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Outside Budapest Archives - Freedom Fighter 56 https://freedomfighter56.com/category/outside_budapest/ Thu, 24 Oct 2019 01:11:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://i0.wp.com/freedomfighter56.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/cropped-thumbnail.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Outside Budapest Archives - Freedom Fighter 56 https://freedomfighter56.com/category/outside_budapest/ 32 32 168084273 Dr. Steven Julius Török – Debrecen https://freedomfighter56.com/dr-steven-julius-torok-debrecen/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dr-steven-julius-torok-debrecen Thu, 24 Oct 2019 01:11:00 +0000 https://freedomfighter56.com/?p=3005 I was a first year student at Kossuth Lajos Tudományegyetem in Debrecen, studying nuclear physics. Students from Szeged University came to our Univesity on the 21st and reported their 16 points for university autonomy and asked our support. Next day there was…

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I was a first year student at Kossuth Lajos Tudományegyetem in Debrecen, studying nuclear physics. Students from Szeged University came to our Univesity on the 21st and reported their 16 points for university autonomy and asked our support. Next day there was a university-wide meeting and a decision to demonstrate. On the 23rd we marched from the University to the city center, singing the Mardeillese! I sang it in French, since I studied in a Licee Francais in Gödöllõ when I was 10 years old, run by the Norbertine Fathers. The school was closed two years later and the buildings later became the Agricultural University where my mother worked in 1956 as a laboratory assistant and where I participated in gymmnastics and skiing university sports while still in high-school at Petõfi Gimnázium in the village of Aszod. I graduated in June of 1956 and was admitted to Debrecen, where I joined the new nuclear physics program, being one of 16 admitted from over 200 applicants.

After the demonstration on the 23rd, news came that in Budapest shots were fired that same evening, so we regrouped and defended our university with the armory of the ROTC corps that we were all members of. We had, however, no ammunition and hoped that whoever would attack us would not know this! At the same time the student council contacted the Hungarian Army barracks in the city and they decided to support us. News came that in Budapest the revolution succeeded — we thought we were the only ones doing a revolution, as a postcard I wrote to my parents would have testified. However, they never received the postcard.

TOWN MEETINGS
I volunteered to the student council with a friend from the same dormitory, Zoltán Bódy (may he rest in peace; he died about 10 years ago after becoming a professor at our alma mater in Debrecen that I visited again some 5 years ago…). A bus picked us up in the morning at the student dorm and at each village around Debrecen 2 students and a soldier (whom we picked up at the barracks, similarly volunteers but with official Hungarian Army approval) were dropped to organize a town meeting, inform the people of events in Budapest, disarm the police, and organize the national guard with their help. As young and enthusiastic eighteen year-olds we did this without a hitch and even without any sense of danger, ending up with the whole village singing the Hungarian National anthem, then they invited us to a wedding where the bus on its return picked us up around 10 . p,m. to take all 36 of us back to Debrecen.

My village was Görbeháza where I visited again last year after 49 years and hardly recognized the town — the church and the Cultural Hall where I held the meeting were still there, but the deep mud was gone, all paved roads, many new buildings. The other 11 teams of soldiers and students were in other surrounding villages of the district, were similarly tired but succesful.

GDYE SUEZ?
The next day (Thursday) I decided to hitch-hike to Budapest to find my parents in Gödöllõ. As I hitched a ride on food-trucks carrying pigs and wheat to feed the capital, at night convoys of Russian Army trucks passed us. Someone shouted at us: GDYE SUEZ? [Where is the Suez Canal?] This was supposed to be the withdrawal of the Soviet troops agreed with the new Hungarian Government… I arrived about 10 o’clock at night to Budapest to Üllõi út where the food was offloaded. I started to walk, then heard some shots in the distance. A patrol stopped me : who are you? A student from Debrecen — I showed my student ID. They were revolutionaries patrolling the streets, trying to capture any secret police in hiding or trying to escape. This happened to me about three times in the dark streets before reaching my cousin’s house near Kálvin Tér. My pants were completely wet when I climbed the stairs to the third floor and they let me in…

Next day was the 1st of November and I took the electric train to Gödöllõ, picking up all the free newspapers on the way to the Keleti train station. It was euphoria… we had finally won! My mother and father were happy to see me. In fact, my father had gone by motorcycle to my dorm to try to pick me up — only to be told that I had left! He could at least bring back my clothes and books! I could not, however, forget the ominous Russian convoys coming towards Budapest that passed us: Will this last? I thought to myself, Imre Nagy just declared Hungary’s neutrality — will they respect it?

The Revolution really threw me into the world at 18 to fend for myself. I believe it is perhaps the single most important event in the 20th century that turned the tide on communism.

WALKING TO AUSTRIA
We decided with a high school friend to go into hiding at the state farm where my father worked, in Balatonfenyves, near the lake Balaton, after the Russian invasion on November 4th., Around the 10th of November, when we saw that no help was forthcoming, we feared for our safety. Then, on the 23rd, we started walking toward the border, after my father went there on a motorcycle the day before to see that if it was still possible to cross. From Keszthely it was a walk of some 120 km, however we could hitch some bus rides as far as Zalaegerszeg. There the driver told us to get out and walk around the hills towards Zalalövõ since Zalaegerszeg was already controlled by the Russians This we did and the evening w arrived to a house where my father had been the previous day and where they put us up for the night. It was a wedding feast that night; we drank and danced and the people who knew where we were going told us “Go and tell them: we are very disappointed!”. I still remember the face of the little old lady who could have been my grandmother who told me this.

The next day we started walking early through the fields and reached the river Mura in the afternoon that we had to cross to get to the border. Incidentally, there was fresh snow and fog and we got lost — my father thought we could only cross out towards Yugoslavia but we wound up by the river, highway, forest and railway line near the Austrian border. There was a patrol on the bridge, so we walked a bit downriver where a man with a boat took us across and hid us in a barn. The highway and rail line were already guarded so he suggested we wait till night when he would try to take us across. By the time midnight came instead of the 2 of us there were a dozen of us hiding in the barn, similarly picked up by the man with the boat during the day as they were coming across the fields. Some were Hungarian soldiers, some students, some families.

