This
year marks the 60th anniversary of the Hungarian revolt against its
Communist government (and Soviet overlords). What started as a student march on
the Parliament building in Budapest on 23 October looked for a few days as
though it would crack open the Warsaw Pact. But within a couple of weeks the
Red Army invaded and even more repressive measures were imposed on the country,
symbolized in such photos as this one:
Hungary’s
in one of those dicey geopolitical situations, standing in the path between
Russian and German interests. During the Second World War the country was an
Axis ally, and engaged in some unsuccessful secret attempts to negotiate an
armistice with the Western Allies while fighting off the Soviets, which
resulted in a German invasion in March, 1944. Between then and Germany’s
surrender in April, 1945, 450,000 Jews and 28,000 Roma were murdered; there was
almost no Hungarian resistance to this policy of deportation and murder.
One of
the victims was the poet Miklós Radnóti. During the war Radnóti was conscripted
into the Hungarian army; being a Jew, he was assigned to an unarmed labor
battalion on the eastern front. He continued to write poetry, which we know
about because, as the end approached, he bribed one of his Hungarian guards to
smuggle his notebook of poems out. In November 1944, on a forced march, Radnóti
was killed, with about 3200 comrades.
Like
poets everywhere, Radnóti wrote about the human experience. In his case, of
course, that experience included imprisonment and the expectation of being
murdered. For example:
“The
Hunted”
From my window I see a hillside,
it cannot see me at all;
I’m still, verse trickles from my pen
but nothing matters in hiding;
I see, though cannot grasp this solemn,
old-fashioned grace: as ever,
the moon emerges onto the sky and
the cherry tree bursts into
blossom.
Since
the end of the war, Radnóti has been recognized as a national treasure in
Hungary. Funny how that works out.
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