Yurie Roška (also spelled Yuri Roška) is an anti-globalist Eastern Orthodox activist from the Republic of Moldova, rector of the People's University, a prolific author, and a Romanian translator of the works of Aleksandr Dugin. He served as party leader, deputy speaker of parliament, and briefly as Deputy Prime Minister before leaving national politics in 2009. Outside party politics, he is an accomplished orator and is fluent in Russian, French, and English, as well as his native Romanian.
Roska describes himself as a Christian optimist, and in the first of this two-part interview recorded at his home, he talks about coming of age under Leonid Brezhnev, being introduced to the Christian faith by his grandmother, his grandfather's wartime assassination by Nazi-allied Ukrainian Bandera rebels, his anti-Communist activism as a student and young journalist, facing KGB threats to disappear his son, his hatred of Russification and state-mandated linguistic deception, his embrace of nationalism, his conversion to anti-corruption Christian politics after Moldova's independence following the collapse of the Soviet Union, his unanimous support for a constitutional amendment in 1994 affirming that a family is created by a man and a woman, and his subsequent involvement as an avid listener and regular guest on Western anti-Communist radio stations (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, BBC World Service, Voice of America).
We'll go into more detail later in this interview about why Rosca was hated by his American and European patrons, and how he responded to being hated by the US State Department, the European Union, the OSCE, the Council of Europe, and Western European capitals. In short, as mentioned earlier, Rosca refused to back the Western-led legalization of LGBT propaganda in his country and became an advocate for LGBT studies (which actually originated in the US and UK). Christ-Like Leadership He believed he was “in direct league with Jesus Christ” in national affairs and was increasingly convinced that the West was dominated by “arrogant, aggressive, and violent” colonial powers. As evil Rosca did not adopt a Soviet-Communist style of political stance, and throughout his political career maintained that the Republic of Moldova had its own national interests and was not merely a buffer state against the Russian Federation. He refused to let Moscow, Washington or Berlin dictate policy, and as a result he was forced to resign in 2009.
Iurie Roșca writes: Arca Louis Noe (Noah's Ark) and the annual Chisinau Forum. his Telegram Channel He is multilingual. The first of his many books to be written partly in English was Record of Dissidents in the New World Orderis a collection of previously published articles and is scheduled to be published in summer 2024.
The second part of this interview here.