At midnight we filed in a single file towards the border. First a patrol vehicle passed the highway and we rushed across after it left. On the railway two Russian soldiers were patrolling on foot. However, we were 12 and they did not know whether we were armed (we were not) so they turned back and let us pass. Then in the forest in the snow we walked towards the border. The guide with us turned back, we gave him all the Hungarian currency we had with us as our gratitude. He warned us to turn west and not north, since then we might cross back to Hungary. We crossed the border at Deutshcbillings near Csáktornya on the night of the 24th of November. W reached an Austrian border post, I greeted them in German, and they took us to a schoolhouse where there were already about a hundred people they gathered during the night. They showed us a movie that I still remember: “Ferien in Tyrol…” They then took us to a makeshift quarter at the school where I started the cheese my father had packed for me… I was safe!


Dr. Steven Julius Török
Born in 1938, he took part in the events in Debrecen and Budapest. After escaping to the West via Austria, he lived in Japan, where this story was published in his 1963 high school magazine, Koni Course. He became a friend of the bestselling author Shiba Ryotaro in Osaka, who modeled the hero of his novel “Ryomaga Yuku” about Dr. Török. Shiba only told him this later, after the novel had sold 17 million copies in Japan. His friend passed away 10 years ago, but he is now writing a historical novel about the 13th century in Hungary dedicated to Shiba’s memory. The novel features Prince Kálmán of the Árpád Dynasty and will be published this year, possibly in China, in English. Dr. Török also lived in the United States, attending Stanford University in California and earning a PhD from Columbia University in 1976. After his retirement from the United Nations in 1998 he repatriated to Hungary, where he now lives in his ancestral home.

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Mária Szodfridt – The Story of My Husband: The Terrible Years Before the Revolution https://freedomfighter56.com/maria-szodfridt-the-story-of-my-husband-the-terrible-years-before-the-revolution/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=maria-szodfridt-the-story-of-my-husband-the-terrible-years-before-the-revolution Thu, 24 Oct 2019 00:41:16 +0000 https://freedomfighter56.com/?p=2968 Szabadságunkat köszünjük nektek, 56-os hõsök” “For Our Freedom We Thank You, Heroes of 1956” These are the words engraved on the stone monument on the grounds of the Philadelphia & Vicinity Hungarian Sports Club. The Club’s membership dedicated it on the 40th…

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Szabadságunkat köszünjük nektek, 56-os hõsök”

“For Our Freedom We Thank You, Heroes of 1956”

These are the words engraved on the stone monument on the grounds of the Philadelphia & Vicinity Hungarian Sports Club. The Club’s membership dedicated it on the 40th anniversary of the Revolution.

The Club was founded by Hungarian refugees from 1956. It is commonly referred to as the “Magyar Tanya,” or “Hungarian Farm.” It is located on a 120 acre-large piece of land that resembles the hilly, wooded regions of Dunántúl in Hungary. We purchased it for $20,000, but its value has grown to several million dollars.

We built the Clubhouse out of a ramshackle, abandoned 125 year-old farm house. Next to the building that holds our ballroom and fully equipped kitchen we have a large swimming pool. Every July we hold a big Hungarian Day, which is an important event for East Coast Hungarians, and draws a thousand participants! We have spots for 30 camping trailers with hook-up for water, electricity and sewage. We built all this from sheer willpower, 95% of it with our own hands, and, without a dissenting voice in our midst.

A group of young Hungarians grew up here: we had a Hungarian Scout troup, a Hungarian School, and a Hungarian dance group. We preserved our heritage. The commemoration of national holidays, March 15, the Heroes’ Day, the 1956 anniversary, etc. are still important and inspiring events for us.

One of the founders of the Magyar Tanya and its president for over 40 years was my husband, József Szodfridt (1922-2003). Through his leadership he played a major role in this organization from its origins in the 1960’s until his death in 2003. He saw this project as his life’s work in America.

One cannot fully appreciate the inspiring stories about the 1956 Revolution, without first learning about the tragic consequences of communist rule on individual lives in Hungary. That is why I would like to share a letter with you that my husband wrote to a good friend and former fellow prisoner who asked him to document his terrible experiences of time spent in Russian and Hungarian prisons between 1945 and 1956. His fate, along with those of thousands of others, was tragically typical of those years. It served as precursor to the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, when even the youth shouted “Enough!”

József’s letter to his friend:

 My military rank: I was a 2nd lieutenant. I graduated from Ludovika Academy. On August 20, 1944, they promoted me to artillery lieutenant. I was assigned to a heavy gun artillery brigade, the Sopron #101, and sent to the front in the beginning of September, 1944, as chief officer. In a short time I became squadron commander.

In May, 1945, I was taken prisoner near Wratikau County (Czechoslovakia.) I served time in the Olmutz prisoner of war camp and was one of the few Christians held at Auschwitz. Among the people, it was said that the Germans demolished this place before they retreated. This is a misleading lie! Nothing was demolished there or set on fire. The Russians used it as a prisoner of war transit camp; fifty-three thousand of us were crowded together there, where before us nine thousand had “lived in inhuman conditions.”

Both of the ditches lining the 3km road which led from station to camp were filled with bodies, shot in the head, because the people were so sick they couldn’t keep up the pace. I was lucky, because two young men from my brigade dragged me the entire three kilometers, even though they, too, could barely walk from hunger and weakness.

I don’t even have to tell you how miserable the conditions at the camp were: people were dropping like flies in autumn. I was able to get back on my feet after 12 days in the epidemic hospital, thanks to one of the soldiers from my squadron. At the risk of his life, he climbed up the lightning rod and saved my life with whatever charred bread and tea he could find.

At this epidemic hospital the conditions were indescribable. I was fortunate because they threw me on the highest (third) bunk, so nothing could drip down on me from above. For 12 days I soiled my bed. On the 12th day I got up to go to the latrine, and when the doctor saw me, he released me as healthy.

This is how I ended up in the same transport as the men from my squadron. On the car someone had just died waiting for the engine to arrive, and, as his replacement, I became the last Hungarian to be taken from Auschwitz to Russia.

1947 – Until the fall I was at the Akmolinsk #330 prison of war camp. On October 23rd I arrived in Debrecen.

1947 – In November, I enrolled at the Technical College as a mechanical engineering major.

1949 – From February 3rd I was again in prison. I got involved with the Gyõr police as well as the ÁVO there. For 53 days I was held for questioning at the Military Police Branch on Bartók Béla Street in Buda. (They were particularly cruel under the bloody András Berkesi and his deputies: They knocked out 8 of my teeth, broke several of my ribs, kicked and destroyed my right kidney, broke my nose, pummeled my genitals, beat my palms and soles of my feet to shreds. They tried to extract a confession from me at any cost!)

After the investigation I spent time in the Margit Street military detention center, the Pest Regional Government detention center, and the Markó Street prison. After my conviction I was I sent to the “gyûjtõfogház,” a political detention center, where it was my job to “build democracy.”

