Undoubtedly, "The Revolution WILL be televised" was the main players'  motto. Most Romanians only saw their revolution on their small black and  white televisions while others were the actors, willing and uninformed.  Young draftees, sacrificied to put on a show to fool a deceived  population into believing terrorists were responsible.    The "Pigs'  Slaughter" is the story of how the events during the run-up to Christmas  Day 1989 changed a family and nation forever. It skillfully reveals how  beneath the drunken joy of the Romanian Revolution lies the true story  of the deception of a nation and the world. The story is told from the  point of view of a 14 year old boy in a small Transylvanian town,  destined to become a journalist and learn the inside stories, whose  hindsight and flashforwards reveal to the reader the truth, of which  most of the story's protagonists are painfully unaware. In a story that  seamlessly weaves in relevant references to World War One and Two, the  French Revolution, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and even Vlad the Impaler  (the inspiration for Dracula's character), is revealed an inside  description of how the Eastern Block, locked behind the Iron Curtain,  was finally dismantled.    The Revolution ruthlessly took more than it  gave - beautiful bodies, healthy food, cultivated culture, tested  tradition. In the end, communism's empty materialism was simply traded  for western society's empty materialism, which happily did away with  what the Eastern Block years had inefficiently leftover. The boy's  family and country's traditions died with his grandparents and the  arrival of the morally and culturally bankrupt influence of Western  society. The hungry people of before 1989 have been transformed into  obese people. Instead of queuing for meagrely rationed bread they now  queue to buy imported foods in overpriced hypermarkets.        Particularly relevant to Westerners who grew up after their own  traditional cultures were overtaken by the modern "developed" world, is  the invaluable insight provided by a first-hand experience that knows  both sides of that transition, how it was done and, most importantly,  it's consequences. Reading this book will not only tell you more about  Romania but also about your own country, culture and identity - why and  how the traditions died.     It's time the world heard this true story  of Romania's Revolution, because most Romanians took only a couple of  years to realise how little western culture had to offer.       
 
 
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