Gheorghe Muruziuc (b. 19 November 1930, Fălești; d. 25 September 1998, Bălți), completed four grades in a Romanian primary school and then pursued his incomplete secondary education under the Soviet school system. Probably due to this mixed schooling experience, he acquired a Romanian national consciousness. In 1949, he was forcibly mobilized to the coal mines in Novoshakhtinsk, Rostov on Don region. He became a high-skilled electrician and returned to the MSSR in the early 1960s. He participated in the construction of the sugar factory, and in 1963 he was hired as an electrician at the same plant. In the early 1950s, while in Abkhazia, he married a woman of Tatar origin. Muruziuc initially tried to sew and publicly display a Romanian flag on 12 June 1966, on the occasion of elections to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, but he was apparently prevented from doing so by his wife. However, on the night of 27/28 June 1966, when the Soviet authorities were preparing to celebrate the twenty-sixth anniversary of “Moldavia’s liberation from the Romanian capitalist and bourgeois yoke” (as the events of June 1940 were commonly labelled in official Soviet parlance), he raised the Romanian tricolour on the chimney of the sugar factory in Alexăndreni at about 4,30 am. When the day broke, the Soviet authorities panicked and sent representatives of all relevant institutions to descend upon the factory: the district militia, the local and district party committee, the administration of the factory, and the KGB from Bălți and Chişinău. Muruziuc held out for five hours on the roof of the factory, more precisely on the 45m factory chimney. All sorts of officials tried to persuade him to descend, but those who tried to climb on the roof were discouraged by Muruziuc, who used a batch of bricks and cement fragments to drive them away. After five hours, during which the whole village was discussing Muruziuc’s action, he decided to climb down. He was immediately interrogated by the local prosecutor, and on 30 June his case was discussed in an open party meeting at the factory. It is important to note that he had been a candidate member of the CPSU since March 1966. During the party meeting, he reiterated his position, refusing to resort to self-criticism. In fact, he asserted that “Moldavia should only exist for Moldavians, and persons of other nationalities should pack their suitcases and leave Moldavia’s territory.” He also voiced his opinion that “the Moldavian Republic should leave the USSR according to national criteria.” Significantly, both during this meeting and later interrogations, Muruziuc claimed to speak for the “whole Moldavian people” and to be defending its interests, ostensibly neglected and ignored by the Soviet authorities.
He was arrested on 3 July and officially accused of “fomenting national hatred and undermining the national and racial equality” of Soviet peoples. He was also accused of disturbing public order (“hooliganism”) due to his behaviour during the factory incident. During his interrogations at the KGB headquarters in Chișinău, the changes in his testimony prompted the KGB officials to suspect him of being mentally ill. He was scheduled to undergo a detailed psychiatric assessment and was hospitalized in Costiujeni psychiatric hospital, near Chişinău, for twenty-four days. Interestingly, the punitive medical system, frequently used in the USSR to silence dissenting views, failed in this case. According to Muruziuc’s later claims, he was helped by one of the doctors, who advised him to avoid taking the prescribed medicine and thus remain sane. After that, the KGB investigated him for several months in a row, and interviewed a large number of witnesses (family members, co-workers, factory officials, acquaintances, etc.). In November 1966, he was sentenced to two years of incarceration in a labour camp in Ivdel, situated in Sverdlovsk region in the Urals. He was released before completing his sentence, in March 1968 (after one year, nine months, and ten days). He displayed dignified behaviour during the trial, and stated openly what he thought, in particular that Moldavia was being robbed of its resources and that Moldavians (that is, ethnic Romanians) were being discriminated against by the Soviet authorities. Moreover, Muruziuc advocated the MSSR’s breakaway from the USSR and the settlement of the national problem either by creating an independent state or by uniting with Romania. At a certain moment, he was encouraged to leave for Romania together with his family, probably because the Soviet authorities realized that he was “incorrigible” from an ideological viewpoint. However, Muruziuc turned down the offer, saying that he wanted to remain in the MSSR, where he was born. Upon his return from the labour camp, the KGB offered to provide him with an apartment in any city of the MSSR, but he categorically refused and insisted on living in Alexăndreni. It was only years later, when his children were grown up, that he moved to Bălţi, the largest city in the northern part of the republic. His family suffered a lot, as the authorities harassed them while he was missing in 1966–1968. Some workers of the sugar factory were instigated by their chiefs to label Muruziuc’s family members “fascists.” When Muruziuc returned from prison, he insisted on being hired at the sugar factory again. Although the authorities refused at first, he ultimately got his old job back. He later worked for a construction firm in Bălți and remained critical of the regime. He was legally rehabilitated on 11 March 1991, when the Moldovan Supreme Court annulled his sentence and closed the case against him.