I was a plumber, an electrician, a Russian translator, a smith, a technical draftsman, a locksmith, an engineer, a furnace stoker, a machinist, an electrical and flame welder, a stone mason and a typewriter repairman to name just a few of my jobs. (Knowledge of these skills has served me well to this day.)

1952 – on June 3rd I got in major trouble by being a ringleader in providing cover for the successful escape attempt of Szilárd Karácsony, who reached Austria safely. They kicked apart my sphincter muscles, and beat out my eye (among others). Fortunately, they took me into the ÁVO headquarters for an interrogation, as I probably owe my life to this.

Because of this escape attempt, they demoted the warden, Bánkuti, from major to captain. Out of total rage and retaliation, they beat one of our men (Ferenc Kurucz) to death in front of numerous witnesses from every work brigade. I can imagine that I could have met a similar fate had I not been taken away.

1953 – I ended up in the Csolnok coal mines. There I first worked on the coal wall, and later as an electrician. I gained some new skills, including electro-locksmith and mining equipment operation.

1953 – In December, because of strike organizing I was taken to the Márianosztra penal house, from where I was transported to Várpalota.

1956 – Once again I ended up at Csolnok as a skilled laborer. From there I was released on August 18th and was ordered to report again in February, 1957, to resume serving the rest of my sentence.

During the Revolution I was in Gyõr under police surveillance, planning my long-awaited wedding.

On November 13th, I received the news that I was again on the list. After a brief conversation with my wife whom I had just married 3 weeks before, we decided to leave the country. We crossed the Andau Bridge on a November night, on a rainy, muddy road to the unknown, and we succeeded in making it to Austria.

Thinking back on it, fate is so unpredictable: we were most happy when we lost our homes, but won back our freedom!



Mária Szodfridt
Mária Szodfridt was also born in Gyõr, and attended the College of Physical Education in Budapest. After graduation she returned to Gyõr, where she taught physical education to high school students for 8 years.

After their arrival in the United States she worked as a quality control laboratory technician at Merck Pharmaceuticals. She taught in the Hungarian School, worked with the Hungarian Scouts, and supported her husband’s work at the Magyar Tanya in every possible way. She and József have two children.


József Szodfridt
József Szodfridt was born in Gyõr in 1922. His university studies in Budapest were interrupted by World War II. After serving 11 years in several communist prisons, in 1956 he escaped with his bride, Kiki, and three close friends and former prison-mates to Eisenstadt, Austria. In April, 1957, after they realized it was hopeless to wait to return to Hungary, the Szodfridts and the group of friends from Gyõr decided to immigrate to the United States. They started their American life together in Lansdale, Pennsylvania.

József held many jobs, working his way up in each position, first as an electrician, vacuum plater, and plant manager, and finally, as a consultant. In the early 1960’s along with others, he began decades of hard work actually building the facilities of the “Magyar Tanya,” the “Hungarian Farm.” He served as President of the Hungarian Sports Association of Philadelphia for 38 years, until his death in 2003

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Ferenc Novák – Class-alien work battalion https://freedomfighter56.com/ferenc-novak-class-alien-work-battalion/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ferenc-novak-class-alien-work-battalion Wed, 23 Oct 2019 16:32:56 +0000 https://freedomfighter56.com/?p=2789 The autumn air in October 1956 was filled with anticipation in the barracks of Unit 4055 of the work battalion in Komló. We had nearly completed our two years of compulsory military service in the coal mines and were eagerly looking forward…

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The autumn air in October 1956 was filled with anticipation in the barracks of Unit 4055 of the work battalion in Komló. We had nearly completed our two years of compulsory military service in the coal mines and were eagerly looking forward to returning to civilian life. There were changes on the outside too; a process of fermentation that started after Stalin’s death was accelerating with calls for radical reforms in the communist regime, voiced by intellectuals inside as well as outside the party. Overall, a sense of excitement pervaded the place.

Our unit was largely made up of “class alien” elements: we were the sons of former government officials, military officers, well-to-do farmers and other middle-class families who were deemed unreliable in the eyes of the communist regime and therefore not to be trusted with weapons. Some of us had already personally known the heavy hand of the regime, having been imprisoned or, as in my own case, deported. Being of like background, there was a sense of real camaraderie that made our life there bearable.

Changes in the air
By the year 1956 our treatment by our officers had markedly improved. The sometimes brutal treatment of earlier years gave way to a more civilized, almost respectful attitude, as if they sensed that their power was eroding. No longer did they call us enemies of the working class. The emphasis was now on our contribution to the building of socialism.

By and large, we were aware of the changes in the political atmosphere in the country. Those of us who were able to visit their families brought back news when they returned from leave.

On the 17th or 18th of October one member of our unit – named Szegedi who happened to be from Szeged – brought back news of an extraordinary meeting of students at the university, demanding, among other things, the right to form a new student organization independent of communist party control. The answer to that was a midnight raid on the dormitories by the secret police, during which several students were badly beaten up.

There were also rumors of a planned march of students in Budapest on Monday, October 22, demanding that Parliament pass laws aimed at economic and political reforms. The idea of an unauthorized march seemed so absurd, I decided that I had to witness it. I got a three-day pass and traveled to Budapest on Saturday.

Monday afternoon I took my Soviet-made Zorkij camera and went to the Parliament building, waiting for the historic event. The hours passed and nothing happened. When darkness fell, I rushed to the railroad terminal to catch my overnight train back to Komló.

Listening to the radio
The next day, on the 23rd I was on guard duty at the camp gate. In the evening we were listening to the radio broadcasting the speech of Ernõ Gerõ, the new party chief just back from Yugoslavia where he met Tito, trying to patch up differences between the two communist countries. We expected him to sound a conciliatory note regarding the political and economic reforms demanded by party members and intellectuals. Instead, he strongly denounced the reformers and called for closer alignment with the Soviet Union.

Not much later we heard in the radio that “hooligan elements” started shooting at various points in the city. A curfew was announced. We were not sure what happened, but were rooting for the insurgents. Daily thereafter, we followed the events as broadcast in the radio.

In the camp, the days went uneventfully. In the town the newly formed revolutionary councils took over control after the communist functionaries and secret police ran away or went into hiding. There was a general strike, so the mines were idle. Our officers were clueless, not knowing which side to take. One day a group of armed students from the University of Pécs showed up and disarmed the officers. Each company selected one officer to lead us into battle if necessary – and if we were supplied with arms – and we sent the rest home.

