In 1933, he obtained a scholarship to the
University of Berlin, where he came into contact with Klages and
Nicolai Hartmann. While in
Berlin, he became interested in measures taken by the
Nazi regime, contributed a column to
Vremea dealing with the topic (in which Cioran confessed that "there is no present-day politician that I see as more sympathetic and admirable than
Hitler", while expressing his approval for the
Night of the Long Knives — "what has humanity lost if the lives of a few imbeciles were taken"), and, in a letter written to
Petru Comarnescu, described himself as "a
Hitlerist". He held similar views about
Italian fascism, welcoming victories in the
Second Italo-Abyssinian War, arguing that: "Fascism is a shock, without which
Italy is a compromise comparable to today's Romania".
Cioran’s first book,
On the Heights of Despair (more accurately translated: "On the Summits of Despair"), was published in Romania in 1934. It was awarded the
Commission’s Prize and the
Young Writers Prize for one of the best books written by an unedited young writer. Successively,
The Book of Delusions (1935),
The Transfiguration of Romania (1936), and
Tears and Saints (1937), were also published in Romania (the first two have yet to be translated into English).
Although Cioran was never a member of the group, it was during this time in Romania that he began taking an interest in the ideas put forth by the
Iron Guard - a
far right organization whose
nationalist ideology he supported until the early years of
World War II, despite allegedly disapproving of their violent methods.
Cioran censored
The Transfiguration of Romania in its second edition released in the 1990s; he eliminated numerous passages considered
extremist or "pretentious and stupid". The volume expressed sympathy for
totalitarianism, a view which was also present in various articles Cioran wrote at the time, and which aimed to establish "
urbanization and
industrialization" as "the two obsessions of a rising people".
Marta Petreu's An Infamous Past: E.M. Cioran and the Rise of Fascism in Romania, published in English in
2005, gives an in-depth analysis of
The Transfiguration.
His early call for
modernization was, however, hard to reconcile with the traditionalism of the Iron Guard. In 1934, he wrote: "I find that in Romania the sole fertile, creative, and invigorating nationalism can only be one which does not just dismiss tradition, but also denies and defeats it". Disapproval of what he viewed as specifically Romanian traits had been present in his works ("In any maxim, in any proverb, in any reflection, our people expresses the same shyness in front of life, the same hesitation and resignation... [...] Everyday Romanian [truisms] are dumbfounding."), which led to criticism from the far right
Gândirea (its editor,
Nichifor Crainic, had called
The Transfiguration of Romania "a bloody, merciless, massacre of today's Romania, without even [the fear] of
matricide and
sacrilege"), as well as from various Iron Guard papers.
After coming back from Berlin (1936), Cioran taught philosophy at the "
Andrei Şaguna" high school in
Braşov for a year. In 1937, he left for
Paris with a scholarship from the French Institute of
Bucharest, which was then prolonged until 1944. After a short stay in his home country (November 1940-February 1941), Cioran never returned again. This last period in Romania was the one in which he exhibited a closer relationship with the Iron Guard, which had, by then, taken power (
see National Legionary State) — on November 28, he recorded a speech for the state-owned
Romanian Radio, one centered on the portrait of
Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, former leader of the movement, who had been killed two years before (praising him and the Guard for, among other things, "having given Romanians a purpose").
He later renounced not only his support for the Iron Guard, but also their nationalist ideas, and frequently expressed regret and repentance for his emotional implication in it. For example, in a 1972 interview, he condemned it as "a complex of movements; more than this, a demented sect and a party", and avowed: "I found out then [...] what it means to be carried by the wave without the faintest trace of conviction. [...] I am now immune to it".
In 1940, he started writing
The Passionate Handbook, and finished it by 1945. It was to be the last book that he would write in
Romanian, although not the last to deal with delicate and lyrical aphorisms demented by infinite pessimism.