-
Lokalizacja:
- Chișinău, Moldova
Mykolaitis-Putinas is a famous Lithuanian novelist, poet, playwright and literary theorist, and a professor at Kaunas and later Vilnius University. In 1909, he entered the seminary in Seinai. He was ordained a priest in 1915. He later continued his studies at the St Petersburg Catholic Academy. Mykolaitis-Putinas published his first collection of poems in St Petersburg. After St Petersburg, he continued his studies at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. After completing his studies, he returned to Lithuania. In 1933, he published his most famous novel ‘In the Shadow of the Altars’, which caused a great scandal in Lithuania, as it describes a priest’s doubts and his eventual renunciation of his vocation. In 1935, Mykolaitis-Putinas left the priesthood. He started teaching at Vilnius University in 1940, where he became a professor.
Mykolaitis-Putinas decided not to flee but to stay in Soviet Lithuania in 1944. During the Soviet period he was known not only as a poet and a novelist, but also as a teacher at Vilnius University (until 1954). He nurtured a lot of writers and critics, and passed on the traditions of literature in independent Lithuania to the new generation of teachers and scholars. (For a very short period of time, from 1945 to 1946, Mykolaitis-Putinas was director of the Institute of Lithuanian Literature.) During the Late Stalinist period, he was criticised by Party officials for his political passivity and his anti-Marxism. In 1946, Mykolaitis-Putinas was obliged to publicly repent for his stance. Only a couple of his writings were published during this period. The government halted the publication of his famous novel ‘In the Shadow of the Altars’. (The novel was only published in Soviet Lithuania in 1954.) Another novel by him Sukilėliai (Rebels), in which he described an uprising of 1863 in Lithuania against the Imperial Russian government, was published in 1957. Mykolaitis-Putinas’ collected writings were published between 1959 and 1969 in ten volumes. A complete collection of his writings in 13 volumes started to be published in 1989; the 12th volume was published in 2013.
-
Lokalizacja:
- Vilnius , Lithuania
Béla Márkus was born in Bükkaranyos on 11 December 1945. He is a Hungarian literary historian, critic, and candidate for a doctorate in literary studies. His research areas include the Hungarian literature of the twentieth century, Hungarian minority literature, and the literatures of different ethnic groups. He graduated in 1970 from Lajos Kossuth University (nowadays known as the University of Debrecen) in the Faculty of Arts as with a degree in Hungarian and andragogy. In 1970–1974, Márkus was a member of the staff at the Hajdú-Bihari Napló (Daily News of Hajdú-Bihar County). In 1972, he graduated with a degree as a journalist. From 1974 to 1978, he was a reading editor for the periodical Alföld, and in 1978–1980, he became the main co-editor and, in 1990–1992, the main editor of the periodical. From 1993 to 2010, Márkus served as a professor in the Department of Modern Hungarian Literature at Lajos Kossuth University, where he complicated his habilitation in 2001.
