During
World War II, Wald served in a forced labor detachment due to him being
Jewish. In terms of his political views, Wald was a
Communist and "a radical
antifascist". Wald began publishing in September 1944 in the newspaper
Tribuna poporului (The People's Tribune). In addition, he also contributed to several additional leftist periodicals and to some cultural publications as well. Wald graduated from the faculty of philosophy at the
University of Bucharest in 1946, after writing a dissertation called “The Petty Bourgeois Mentality.” Wald became a professor of
philosophy in Bucharest in 1948, a job which he occupied until 1962 (when he was fired due to his opposition to the official "
nationalist-communist" stance of the then-Romanian government). Wald worked in several other educational institutions as well until his retirement in 1983. Due to his political commitments, Wald also worked in the
propaganda department for the
Communist Romanian regime in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Later on in his life, Wald became significantly closer to Judaism, which he thought was a "matrix of humanist thinking". Late in his life, the
Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company’s Center for Oral History (C.O.H.) conducted an interview with Wald where he talked about and discussed his life story. Wald died in 2002, at the age of 80. ==References==