 94 Popa, Radu Dumitru, 44-49, 62-
Saptamina (Weekend; later
3
60
Romania Mare), 192 Schluntz, Erika, 127, 138, 159, 166
66, 85, 192
Possamai, Mario, 197
"Scoptophilia." See Scott,
Lumea Libera
Nathan, 130
Raceanu, Mircea, 207
Sebastian, Mihail, 157
Ratesh, Nestor, 187
Secolul 20
Rebreanu, Liviu, 63
Red
(Twentieth Century), 66,
77
Brigade, 72
Securitate, 23, 36, 51-55, 62, 91,
Red Horizons (Pacepa), 118, 255
117-19, 122-23, 142, 163, 209,
Reformation, 109, 134, 154
212-13,227,254-55,276,279 in revolution, 182-89, 192-
Religione epotere (Religion
and
power) (Culianu, Gianpaolo, and
Lombardo), 102, 104
93,
218
Tess; Cea§escu, Nicolae;
magic, 3,6, 24, 81,133, 136,
166
Petrescru,
philosophers, 40, 60, 81 to
of, 91,
See also Iron Guard; Culianu,
Renaissance
Return
187-99,202-4
Culianu 's criticism
Cosmology (Toulmin), 107
Segal, Allan, 237, Shafir,
Dan 274
Michael, 265
Reynolds, Franklin, 250
Shakespeare, William, 46, 81
Rickert, Jonathan, 271
"Sons of Avram Iancu," 206, 253
Ricketts,
Mac Linscott,
60,
1 1 1
Sontag, Susan, 10 Spengler, Oswald, 226
300 Index
Spinner, Greg, 4-6, II, 18-20, 24,
Ulieru, Nicolae, 276
167-70, 176-78, 180-81, 187,
Unanue, Manuel de Dios, 208
207-8, 228, 232, 236-37, 247-
Ungureanu, Sanda, 47, 76
50,252
Ihuuvers, histoire
Stamatu, Horia (H.
S.),
Stamm, Stephanie,
167, 181
Stanculescu, Victor,
1
1
15—17
et description:
VEgypte ancienne (Laurent), 48 "Ureche," Captain, 51-55
84
Stanescu, Gabriel, 274-75
van der Leeuw, Gerardus, 104
Stanescu, Sorin Ro§ca, 274-75
Vatra Romaneasca, 192, 218, 238, 259,
Stefan the Great, 30
Verdery, Katherine, 196
Stevenson, Jennifer, 13, 233 Stein, Robert, 23, St.
Vermaseren, M.J., 103
249
Viata Romania, 200
John, Robert, 98
Sullivan,
265-66
Lawrence, 153, 160, 188,
Vidyasagar, Prabadh,
45-46
Voican (-Voiculescu), Gelu,
215,229,236
1
84,
193,199-200,273-75
Sweek, Joel, 246 "Szabo, Adrian," 211-12, 258-63,
Diminea\a interview, 186, 200 Voinea, Dan, 271
269,275 Szulc, Tad, 212, 225
Wagner, Richard, 206 Weiss, Ellen, 17, 22-24, 245-47,
Talpes, Ion, 276
Thompson, D'Arcy Wentworth,
249,258-59,260 Wiesel, Elie, 207
137,239 Thorndike, Lynn, 215-16 Through
Wiesner, Dorothy (Mrs. Kurt Hertzfeld), 159, 185, 219, 225
the Looking-Glass
Wiesner, Hillary,
(Carroll), 167, 170 Tillich, Paul, 10
190, 195,
Tismaneanu, Vladimir,
33, 56,
12-14, 20-21,
192,197,231,254
197,203-9,221,234,
238
meets Culianu, 126-28, 131 —
Tokes, Laszlo, 182
34. *36
Toulmin, Stephen, 107, 171, 221
in Turkey,
Tracy, David, 156, 158, 233
in Italy,
Tricolorul,
9,
83, !53, 157-66, 179, 182, 187,
263
138-45
I49-5 1
*
J
57- 6l
Triet Le, 208
151,216-
in
Cambridge,
in
Amherst, 185, 219
Trifa, Viorel, 119
14,
17
Truth That Killed (Markov),
1
75
Tudor, Corneliu Vadim, 192, 265
after the
Tudoran, Dorin, 164, 175-78,
253-54, 266 works with Culianu. See
180, 196, 206, 208, 227, 235-36,
Wiesner
Agora, 167, 198, 207
22,217-18,233-34,238,251, 54-55»
2 59»
murder, 247-49,
Culianu: Works, with
254,273,274
2
»
172-76,191
262-63,
2
73
Wiesner, Nikki, 159, 185, 190,
248-49
Index 301
William of Occam, 221
Zaharia, Dorin, 44, 45, 78
Wilson, Liz, 175 Windsor Star, 114
Zaleski, Carol, 108, 229, 237,
Winkler, Mary,
no
248 Zarifopol, Paul,
3
Ziua, 274
Yoga, 43, 60, 84, 89 Yu, Anthony, 153-54, 160, 226,
250,277
Zolla, Elemire, 175-76, 194, 219 Archetypes,
172-73
loan Culianu, 273
IS?
occult whose predictions were often remarkably
accurate— began toying with
coalition in Romania, taunting
presumed safety of
his
new
a
far-right
them from the
American base with the
content and tone of his
articles,
goading them
into believing him dangerous. Besides shedding
new
light
on the murder, this book offers
a
fascinating introduction to Romanian politics in the
aftermath of the 1989 revolution and to
the relation of ideas to power in current history, as well as to the exotic and mystical ideas of a brilliant
man.
TED ANTON
is
an associate professor in non-
fiction writing at
DePaul University. His Lingua
Franca cover story on Culianu's murder was a finalist for
the National Magazine Award in
Reporting in 1993. For his work on this book he
was awarded
a Fulbright fellowship
and
a
Fund
for Investigative Journalism grant. His writing
has been recognized for three straight years in Best American Essays. His articles have appeared in The Sciences, Chicago
Tribune,
Magazine, the Chicago
and other publications; he
editor of The
New
is
Science Journalists.
Jacket design: Rich Hendel
the co-
"Fascinating and excellent .
.
.
important not just
because
it
illuminates
history, but
because at the
center of the story
is
loan
Culianu, a figure so interest-
ing no novelist could invent
him. [In this murder] fiction
and fact change places in a deadly
game
of masks and
illusions."
— Andrei Codrescu "Reveals both a fascinating individual's twenty-year-long
life-and-death struggle with his conscience,
and a violent
underground war in Eastern Europe. This
is a
story not
only about the power of
freedom of speech and press, but also about the explosive
convergence of scholarship
and
politics,
and the very
real risks of the
bered
life
unencum-
ISBN 0-8101-1396-1
90000>
of the mind."
—Jeffrey
Kittay, publisher,
Lingua Franca 78081
0"1
13961