-
Lokalizacja:
- Debrecen, Hungary
Áron Márton (b. 28 August 1896, Sândominic, Harghita county; d. 29 September 1980, Alba Iulia), bishop of Alba Iulia, the most influential Hungarian personality in twentieth-century Transylvania. He completed his secondary-school studies in Şumleu Ciucului, Miercurea-Ciuc and at the Károly G. Mailáth High School in Alba Iulia. In 1915 he was recruited for military service and he was discharged as a lieutenant. After the War he worked as an official in Brașov, and then from 1920 he was a seminary student in Alba Iulia. In 1924 he was ordained as a priest. He worked as a chaplain first in Ditrău, then from 1925 in Gheorgheni. From 1926 he taught religion at the public high school of Gheorgheni, and then from 1928 he served as a teacher of religion and assistant headteacher at the Catholic High School of Târgu Mureș. From 1929 he was a parish priest in Turnu Roșu and inspector of education at the Teréz Orphanage in Sibiu. After that he was a court chaplain in Alba Iulia for bishop Gusztáv Majláth. From 1930 he worked as an archivist, and from 1932 he held the position of episcopal secretary and he also worked as a university priest and homilist in Cluj. He was the organiser of extracurricular cultural education. Beginning with 1938 he was the parish priest of Saint Michael’s (Szent Mihály) church in Cluj. Pope Pius XI appointed him as bishop of Alba Iulia on December 24, 1938 and his consecration took place on February 12, 1939 (Domokos 1989; Virt 2002).
Following the Second Vienna Award the diocese was divided in two and Áron Márton remained in South Transylvania. The bishop was the only one during the Antonescu-government who dared to protest against the unequal treatment of Hungarians from Southern Transylvania. He was also the only person who presented the situation in an authentic manner to the Hungarian government. For three months, from November 1943 until January 1944 he visited the work camps set up near Făgăraș where some of the prisoners sent to jail without trial were specifically Germans and Hungarians. He officiated masses and helped those in need with pieces of clothing. On 18 May 1944, in his speech held in Saint Michael’s church in Cluj he protested against the deportation of Jews, and then a few days later on 22 May he sent a letter to the Hungarian authorities in which he asked them to prevent the deportation of Jews. After 23 August 1944 the bishop also visited the Hungarian intellectuals gathered as political prisoners in the work camps at Târgu-Jiu, Brad and other locations and on occasion he used his prestige to successfully intervene for people’s release. On 19 January 1945 he sent a letter to prime-minister Nicolae Rădescu in which he protested against the deportation of Germans (statement of József Marton; Marton 2014).
Even after the Second World War Áron Márton fought for the rights of the Hungarian minority, for freedom of religion and conscience. He tried to unite the leaders of the historical churches and in Cluj a memorandum was drawn up which proposed a more acceptable solution and asked that at least a part of the Transylvanian Hungarian population should be reattached to Hungary. The memorandum was signed only by Áron Márton. The content of the document which became one of the bishop’s main sins is known, as in the following month, on 8 January 1946 Áron Márton wrote an open letter of several pages to prime-minister Petru Groza. Giving an account of the impairments of rights (injuries), the situation, and state of mind of the Hungarian minority, he emphasised that he was not speaking on behalf of his community since he had no such delegacy. At the same time: “God created me a Hungarian and of course it hurts me to see the fate of my brothers and the evolution of their destiny cannot leave me indifferent. On the other hand, my priestly profession obliges me to weigh the issues also from the moral point of view. The situation of Hungarians living under Romanian supremacy does not comply with the great moral requirements laid down in the Statute of the United Nations as guiding principles of peaceful coexistence. And if we honestly want to promote peace between nations, I believe that we need to look for a way to see it unfold in this direction.” In 1946 the direct attacks began in the course of which Catholic priests were also persecuted and arrested. The bishop protested against this, too. On 18 March 1948, in the name of the Romanian Catholic episcopacy, along with his fellow bishops he turned to the minister of religious affairs in a letter, in which, due to the contradictions discovered in the Constitution, they argued in favour of freedom of conscience and religion as well as in favour of religious education and pastoral care. The new Constitution questioned the existence of religious denominations and Áron Márton realised that it was no longer possible to fight this alone so he joined the resistance movement organised around the nuncio Andrea Cassallo, who was later expelled. Áron Márton was asked to elaborate the Catholic Church’s statute, to be submitted to the state authorities. Out of the forty-six points of the draft, drawn up in a manner that was loyal to the Church, six were approved. In February 1949 the bishop reformulated the most important points but he did not receive an answer. As a reaction to the prohibition of the Romanian Greek Catholic church, Áron Márton called upon his priests in his circulars of 6 October and 20 October 1948 to offer the greatest possible support and help to their Greek Catholic brothers. At the time of Áron Márton’s death, Bishop Alexandru Todea thanked him in a separate entry in a memorial album for having assumed a role in the survival of the Greek Catholic church (statement of József Marton; Márton 2016).