Bored of being idle during those tumultuous times, we sent a delegation to General Maléter who was in charge of the working battalions, requesting that he either authorize us to disband or send us arms and direct us to where we may be needed. His answer was for us to stay put and await further orders.

At dawn on November 4 we awoke at the distress call broadcast by Imre Nagy over the radio announcing that the Soviet troops attacked Budapest. We could hardly believe our ears. That meant the collapse of all our dreams. Our despair knew no bounds.

Csepel truck
Our first thought was to go home, to find out if our families were safe, then to leave the country, because we couldn’t face the prospect of the return of a regime we thought was gone forever. One of us, who knew how to drive, got hold of a Csepel truck, into which about 20 of us piled and took off heading north, toward where most of us lived. We were careful to avoid the main roads where we might have encountered Russian troops. One by one we dropped off our companions as we reached the vicinity of their hometowns, until we reached Lipót, our northernmost point, the home of our driver.

At that point there were only two of us left, László Bitó (later famous eye specialist and medical researcher in the USA, and eventually noted writer and publicist in Hungary) and myself. Of the two of us, I had driven a tractor once, so I became the driver. Someone helped me put the shift in third gear while others gave the truck a push, since the starter didn’t work. We started with a lurch and I managed to keep the truck going in the same gear, afraid to do anything that might cause the engine to stall. Burning the clutch all the way, we started on our way toward Budapest.

At Gyõr, our luck ran out. As we reached the crest of a high bridge, we saw a group of Russian soldiers at the other end. With difficulty I managed to stop the truck and we were waved off. In halting Russian, we tried to explain that we were unarmed and trying to get home, not to fight. They were apparently fresh troops unfamiliar with the location and were clearly under the impression that they were at the Suez Canal, expecting to encounter American troops. Shortly they transported us to the local headquarters of the Hungarian secret police, and locked us up in the basement jail. There were already several other servicemen in neighboring cells. We were sure that our next destination would be somewhere in Siberia.

Negotiated release
Luckily, an officer from the local Hungarian barracks appeared who somehow negotiated the release of his men. At this point we started shaking our cell door demanding that we, too, be released. The officer at first didn’t believe that we were also soldiers because our uniform was different from that of the regular units. Eventually he understood and took us with him also. We were relieved to be able to sleep in the relative safety of a Hungarian barracks.

Our release demonstrated a strange situation in those days. While some Hungarian army units were effectively fighting the Russians, others were locked up in their barracks and maintained a state of neutrality with the tacit or express understanding of the Russians. Perhaps the latter was the situation in Gyõr at the time of our little adventure.

Next day we managed to get on one of the sporadically running trains and got as far as Komárom. There, learning from our earlier experience, we took no chance and went directly to the local garrison to spend the night. The following morning we caught a train that took us all the way to Budapest. This time we were traveling by day, and were able to observe Russian soldiers dug in along the railroad tracks, apparently in combat readiness.

Exactly a week after starting I arrived home in Budaõrs. I found everyone safe and sound. My parents’ joy didn’t last long when I told them about my decision to leave Hungary. Next morning my brother Péter and I trekked to the Kelenföld railroad station where we met László Bitó, his brother József, his fiancée and her parents and together boarded a train bound for western Hungary. We rode that train as far as we dared, then continued on foot, reaching Austria by way of the bridge at Andau, made famous in James Michener’s novel. The time was 10 pm on November 12, 1956.

On December 15, the seven of us arrived at the Camp Kilmer refugee camp in New Jersey.


Ferenc Novák
Born in 1934, he was deported with his family in 1951 and served in a work battalion from 1954 to 1956. In the United States he attended Princeton University, receiving a BSE degree in Electrical Engineering in 1961. In 1996 he retired after a 33-year career with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. He is married, has four children and lives in Short Hills, NJ.

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Eugene Laszlo Hegedus. REMEMBER 56 https://freedomfighter56.com/eugene-laszlo-hegedus-remember-56/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=eugene-laszlo-hegedus-remember-56 Thu, 17 Oct 2019 11:09:37 +0000 https://freedomfighter56.com/?p=1940 I do remember ’56. One must not forget it. Yes, I remember as if it happened today. Yes, I remember when I experienced freedom for the first time. I remember that our joy was second only to our enthusiasm. I remember when we…

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I do remember ’56. One must not forget it. Yes, I remember as if it happened today. Yes, I remember when I experienced freedom for the first time. I remember that our joy was second only to our enthusiasm. I remember when we first heard the news that demonstrators took the streets of Budapest. I remember when we broke into the local prison in Gyõr to facilitate the release of the political prisoners, of whom there were many.

How could I forget when the AVO, the Hungarian secret police, fired on us as they rolled in with a huge truck and we tried to escape through the construction paraphernalia, deep ditch, forms for the concrete pouring etc. As the train station and its facilities were enlarged, fixed, rebuilt, we, or I should say the lucky few who were blessed with a small skinny body squeezed through the iron fence, bruises and scrapes on our bodies, missing buttons from our clothing were the evidence of our struggle in trying to get away from the lethal scene.

I remember, and I can’t forget this even decades later; we gathered ourselves again the next day. We marched en masse toward the headquarters of the AVO. Of course, we entered through the back door and demanded (those were giant words then) and I mean demanded, the release of the messengers from Budapest and the release of the individual dossiers that they kept on basically every adult in Hungary. The situation turned ugly, since they were the only ones with weapons, but we had the masses behind us. Yes, behind us in more than one sense.

Confronting the AVO
I was looking through a protective iron gate and the AVO’s machine guns stuck into my gut, with threatening words “Back off or I’ll shoot! Besides, we already requested reinforcements …” and he continued to ramble on still in a threatening voice. Soon we could see fear in his eyes. I too collected all my strength and calmly, with a rather strong voice I told him it’s impossible, since we cut the phone lines. What else could I have told him? There was no way to back off. Behind me was the crowd-the students, the workers, and many of Gyor’s citizens. They just pressed on.

We succeeded in our quest of getting in. We sent out the occupants, and then started feeding the large bonfire whose flames seemed to enjoy burning the unwanted documents that the AVO amassed. The smoke, the ashes rose not much faster than our spirits celebrating this newly acquired freedom of ours. The fate of the AVO was not pretty. We could not protect them from the crowd’s angers, not only angry words, but blows both by hand and foot. It seemed as if no one cared about them or felt sorry for them. They deserved punishment, but it should not have been administered to them by the crowd.

