… I don’t want to live here anymore. Because of these communists, no matter how hard I try, I cannot realize anything. I decided to go to France to try my luck there. I want to go to France, to study there. And now, when I’m still young, is the best time for leaving there...
He was born on March 22, 1944 in Popeşti-Leordeni, Ilfov County.He finished 7 classes, having attended school in the village, even though his parents didn’t want him learning. At school, he was close friends with Ion Iordan, the son of the village’s church singer, who was just a few months older than him. After completing primary school, he wanted to go to a vocational school in Bucharest. However, after failing to take the exam and having quarreled with his parents, he stayed in Bucharest, working as an unskilled electrician on a construction site.Because of the particularly heavy work he was doing on the construction site, and rebelled against the Communist regime, when only 17, Ioan Marin decided to leave the country at all costs and convinced his friend, Ion Iordan - who was studying at a high school in Bucharest - to join him. They chose France as a destination and drew up plans to cross the border illegally. Constantin Stanciu, another 17-year old young man, joined them as well.In July 1961, he tried to cross the border together with two other friends at Ciuchici, a village near to Oravița. Before crossing the border, they stopped to buy supplies from a store, without realizing they were too close to the border and could thus raise suspicion. One of the persons in the store informed the authorities, and on July 6, the young men were surrounded by militia officers, arrested and questioned at the local militia station. They were then transported to Oravița, where the interrogation continued until Constantin Stanciu admitted to having planned to cross the border illegally and flee to France. From Oraviţa, they were sent to Timișoara, where they remained under investigation for approximately 6 months. Following the trial from December 1961, Ioan Marin was sentenced to 2 years in prison for “attempt of illegal border crossing”. His friends, Ion Iordan and Constantin Stanciu, were sentenced to 3, respectively 2 years in prison.He executed his sentence in the Timișoara and Jilava prisons. Despite the torment he endured, communist prisons offered Ioan Marin the chance to meet numerous intellectuals, and acted as spaces for expressing solidarity, fellowship and generosity towards people around him. He was released from jail on January 17, 1963, based on a pardon decree.