On 21 June 1949 Áron Márton was arrested by the Securitate. At first he was kept in investigational detention, and then he was sentenced to life imprisonment by the military court in Bucharest on 13 July 1951. He served his sentence in the penitentiaries of Jilava, Aiud, Sighetu Marmației, and the Malmaison in Bucharest. After his sentence had been suspended by the Presidium of the Great National Assembly, he returned to Alba Iulia on 24 March 1955. As a result of the measures adopted by Áron Márton, who demanded discipline and work from his priests, the clerical peace movement collapsed. The bishop announced the great spiritual exercise, which had as its purpose to enable those who had fallen and succumbed during the “peace period” to settle their cases spiritually. The three-day spiritual exercise was followed by confession. The penitence was not in the form of prayers but consisted of money paid by those affected for the maintenance of the Faculty of Theology in Alba Iulia, which was in a very bad state. The situation was settled, and from then on, by virtue of an episcopal ordinance everybody had to accept the others. Áron Márton reorganised the Faculty of Theology, too. After his release, already in the autumn of that same year fifty theologians applied for posts, together with those who had earlier left the institution due to the collaboration of the Church leadership with the state authorities. Also at that time, Greek Catholic priests appeared, among them Lucian Mureșan, future archbishop and cardinal. Although the chorister school was established in 1953 in the so-called peace era, the bishop had planned its foundation already in 1948, so he approved and sanctioned the institution’s operating as a small seminary (statement of József Marton).
In the period between 1957 and 1967 Áron Márton was under house arrest and led the diocese from his episcopal residence. Among his responsibilities was the leading of the vacant dioceses of Satu Mare, Oradea, and Timisoara. Thanks to a short-term relaxation in the grip of the system his house arrest was eventually suspended. This was the time when he could undertake visits to Rome between 24 February and 6 March 1970, 6 and 26 October 1971, and 2 and 12 March 1974, on which occasions he had to settle certain matters. As a result of his visit in 1970, the possibility was created for at least four trainee priests or theology students per year to study in Rome. The most significant visit proved to be that of the year 1971, when Áron Márton took part in the episcopal synod and also held a speech. This is when he managed to obtain approval for the appointment of Antal Jakab as his suffragan. Jakab’s consecration as bishop took place in February 1972 in Saint Peter’s Cathedral, and received the approval of the Department of Religious Affairs as well. Succession represented the most delicate issue. Jakab was appointed with succession rights, cum iure successione, and was entitled to immediately follow Áron Márton in the position of bishop without the need for a new exchange of documents or further conciliation between the Romanian state and the Holy See. The visits to the Holy See meant a great experience and satisfaction to Áron Márton. He gave one to two-hour-long accounts of his journeys at the Theology Faculty in Alba Iulia so that he could spiritually strengthen his priests. It was important for theology students to maintain their optimism, knowing that they were taken into consideration in the better half of the world. Tragedy hit Áron Márton after his third visit to the Holy See, in May 1974. Following serious surgery he decided to adopt a more moderate work schedule and assigned part of his episcopal responsibilities to his suffragan (statement of József Marton; Márton 2015).
