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Emil Fagure


Emil D. Fagure (born Samuel Honigman; April 7, 1873–March 16, 1948) was a Romanian prose writer, translator, journalist and theatre and music critic.

Born into a Jewish family in Iași, his father was a cantor and piano teacher; his brother Albert would become a socialist journalist. From a young age, he had a solid musical education, and attended the National College. He graduated from the law faculty of the University of Bucharest, beginning a career in journalism as an editor for Munca and then Lumea nouă. He subsequently edited Adevărul, where, between 1895 and 1921, he reached the positions of editing secretary and later editor-in-chief, and was also chief editor of the supplement Adevărul literar și artistic from 1920 to 1921. At Paris between 1918 and 1919, contributing to several French periodicals, he formed part of the editing committee for La Roumanie weekly, advocating for closer ties between France and Romania. For his activity, he received a decoration from his native country, as well as the Legion of Honour.

Constantin Mille established Lupta newspaper in 1921, and he and Fagure, as well as Barbu Brănișteanu, would serve as directors until 1937, when it was suppressed. In this position, he advocated for the National Peasants' Party, which helped secure his entry into the Assembly of Deputies in 1929. He later became a Senator. Fagure and Mille also ran Presa from 1921 to 1923. Various prose fiction and reportages of his appeared in Evenimentul literar, where he served as editing secretary and signed as M. Dobrin, in the Iași Evenimentul and in the Bucharest Pagini literare, Teatrul, Dimineața and Rampa. In the legal field, he published juridical treatises and studies as F. Emilian.

Writing lead articles, reportages, investigations, interviews, columns such as Note, Păreri și impresii and Fapte și observații (sometimes signed E.D.F.), Fagure identified and commented on the events and happenings of his time. He attempted to impose respect for social justice, criticizing the ills brought on by poor governance (in particular that of the National Liberal Party) and supporting various causes, including the entry of Romania into World War I on the side of the Allies and opposition to the ascendancy of the extreme right and Romania's increasing domination by the interests of Nazi Germany, which led him to leave the country between 1938 and 1945.


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