I do remember all of this. I remember as the crowd punched and kicked them. I remember because I can’t forget it. I remember because for decades I have had nightmares about it and I remember all my dreams. I used to go home in my dreams, but before I had a chance to hug my parents and siblings, the AVO came. Their dastardly actions, their cruel behavior scared me. I knew them. With bloodthirsty eyes, open mouths with fangs and sarcasm in every word they spoke, they started chasing me. I tried and tried to escape, but all was in vain. My legs were solidly anchored to the ground. My wings (yes, I had wings, and I could fly in my dreams) were clipped. The trench was too wide, the water too turbulent and deep, the snakes were biting and / or spewing poison. On top of all this, the searchlights were aiming their reflectors at me and caused temporary blindness. I saw my mom as my father was holding her back from trying to help me escape from the swamp and its nasty inhabitants. I tried to warn her not to come, but I was voiceless. No sound came from my throat. God only knows how many times I woke up from my nightmares, soaked, voiceless, crying without tears only to be consoled by my wife, who gently shook my shoulders to awaken me from this horrible torture. There times when I assumed it was the hangman’s hand putting the noose on my neck and I violently attacked her. Suddenly I heard the sharp sound of the gun … Oh the relief as I woke up from my dreams! The nightmares were still racing in my mind. I had to tell her. She was always a polite and patient listener. Many times I fell back to sleep as she was holding me in her arms.

Toppling the Red Star
Sure, I remember as a young student representative at the revolutionary council, taking information or news to the radio station and the wire service (MTI). I first went on foot, later I was armed with an official permit to stop and request transportation from any vehicle. I remember, since it’s impossible to forget the Red Star falling down from the top of the obelisk at the bus station. Because I was there. I was the one who managed to get a rope around it, while my compatriots tied the other end to a tractor and succeeded in pulling it down. My antics with the star made me a bit of a star myself. As much as we enjoyed it then, we regretted it considerably more later because as the saying goes, we were caught red-handed (no pun intended) by the city’s official photographer.

I remember the darkness that befell Gyor one early November night. The electricity was shut down all night, nothing moved, nothing happened in the total darkness. Only the rising sun brought light to the city. We worked the hand-cranked copy machine, churning out leaflets to inform the Mongol-looking Russian soldiers about our intentions. We had no bones to pick with them, only with the system, the tyrant, the communists, the Soviets. Little did we know then that they could not even read. Some simply could not read, some could not read the Latin alphabet, so while some were looking for the Suez Canal or Berlin, the others could not even decipher our Cyrillic letter flyers.

My Sentence
I was arrested, interrogated, and in a mock trial (I didn’t know then) was sentenced to death. The “sentence” was carried out on my derriere, where a kick by a huge Russian boot propelled me down, tumbling to the bottom of the 32-step entrance of the city hall. I can still hear their loud laugh, and see their ugly faces and the fire of hate emanating from their eyes. I accepted my teacher’s recommendation to go home and lay low for a while in my hometown, which is the small village of Markotabodoge. Even God had a hard time remembering where this small village was, so I felt safe. “It’s vacation time,” I said to everyone “There is no coal as usual”, I explained to anyone who inquired why I was home.

One day, my grandfather rushed back from the city demanding to know in front of my mom what I had done. “Why are your pictures plastered everywhere? Why are you a wanted man? What horrible things have you done?” My mother just looked at me and quietly said “I cannot and will not send you away from home, but at this time I’m afraid to ask you to stay. I suddenly just hugged and kissed her. We quickly got my little sister home from school. She was only a little girl. Thirty-four years later I questioned her, but she had no recollection of any of these events. I had to wait and I mean I HAD to wait 34 years for a chance to return. I was approached and my services solicited by a Hungarian spy, whom I reported to the FBI. He mysteriously died a few months later, so how could I have gone home with these happenings?

Returning Home…34 Years Later
Thirty-four years later, in 1989, the Hungarian communist party declared its dissolution. The Berlin wall came down, due in no small part to the Hungarians, and we finally had free elections in Hungary. Finally, I could go home too. We got our passports, my wife and I and started the journey. RETURNED. Returned to my homeland, my country of origin. Hungary. Back to our God-forsaken village of Markotabodoge. Back to see my mother, father, brother, sister, my loved ones. The relatives, the memories, the Village. It was relatively easy to recognize my country along with my little village. My little village had everything except for size. A lot of people were missing from the few inhabitants and almost all were still poor. Just like in the olden days, but they were free again.

We spent thirty unforgettable days at home. We had woven the days and nights into one and exchanged our stories about the past thirty-four years, extending it backwards to my earlier years, my childhood years. We had also seen a remarkable collection of cities, churches, museums, castles, natural wonders and man-made monuments. At one of the visits to Gyor, we toured the city with a taxi, looking up some of my favorite teachers and revisiting important sites. The taxi driver took delight in explaining the curious statue of three Russian soldiers holding on to one flag “The western winds were rather strong” he said. “They were hanging on for dear life. In ’56, during the ill-fated revolution, there was a tall obelisk and humungous Red Star on top of it. The crowd tried to bring it down without any success until a little blond kid made a lasso out of a rope and heaved it up and tied the other end to a tractor. You should have been there to hear as the crowd roared in approval. I can never forget that scene and I can still see the little guy, who must have been one of the students from the local high school.” “So can I”, I thought to myself. “I was there. I was him.” Suddenly I felt my wife squeezing my hand, telling me in English “No, don’t tell him, don’t tell him that the little guy was you.” She confessed later that she never really believed my story. Now she had proof.

The thirty days went by with super sonic speed. We had an immeasurably good time. Since then, we have returned several times, although my mother and father are in eternal rest. “Blessed or cursed”, says the poem (Áldjon Vagy Verjen A Sors Keze – M. Võrõsmarty). “You were born here, and here is where you have to die.” Well, I lived here in America for 34 years. I was worse off than an orphan. My parents were alive, but I couldn’t see them. My children were born here. They live here. This is their home. The poem, if applicable, applies to them. Why should I create orphans of them? I also adore my children’s children. I still make an occasional visit to see my sister. I will take in some sights as well. I will always visit the graves of my mother and father, but I wish to remain here with my children and friends.

MARKOTABÖDÖGE
A quaint little village nearly 1,000 inhabitants in 1956, now number less than half that. It lies in the northwest corner of Hungary, near the Austrian border, very near in fact. It was considered to be within the border zone, which meant that you had to have a personal identification card – a passport-like document – with you as you traveled in and out of the zone. My uncle worked for the government as a dike inspector and I myself was a water boy as they dredged the river Rápca and the Hanság Canal. I am just trying to give some background as to how I came to be familiar with the Hanság region, a swampy, unfriendly almost no-man’s land. In fact, the Russians used the region for their bombing exercises.