Áron Márton was also a man who embraced culture. It was no accident that as a young person he and the linguist Lajos György founded in September 1933 the pedagogical magazine entitled Erdélyi Iskola (Transylvanian school), which aimed at serving school education in the Hungarian language, the safeguarding of school and folk traditions and the utilisation of the more recent achievements in pedagogy. Last but not least they intended to help pedagogues in a period when teachers had no access to proper books as they lacked the necessary financial allowances. Although during his episcopacy the Church was confined within the walls of the church, to the vestry, Áron Márton strove to maintain contact with the personalities of culture and he welcomed the most outstanding Transylvanian writers, poets, and scholars – for example Andor Bajor, Sándor Fodor, Sándor Kányádi, and Samu Benkő – but also the more prominent experts in the field of science. As a consequence of the political changes they became questionable persons in the eyes of the party, but from Áron Márton they received much-needed support. The bishop maintained contact also with Hungarian poets and writers. He corresponded with János Pilinszky, and Gyula Illyés sent him his essay novel entitled Kháron ladikján (In Charon’s Boat) about growing old and dying, to which the bishop replied “You are not a faithless person, only a seeker.” The bishop gladly exchanged ideas with representatives of the opposition who would become black sheep in the 1980s. His guests were not only cultural personalities but also some persecuted persons who in case of need also benefitted from material support from the bishop. This is also a part of the cultural opposition. These people also represented human dignity in the face of the world. In 1971 – under the protective wing of the bishop – at the Theology Faculty of Alba Iulia a series of lectures was launched. Secular writers and poets came on Sundays to hold presentations beyond the regular curricular schedule. The initiative was banned already at the fourth presentation. Nevertheless, it was a great experience for the trainee priests to listen to Bajor, Fodor, Kányádi, or the traveller-writer Ödön Jakabos. The bishop was open toward everybody irrespective of confessional adherence. Áron Márton maintained contact also with persons of other nationalities and representatives of other confessions (Ozsvát 2003; statement of József Marton).
As of 1955, from his release from prison until his death in 1980, the bishop was under permanent monitoring and the Securitate tried to find out all of his initiatives and render all his anti-communist efforts impossible. His perseverance in resisting the interfering attempts of the state ensured the survival of the Church and of the Catholic faith and made him a moral example in the eyes of both his contemporaries and posterity. In the Archives of CNSAS (Romanian acronym for the National Council for the Study of Securitate Archives) there are four files relating to the person of Áron Márton, of which two are stored in the Penal Fonds, while other two are kept in the Informative Fonds. In the Penal Fonds the bishop’s name can be found on file no. P337 which consists of five volumes, comprising a total of 408 pages, and on file no. P254 consisting of twelve volumes numbering in total 4,544 pages. As far as the Informative Fonds is concerned, the following files can be found: file no. I261991 consisting of 174 volumes counting 54,.687 pages in total, and file no. I209511 made up of 62 volumes comprising a total of 22,393 pages. In this regard it must be mentioned that bishop Áron Márton has the largest amount of records of any individual in the Informative Fonds of CNSAS. As a comparison, the informative file of Ion Gavrilă Ogoranu who was the leader of the most significant anti-communist armed resistance group in all Romania comprises 119 volumes, while that of Ion Mihai Pacepa, the chief of the Directorate for Foreign Intelligence who fled the country in 1978, contains 120 volumes. According to Áron Márton’s observation files, the Securitate staff applied complex methods and means in order to collect information about the bishop between 1955 and 1980: they operated an intelligence network, monitored his activity with the help of technical means and the involvement of persons, controlled and censored his correspondence, made use of technical investigation instruments (Bodeanu 2014).
