After joining the
Axis powers in the
1941 invasion of the Soviet Union, Romania, now fully controlled by Antonescu, ordered another clampdown of the PCR underground. Though not re-arrested, he was placed on an extended lists of communists, and continuously observed by the
Siguranța. The latter institution recorded his residence as 11 Doctor Babeș Street (in
Cotroceni). Together with
Eugen Jebeleanu, they prepared logistics for the nationwide census of 1942. This effort, carried out from an ICS base in Cotroceni, involved numerous
Romanian Jews, who offered up as volunteer statisticians in hopes of escaping
labor and death camps. According to Corbea, he and other non-Jewish supervisors agreed to leave this workforce untapped, allowing Jewish youths to study rather than work on the census; they also formed
volleyball teams, which offered them the opportunity to approach other communist sympathizers without causing suspicion. Antonescu meanwhile organized a
Transnistria Governorate in the post-Soviet sphere of occupation, carving it out of the former
Ukrainian SSR. Corbea was dispatched for that institution's field projects in Transnistria, which included an ethnographic survey of the
Romanians in Ukraine. s during the
Odessa Offensive of early 1944 While in Transnistria, Corbea and Mănescu observed traces of
The Holocaust in Ukraine, and also helped rescue a
Komsomol youth, Viktor Hanko, by forging his identity papers. Corbea himself tried to publish a new selection of his poems, as
Candele păgâne ("Pagan Candles"). It was scheduled for publication in early 1943, "but the fascist military censorship had it banned." In one of his autobiographic fragments, Corbea claimed to have gone into hiding, and to have assisted in helping Romanians desert on the
Eastern Front. Stopped by the Wehrmacht from crossing the
Dniester Estuary, he made his way into a heavily shelled Odesa, and managed to catch the last ship sailing out to
Sulina. Corbea also reports having seen Romanian war crimes—perpetrated against deserters and civilians alike. By the time of Cobzaru's return to Bucharest,
southern Romania was being regularly bombed from the air. The ICS had him relocated to
Pucheni, which was insufficiently protected. In spring 1944, he escaped with his life when a bomb landed on his house and failed to explode; he was afterward granted a new home, in
Naipu, while Corina was similarly sheltered in
Hălchiu. Dumitru continued to live at their old apartment in Bucharest, but making it seem to the
Siguranța that the place was uninhabited. He claims to have helped plan the
anti-fascist coup of August 23 by storing weapons and ammunition, and thus by serving the
Romanian resistance network in both Bucharest and Hălchiu. He then hid out with one of his sisters, Eramonda Hușneac, in
Lugoj. He had to leave the town in a hurry when his brother-in-law threatened to denounce him as a "
Bolshevik", and was helped on his way back to Bucharest by a Jewish girl, Irma Cohn. Following the coup's success, Corbea reemerged as a communist intellectual. As a
Scînteia editor, he was asked to become a
photojournalist in
Hungary, where Romanian forces had joined up with the
Red Army. He was tasked with documenting the
Battle of Debrecen, but ended up fighting with his
submachine gun. He then followed the
Budapest offensive, and was stationed at
Cinkota—arriving there in the aftermath of pillaging by the
Arrow Cross Party; he then followed the Romanian troops into southern
Slovakia, observing the occupation of
Brezno. Alongside the PCR-sympathizing Sadoveanu, he attended Antonescu's trial by the
Romanian People's Tribunal, and gave his impressions of the proceedings; he was also present at the great communist rally in
Palace Square (24 February 1945), where unknown assailants shot on the crowd. He claimed to have stood by communist writer
Mihnea Gheorghiu, who was left with a gaping leg-wound. Between 1946 and 1948, he was attached as a functionary to the PCR Central Committee. In February 1946, Marxist scholar
Barbu Lăzăreanu lectured at the PCR's Section for Political Education on the "poets of labor and poets as laborers", with ample comments on Corbea. The latter was by then a member of the PCR committee on art and culture, engaging in campaigning for the
general election of November. In that capacity, he visited
George Enescu, successfully recruiting him for the
Bloc of Democratic Parties. During this electoral battle, which opposed the PCR-led Bloc to the PNȚ, his former colleagues at
Dreptatea discussed the cases of former fascists who had turned PCR propagandists, noting that this label applied to Corbea, to
Costin Murgescu, and to
George Macovescu. Also at
Dreptatea,
Constant Tonegaru declared that he preferred to read "advertorials for this and that laxative" than have to engage with political poetry by Corbea and
Miron Radu Paraschivescu. Corbea was instead upheld as a moral and literary examples by the younger
Mihai Gafița and
Veronica Porumbacu. In a January 1946 piece, the former critic discussed Corbea as one of the finest authors of the previous decade, and overall as one of the "progressive poets". In a set of articles printed in July–August of that year, Porumbacu argued that Corbea, Paraschivescu,
Alexandru Toma and
Emil Isac had produced "rich, ample works", living up to their interwar status as poets "on the same side as the people", and noted that they their style had been lit up by "the flame of the party". Corbea returned to poetry with a selection of
ballads (1946) As observed by Sdrobiș, he had completed his transformation from far-right extremist to a "prolific
Proletkult-like author, entirely subservient to communist totalitarianism", though conserving a "revolutionary spirit" in both incarnations. In 1946, Corbea published his first novel,
Singura cale ("The Only Way"). The resulting work was taken up by the
National Theater Bucharest, with
Aurel Ion Maican called in as director. However, it was shelved by the authorities, who preferred a similar play by
Camil Petrescu. ==
Albina and USR induction==