Providing Safe Passage for Refugees
I started my departure with my uncle. It was the two of us pedaling our bikes. My father was not far behind us with his tool sack on his back, fearing retribution from the Communists. There were hundreds and hundreds of people trekking through our village, escaping, hoping to reach the West. Many of them were totally exhausted by the time they reached us. And my mother kept inviting them for scrambled eggs, bread, and water. We never really had any milk. Therefore water was the thirst quencher. The few hens we had worked overtime to produce the eggs. Along with a friend, we guided quite a few people to freedom. In one particular case, a totally exhausted young couple came into our house. Sure, my mother was standing out front and invited all in who seemed to need nourishment or help. My friend and I were charmed into giving them a bicycle ride to the border. To our surprise, they gave us a large sum of money at the border, reasoning that it will have no value outside of Hungary. They also gave me a letter with an emotional request to please send it to their parents to let them know that they escaped or successfully left Hungary. I was already in America when my mother sent me a photo of an elegant motorcycle, which was the parents’ gift to me, fulfilling the wishes of their son for helping them in their time of need.

My Escape
Anyway, our travel towards the border was uneventful. The goodbye from my father was very difficult. We didn’t talk during the trip. I’m sure he was preoccupied with similar thoughts to mine. I was deep in thought about my future. The sentimental song about the émigrés leaving their homeland resounded through my head .. “elmegyek, elmegyek, hosszu utra megyek …” “I’m a goin’ goin’ Far away a goin’ …”

Where? How? And from what would I provide for myself? Would I be able to continue my education? After all, I was one of the very few who after 1,000 years of existence of my village had a chance to go to high school. I always thought I was the first, but I’m sure there were others, not many, but there may have been some before me. Would the border still be open? Could I still enter Austria? My whole life flashed in front of me in an instant. The mischief of my childhood … the memories of World War II … the German and Russian occupations of my village … fishing in the Keszegér which separated Markota from Bodoge … my first years in Gyor in the high school (High School with intensive training in construction technology) … my first cigarette, wine, beer … my first dance … my first kiss … my father’s firm hand and my mother’s chiding words, followed by praise, guidance, and love. I would have to miss all that?! Little did I know how much I would miss it.

Who would say “Fiam, my son, what have you done now?” Would I even see my brothers and sisters again? I already missed my little sister. Oh yes, I had plans running around in my mind already. We would rekindle the revolutionary ideas. We would not let anyone or anything stand in the way. We won once, for two weeks and now all that seemed too remote, so far away.

Petofi’s poem was racing back and forth in my mind:
Felul a galya
Alul a viznek arja
Megis a viz az ur.

Riding on top is the galleon.
Below are the raging waters
In spite of this, the water rules.

Pushing and shoving tamer, kinder thoughts around… What would I do? How? Where? When suddenly and insistently, a gentle tap on my shoulder brought me back to reality. My uncle was saying his prayers, telling me to have a good trip, and trying to say goodbye. His eyes welled with tears, his voice trembled and he didn’t quite know what to do next. Ashamed of his indecision, his breakdown, he just hugged me almost breaking my ribs. He said “Go. Go and escape. At least you will be free. Don’t ever forget who you are. The whole village was always so proud of you. Don’t forget your roots, you are Hungarian. Stay that way. Go buster, and hold yourself to high standards. Just go.” I did not have either the strength or the courage to cry.

Buval es banattal, kizsinoroztatom
Suru konnyeimmel kigomboztattatom.

All my grief and sorrow. Sadly twine around it
While my falling teardrops Buttons shining on it

I had to go. It was a must. So I started my journey. I took a step back. I hesitated. I hugged him. I also cried, but I started moving toward the border to Austria. Oh this was such a long time ago. It was late November 1956. Such a long time ago. I was just a teenager then an aspiring young high school student. The gates of higher learning had been open to me just a few weeks ago but now it all seemed lost. My dreams of becoming a university student suddenly perished. Was I dreaming all this? Would I wake up and find that this is not true? I didn’t know any foreign languages. That alone was an obstacle even if I tried to learn one. How would I afford to educate myself? I needed funds to live, live, live. I wanted to live. My legs kept moving and moving. One foot in front of the other. Move, move. My heart started pounding louder and faster. My soul was longing for what I was leaving behind. My conscience was talking to me, the good and the bad sitting on separate shoulders, “go back, turn around” or “go, just go forward”. And I was walking without even looking back. I didn’t dare. I bowed my head and walked ahead. These few hundred yards were the longest journey of my life. But I just walked.

Elindultam szep hazambul
Hires kis Magyarorszagbul
Visszaneztem fel utambul
Szemebol a konny kicsordult

I have left my homeland
I Left a famous little old land
Sadly I turned once more to see.
Through my falling tears, it’s beauty.

I tried to chase the other stanza out of my head.

Bu ebedem bu vacsoram
Boldogtalan minden oram
Jajj Istenem adjal szallast
Mert meguntam a bujdosast
Idegen foldon a lakast.

Bitter food and bitter my days! “Just let me have something to eat.” And I pressed on …
On and on their bitter tang stays. And the thoughts became pushy.
Tearfully I gaze at the sky.
Numbering the stars as they die I just want to live. Want to look at the sky filled with stars
Grant me Lord a shelter and trusting in God I pressed forward.
A shelter of my own I couldn’t even think of it then …

Tired of waiting
Must I still roam?
Living in strange lands
All alone Alone
I didn’t even arrive to a foreign land just yet. I kept going. Even to think about the end of the song was forbidden

Ejjel nappal a sok sirast
crying night and day for my home

It was still daytime. Sort of twilight, dusk, sunset. The night was falling with it. Any hope of returning going with it. The well-lit church spire was a welcoming sign so I picked up my pace and kept going. The reality of never returning became clearer and stronger. Aldjon vagy verjen a sors keze. Be blessed or cursed by my destiny came to my mind. It was an almost unbearable feeling, but I continued my journey. I had to go. I wanted to live and I wanted to be free. So I walked. I crossed the Hanság canal’s broken down pedestrian bridge (read the Bridge at Andau by James Michener to get a feeling of crossing). I spent the night near the church, in a school house, where I met up with a few hometown friends. Our rain-soaked bodies loved the warmth of the school room and we enjoyed the warm cocoa that was served to us.