The communist authorities tried to prevent huge crowds from attending the funeral of Áron Márton in 1980. In his testament the bishop disposed that no funeral oration or special tribute speech in his honour should be given at his coffin. In his life he participated in all festivities, class-day ceremonies, and sport festivals. On the occasion of various commemorative events he received everyone including simple people and took photographs, and already during his life a certain Áron Márton cult was born which continued after the bishop’s death. The real driving force behind this was Lajos Bálint, who was elected suffragan bishop in 1981. In 1986 the first relief in memory of Áron Márton was unveiled at the Theology Faculty of Alba Iulia. The fiftieth anniversary of the bishop’s consecration was in December 1988 and the related ceremony should have been held in Cluj on 12 February 1989. However, this was prohibited by bishop Antal Jakab as he feared for his priests in Cluj. Eventually a night mass was officiated by the chaplain in Saint Michael’s church where it even pronouncing the name of Áron Márton was forbidden. However, two priests based in Cluj, Gábor Jakab and Lajos Szakács, in compliance with the agreement, received the intellectuals who used to hold lectures, i.e. Sándor Fodor, Sándor Kányádi, and György Beke. Later on both priests were denied their state allowances. Immediately after the fiftieth anniversary of the bishop’s consecration, suffragan Bálint wrote in January 1989 a circular in which, hiding behind quotations from Áron Márton, he alluded to the dilemma of exodus vs. remaining at home, which the Hungarians of Transylvania faced in the late 1980s, but this could not be published either. The future archbishop eventually transcribed these into sermons and published them only later in the Áron Márton Memorial Book of 1996. After the collapse of communism, the already-existing strong esteem for Áron Márton intensified. Following the change of regime, squares, streets, and schools were named after Áron Márton as a sign of public respect. The first studio documentary about the bishop’s life was made by Gábor Jakab and Gábor Xantus in 1993–1994 and carried the title: With his Head Held High: A Documentary about the Life and Career of Bishop Áron Márton. In 2003, on the occasion of the temporary exhibition of the House of Terror in Budapest entitled Áron Márton (1896–1980), a twenty-five-minute film was made on the life and activity of the bishop. On 16 October 2010, the Áron Márton Association of Sândominic, the Sândominic local government and the Roman Catholic Parish House of Sândominic inaugurated the Áron Márton Museum under the leadership of archbishop György Jakubinyi and coadjutor József Tamás. Today this is the most comprehensive museum collection about Áron Márton, also including audio guides. In March–April 2012, director Cristian Amza made a movie entitled Marton Aron, un episcop pe drumul crucii (Aron Marton, a bishop on the way of the Cross). In 2013, on the seventy-fifth anniversary of Áron Márton’s consecration as bishop, by courtesy of the Gábor Bethlen Fund, the ground-floor room in the truncated tower of Alba Iulia Cathedral which had already been furbished earlier as an Áron Márton memorial room, was complemented with two touchscreen info-terminals: one is placed in the exhibition hall, while the other is located in the cathedral (statement of József Marton).
Although the priests ordained by Bishop Áron Márton have by now mostly retired or died, their teachings have been adopted by the younger generation and the respect for Áron Márton continues unbroken. Religion teachers organise Áron Márton contests and the life of the bishop is known to everybody in the Transylvanian Roman Catholic diocese. The purpose is to promote a proper esteem, not by exaggerating but by remembering the real qualities of the man and of the bishop: the sincere, straightforward, helpful bishop living for others. In 1991 his beatification trial began. Today he is designated the Servant of God, which is the name of a candidate for beatification, and the first step in becoming a saint (statement of József Marton).-
Lokalizacja:
- Alba Iulia, Alba Iulia, Romania
Painter. Graduated from the High School of Applied and Fine Arts in 1971, and the Academy of Fine Arts in 1979. His photorealistic paintings, created in a media conscious manner, made him known at the beginning of the seventies. In the middle of that decade he participated in the events and performances created by the Rózsa Group (named after the espresso café located across from the academy).
His self-made sunglasses with calligraphic tracing (presented during protests in 1978) advanced the spirit of the new wave. At the beginning of the eighties he collaborated with János Vető, creating radical, uninhibited “social-impressionist” works evoking the worlds of graffiti and children’s drawing, appropriating the cultural-political icons of the time, and arranging them into unusual constellations. With these pictures and installations, they debuted the new wave program.
