Warning: this answer contains images that depict scenes of violence, dead people and nudity.
Unfortunately, the Second World War is taught in Romania in a very unbalanced way. This happens due to the amount of nationalistic nonsense that was inserted in the scholar curriculum during the Communist period and has remained here after the 1989 Revolution.
I’d be ridiculous to contest that the Romanians suffered many injustices during World War 2. However, in schools, they tend to focus only on these injustices and not on the injustices that were made by Romanians against other people or nations. In the time I spent in the Romanian education system, I never heard more than a few words about:
Iron Guard, the most prominent far-right Romanian movement from the interwar period. They had fascistic tendencies and were responsible for many violent acts and assassinations committed in that period, inclusive the assassination of Ion G. Duca, the Prime Minister of Romania
The plethora of anti-Semitic laws that had been introduced in the late 1930s/early 1940s alongside with the laws against the Jews that already existed (Legi antievreiești în România (1940-1942))
Legionnaires' rebellion and Bucharest pogrom that took place between 21 and 23 January 1940. The Iron Guard members revolted against the leader of Romania, the military dictator Ion Antonescu. During their rebellion, the legionnaires killed around 125 Jews and devastated many Jewish owned business and synagogues
Iași pogrom that happened in June 1941 and led to the death of over 13,000 Jews from the city. At the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, the Soviet Aviation bombed the city and the authorities blamed the Jews for that, accusing them of being Communist and a fifth column
1941 Odessa massacre, when around 100,000 Jews living in the territory between Dniester and Bug, territory organized at the time in Transnistria Governorate, were killed by the combined Romanian and German armies
The deportation of Jews and Roma people in Transnistria Governorate, where many of them died
Finally, the Romanian schools don’t teach the children about the 350,000–400,000 Jews and around 20,000 Roma that died in the territories under the control of Romania during World War 2. I hope this situation will change soon and the schools will teach the entire history of Romania during the WW2, not just the things that make us look good.
EDIT: I decided to disable the further comments for this answer because it looks like some people were very offended by it. I hope they will not try to downvote my answer until it's collapsed.