The Refugee Camp in Salzburg
We were transported to Salzburg to Camp Roeder, a former American base which became our next home. Problems began to surface there. We were fed just once a day and the money we were supposed to get, a few shillings per week, was missing. There was an unusual mix of residents occupying the former military barracks, including prostitutes from Budapest, whose aim was to create paradise for the multitude of Hungarian soldiers and of course providing a lot or a little love for those who wanted it and were able to afford the steep price they charged. The soldiers who crossed the border with weapons were detained in the stockade and were constantly teased by the prostitutes. Several families and individuals alike, like me, shared the huge barracks. Like sardines, we were squeezed into the rooms, but we each had one military issue bed. Sleeping, as badly as we needed it, was next to impossible. The cries, the prayers, the prostitutes’ noise as they plied their trade would not permit it. We were constantly hungry. We got a small slice of bacon fat with bread at first, then the bread disappeared. The guy in charge of the food and the money must have become a rich man, although he was later arrested for swindling away the funds.

I almost had a heart attack one morning as I looked out on the window and saw a column of trucks with a five pointed star on the doors surrounding the base. They looked like the Russian trucks that brought their troops to Hungary just a few weeks ago. Then I noticed the color. They were white not red. Thank God. “Easy kid”, said an elderly gentleman, “don’t fret it, these are Americans, not Russians, the Russians copied the American trucks and mass-produced them.” I knew that, but still my heart was racing. My mother’s advice was still fresh in my mind. “Don’t go too far, my son. Don’t. It’s going to be easier to come home when the system changes. Trust in God. He will help.”

By the end of November, we could no longer stay in Austria as refugees since they were inundated with hundreds of thousands of refugees already. The next logical place would have been Switzerland, but not knowing any of their languages, nor having an adult with me, and no high school diploma, my chances of emigrating there quickly evaporated. We were openly recruited by Australian agencies to settle there, but it was way too far, with basically no chance of ever returning. The scarcity of women also weighed heavily on my decision not to go, even though dating and marrying was not the foremost priority at that time.

Going to America
I heard the song that many people were singing or humming. Amerikan arany az elet, Amerikaba so sincs sotett. Golden is the life in America, life is never without light in America. I thought “what do I have to lose?” The song is full of promises of a good life. What else could I have done?! I too joined the lines that were formed for preliminary screening for those who wanted to go to America. The operative word being preliminary. Very preliminary. Everyone wanted to go to America. But only a few had the chance and had the dream fulfilled (it took a special act of Congress to allow 32,000 Hungarian refugees to enter the United States. I was number 31,900. Standing in line and waiting for your turn had its advantages. All the warm soup you could consume. Some bowls even had meat in them, a luxury we didn’t have before.

One of the officials asked for a volunteer to handle the entries through the door to keep the process orderly. No one volunteered, so I took it upon myself to do it. Then a couple weeks later, he asked me what I was doing. I told him I had volunteered, so I’m doing it since there was no one else interested in doing it. So I’m just fulfilling my promise. I was just a 150-pound skinny kid who was always cold, so being inside was not that bad. When he asked me where my parents and brothers and sister were, he was taken aback when I informed him that I was all by myself. He had an even more difficult time understanding that other than my briefcase, which I always had with me, with two books – math and history of architecture, plus a slide rule, I had nothing else. Not even an overcoat.

The next few minutes went by in a flash. In and out of several rooms, his signature, my signature, both signatures on official looking papers, with just my name on it … he waved a stethoscope, a thermometer, and a few other pieces of medical equipment in my general direction and kept saying how lucky I am that I have a great heartbeat, good eyesight, healthy lungs, excellent hearing etc. … so “you’re not deaf or dumb, nor are you blind” with that he slammed the big seal on another piece of paper, “This will get you on the bus which is waiting for you outside to get you to Munich.” I still remember his firm, but warm handshake. I can still hear him “so long kid! Have a great journey, Godspeed.” And he sort of talked to himself, saying “his parents would be proud of this youngster, too bad he was forced to leave his homeland.”

Startled, as if someone just woke me up, I continued my journey to Munich. We arrived at another American base, an air force base, where for the first time in my life I saw a black man. We were treated to a sumptuous meal. Lots of food. Good, feel-good food. Desserts, fruit, even cigarettes were given out. What a way to live. I can imagine how well they live in America if they live this well on a foreign land. “Of course, they do, they can, they are Americans” I rationalized. We then continued our journey to America.

“Három Koma Kiment, a Liba Legelõre”
Meglatott egy repulot fenn a levegoben
Hej koma micsoda, eke taliga
Hogy az Isten csodajaba kerult az oda

Three simple guys were tending their geese
As they gazed up at the sky, finding there an airplane,
Hey buddy, they yelled loudly, what on earth could that be?
Is it a plow cart? How on earth does it fly?
And how in Gods name did it get to be?

Well, how on earth did I get myself into this situation? How did I get here? Where am I going? The heavens are all around us. The cities of England and Ireland bathed in lights almost in a blinding brilliance. No matter how much I enjoyed the view I could not shake the thoughts from my head:

Mikor mentem Haza fele As I was traveling toward home

Mikor mentem Haza fele
Megnyilt az eg harom fele
Ragyoktak ram a csillagok
Mert tudtak, hogy arva vagyok

As I was traveling toward home
The skies opened up in splendor
The stars shone upon me brightly
They knew already then, an orphan I’ll be

Edesanyam is volt nekem
Keservesem nevelt engem
Ejszaka font nappal mosott
Jajj de keservesen tartott

I had a mother, who struggled to raise me
She did the laundry during the day
And sat on the spinning wheel nightly
Oh How difficult is was for her to take care of me

The stars were shining upon me, they knew that I was an orphan. The bright lights from the ground as well from the sky reminded me of a joke about this Russian super experimental agroscientist who cross-pollinated apples with cherries, cucumbers with melons, and live things with inanimate objects, but this was especially fitting. I wondered how many millions of bedbugs he had to interbreed with fireflies so that Moscow would be bathed similar brightness as London.

As we traversed the Atlantic ocean we were urged to consume all the foodstuff we had with us, saying that the International rules will not allow any food to travel from East to West. What a rule I thought. Just like when the gypsy escaped punishment by outsmarting the Commies who forbade the studying of any western language like English, French, Italian and especially German. When they caught him studying German and were ready to punish him, he replied “But Comrades, I’m learning the East German language.”

Landing in America
We spent the night in America. We left in the evening and traveled all night and yet when we arrived, it was still night. We were not aware of the time zones and the time differences then.