After a mystical experience he turned toward religions at the middle of the eighties. His works created in these years luxuriate in color, drawing on transfigured and reinterpreted Buddhist, Hindu, and Catholic symbols.
As a parallel layer of his painterly oeuvre, he did a series of small paintings verging on caricature, often turning into picture puzzles or jokes reversing the existing political system. Around 1999 he returned to photorealistic depiction, painting the protagonists and objects of his personal life in large format, after photographs, aiming towards sometimes lively, in other cases timeless or symbolic portrayal.
His retrospective exhibition was presented at the Ernst Museum in Budapest in 2007. He received the Munkácsy Prize in 2012.-
Lokalizacja:
- Budapest, Hungary
Photographer, cameraman, publisher. Between 1988 and 1995, he served as editor of and photographer for Hungarian newspapers in Bratislava. From 1995 to 1997, he was a cameraman at Duna TV, Budapest. He is the owner of the Méry Ratio Publishing House, which was founded in 1995. It publishes primarily historical monographies, memoirs, contemporary and historical literature, art and culture history volumes, political pamphlets, reprints, calendars, photo albums, and children’s books. Lives and works in Bratislava and Budapest.
His photographs shot in the baroque churches of Upper Hungary were presented at exhibitions and in photo albums co-authored with Marcell Jankovics. In 2012, he received the Knight’s Cross of the Order of Merit of Hungary for his efforts in preserving Hungarian heritage in the Carpathian Basin.Mészáros grew up in a rural environment, but regularly commuted to a neighbouring city to attend school. As a college student, he had to cross half of the country, since he attended the Berzsenyi Dániel College of Pedagogy (today the University of West Hungary) in Szombathely. In the 1980s, there were only two institutions of higher education in Hungary which offered Library Studies, and the better program was at Berzsenyi College, so the city of Szombathely drew in students who were interested in this field from all over the country. This is significant because the town is located at the western border of Hungary. The Austrian media was easily accessible in Szombathely, and Western materials could be smuggled over the border. Police officers boarding at Celldömölk monitored passengers on trains and asked them about the reasons for their trips near the borders, but these investigations did not primarily target students.
At the college, however, the students did worry about being under surveillance. Members of the police were regular guests at the dormitory, from where a student was taken in several times because he was a Jehova's Witness. As was not uncommon for members of this denomination, the student underlined passages from the Bible, and officers found this very suspicious. At the college, Mészáros encountered samizdat materials for the first time. It is also telling about the atmosphere in which they lived that Mészáros was only able to borrow the first samizdat he saw for a couple of hours, because the owner was worried about agents reporting to the political police.
The first samizdat Mészáros read was a typewritten copy of Hungarian philosopher and social critic Béla Hamvas' essay entitled "Direct Morality and Bad Conscience" (1960). He got his hands on Hamvas’ work in 1986, shortly after the Chernobyl disaster, which proved a memorable experience. As Mészáros remembered, official Hungarian media understated the significance of the event, implying even that it was not a nuclear catastrophe. At the Department of Physics at Berzsenyi College, however, they registered high levels of radiation. This information was circulated in Szombathely, and it was reinforced by Austrian news programmes which reported about Austrian authorities closing playgrounds, since the sand was very responsive to radioactivity. Hungarian media, in contrast, did not even report on whether conditions, and failed to communicate that radioactive clouds were passing over the country. Mészáros was reading Hamvas at the time, and Hamvas wrote dictatorships eventually end up falsifying even the weather reports. (According to Hamvas, "The weather report has to cease to be simple mediation of data, and it must contain disinformation that is somehow favourable to the government.") These lines were a revelation for Mészáros. He realized that this was the reality in which he lived.
Radio broadcasts were also important sources for Mészáros in this period. When he was in Györ in Western Hungary for compulsory military service, he was listening to the Cologne-based Deutschland Funk while he was on guard. The watchtowers were ideal places to listen to Western radio broadcasts, because the reception was relatively good. He was also listening to Radio Free Europe, but he did that at home. At the college, he was himself involved in the college radio, and in 1987, they produced a program on the 1956 Hungarian revolution: they interviewed students, asking them what they knew about and what they thought about the revolution. At the time, this was permitted, but a political police officer came to supervise the program on the spot. Still, recording and circulating a program from Austrian television was out of the question. According to Mészáros, such these kinds of ambivalences and contradictions were very characteristic of the system at the time. But the regime could not prevent information from being mediated to other parts of the country.
-
Lokalizacja:
- Budapest, Hungary
Miklós Mészöly (1921–2001) was a Hungarian writer born in Szekszárd, in the south of Hungary. Following his final examination at the local secondary school, he studied at the Faculty of Law of the Péter Pázmány University of Budapest, where he received a Doctor of Law diploma. Soon after, in 1944, he was enlisted in the Army, was sent to fight on Hungary’s southern front line, and fell captive in Serbia. Returning home in 1945, he worked as a physical laborer for a while, then from 1947–1948 he became a journalist editing a local daily. In 1948 he moved to Budapest, and one year later married Alaine Polcz, a young psychologist from Cluj/Kolozsvár, Romania. In 1951 he took the job of dramatic advisor at the State Puppet Theatre in Budapest. From 1956 until the end of his life, he was a freelance writer.
His first novel, Az atléta halála / The Death of an Athlete, was published first in French, then in 1966 in Hungarian and German. This was followed by a series of markedly disciplined, original novels and stories: Saulus (1968), Pontos történetek útközben / Precise Stories on the Way (1970), Film (1976), and Megbocsátás / Forgiveness (1984). His volumes of essays were also written with a fresh, new approach, e.g., A tágasság iskolája / The School of Wideness (1979) and Érintések / Touches (1980). Much of his oeuvre is represented by books of stories and novels, though he also has published a number of tales, articles, dramas, and film scripts. The main characteristics of his style are: denseness, disciplined narratives, and a profound philosophical approach of human dimension.
In the 1970s and 1980s he took an active role in Hungary’s literary as well as public life: in the passionate debates of the Hungarian Writers’ Union (MISZ), the Attila József Circle of Young Authors, and the journal of ‘Moving World,’ or from 1984 onwards the literary support of the Hungarian Soros Foundation. His independent mind and firm moral stand appealed to many and made him a successful mediator, before the major political changes, between writers and intellectuals of different age and mentality, e.g., between the völkisch patriots and the radical democrats. From 1990 he was a member of presidium of MISZ, and was elected as the founding president of the Széchenyi Art Academy. During his lifetime, he was the avowed maestro of many talented younger Hungarian authors, such as Péter Nádas, Péter Esterházy, Péter Balassa, László Márton, and László Darvasi.-
Lokalizacja:
- Budapest, Hungary
On 10 October 1975, at 1:00 pm, police officers came to her place of employment and detained Mrs. Múčková, explaining that she was to be accussed as a witness (this followed the detention of Mr. Gróf). At only 20 years old, she was held in the police station and subjected to interrogation. During this hearing, they screamed at her and questioned her about her brother, who secretly studied theology. They also asked her about Gróf and their activities together. Mrs. Múčková answered the questions, signed the minutes, and was allowed to go home. Later she continued Christian activities with her husband, but they were under surveillance by the secret police.
As Mrs. Múčková remembers: "We never criticised the state, nor did we even sign the Charter 77. Professor Gróf said that our policy is the policy of the Gospel, and if they will persecute us for that, so be it. But anti-state activities, or materials, or swearing ... those things were not done. We tried to distance ourselves from those things."
Mrs. Múčková remained at home on maternity leave for an extended period, and her children were also at home because she refused to send them to be educated at the socialist kindergarten. She was active in the secret church until the revolution. Her husband died tragically in 1995.
-
Lokalizacja:
- Nová Dedinka 1062, Slovakia 900 29