It took another 25 years before I learned where we landed. By that time I was managing a radio station, the “Station of the Nations”, WHLD 1270 AM licensed to Niagara Falls. I also owned a small share in it. The Air Force, whose base was in Niagara Falls, offered tours to the community leaders to show them how they trained. They flew us way up north to Labrador, almost to the Artic Circle. The 50-100 year old pine trees were no more than a dozen feet tall and their branches spread to no more than a couple of feet. Blueberries seemed to bear an abundant amount of fruit, but the bushes were less than a foot tall. It was fascinating to watch the military exercise under these harsh conditions. It was here, as the local base commander was explaining the base’s history, “over there – those freshly painted barracks were last used in 1956, by the Hungarian Freedom Fighters.

This is where they spent the night upon arrival from Europe – Munich, Germany in fact”. “And where I did go from here?” I shouted. “Well, to Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, another mothballed Army base. Or if your flight took the better part of a day, you went to California”, he explained. I had a choice to make in Camp Kilmer – Whether I would like to be adopted by a couple or join the ranks of a boarding home. I chose the latter. Don’t ask me why. I probably just figured I’d have less of a chance of being rejected by a new family if they numbered more than just the two.

A Bus Serenade
A bus took us toward a railroad station, driven by a black man. It didn’t take long for an idiot to come up with some stupid comments: “Look, this guy isn’t even good to be a gypsy, he’s way too dark. Or maybe he spent extra time in the smokehouse or chimney. Maybe he is a chimney sweep.” He rambled on and on in Hungarian belittling the drive and stopped only when the bus pulled off the road, its engine shut off, and the driver faced us. He proceeded to talk – “Oh my God,” hushed the group “He spoke in Hungarian”.

He thanked the boor for his kind words, and continued saying that he himself is Hungarian. “I’m probably the only black Szekler or Szekely. I consider myself a lucky Szekely. Mom and Dad were refugees like you, from Transylvania and they adopted me when I was just a cute little baby. Look at me now” he said smiling. “This country accepted you, just as it did my parents. Some of you will spend the rest of your lives here. None of you know if and when you will have a chance to return home. I do hope you’ll remember this.” He suddenly started to snap his fingers together and we began to notice a rhythm, and his beautiful baritone voice began to sound the Szekely Himnusz, the Szekler National Anthem.

Ki tudja merre merre visz a vegzet
Who knows which way destiny will take you.

Bolyongos uton sotet ejjelen.
Through meandering roads, dark nights.

He continued with the national Anthem of Hungary. By this time, all of us joined him singing, sobbing, crying. When he started singing some exquisite folk songs, most of us were just listening. He explained that he learned these songs at a Hungarian Scout Camp where he received training as a scout leader. I decided then to follow in his footsteps become a scout to learn these songs if I ever got the chance. We continued our ride towards the railroad station, but to this day I can’t determine whether we went to Philadelphia or New York’s Grand Central station. I suspect the latter, but who knows. Both stations were equidistant from Camp Kilmer and they were both used. With briefcase in one hand, clutching the train ticket in the other with “when the train stops five times get off” written on the back in Hungarian. The train station was streaming with activity, including carolers singing Christmas songs. It was two days before Christmas, well into the season.

My First Dollar, My First Orange
A single dollar bill was burning a hole in my pocket. The first one or I should say the one and only one I received at the camp. I had no idea of its value or buying power. The convenience store inside the station was loaded with goodies. A small bag of oranges was particularly tempting. It seemed to call me “come and get me, buy me”. Needless to say I had a terrible time communicating my desire to purchase the orange to the shopkeeper since neither one of us spoke the other’s language.

Soon I took possession of the bag of oranges, a small bag, containing maybe a half dozen oranges and the shopkeeper started giving me change, pennies, nickels dimes, quarters, my God, how much is he giving me back? Which is worth more? The penny, which was bigger than the dime? The penny was copper, the dime looked like aluminum. My problem wasn’t just the money. I wanted just one orange. Just one. No more. Maybe I raised the wrong finger to show him one. During the heated non-verbal hassle I bit into an unpeeled orange, which tasted extremely bitter, not exactly what I expected. Even more so, I wanted to give the rest of the oranges back and maybe get some more shiny coins in exchange. I liked the pennies, just like a little kid.

Finally the shopkeeper reached into his cash register, took the dollar out, and gave it back to me. I succeeded I thought, but my joy was short lived, he wouldn’t take my change back, nor the oranges. We played something resembling shuffleboard as I finally ended up with my original dollar, the change, and orange that he peeled for me, pus the leftover oranges from the bag. The moment of truth arrived. I wanted just one orange. One. Period. I started giving the oranges to those around me. It must have been contagious; the shopkeeper kept opening bag after bag of oranges and gave it to any of us who wanted one.

The carolers took interest in this weird activity and started singing to us. They were surprised that we cried when they were singing Silent Night and just looked at them when they sang Jingle Bells or Frosty the Snowman. We knew the melody of Silent Night and the words in Hungarian, but the others just didn’t make any sense to us. I was busy thinking of Angels from Heaven, Mennybol az Angyal, which is my favorite Christmas song. We, as a family, even the grandchildren sing or just listen to it at Christmas time still today. Well, of course I ended up crying again at the railroad station.

Derby, New York
Soon after we boarded the train, we pulled out from the station we started counting, one … two … three … four … five … the fifth stop. The final destination. I got off the train. It was December 23rd, 10 ‘clock at night. It was cold. Very, very cold. Especially without an overcoat. I had to go to the bathroom, but where do I go, who do I ask, and how? What if I was in the bathroom and that was when they came for me? I didn’t go. I couldn’t. I was afraid. Every time a policeman, a conductor or a Salvation Army worker or anyone in a uniform approached me, I froze. I couldn’t trust them. None of them noticed my soiled pants which were dark blue in color, but I had that warm feeling trickle down my legs. Okay, no other way to dance around it. I had to go. I did wet myself. It was dawn when I heard a loud voice ask “Is there anyone here waiting for me?” If it weren’t for the extremely high ceiling at the station I would have knocked myself out, that’s how high I jumped. Oops, that warm feeling surfaced yet again. “I … I … I am here. Over here” I yelled. This was my chance. I wasn’t about to give it up. “Praise the Lord” I greeted the priest. “Praise the Lord Parson.” I couldn’t shake his hand, nor could I hug him. And in my joy, I forgot to ask him where the facilities were. I just kept saying what we were taught to say to the local priest. “Praise the Lord. Praise the Lord Parson.”

“I’m not a parson, I’m not a vicar, I’m not a parish priest.” He said as he took off, but he had no chance of losing me. I felt safe in his presence. Like a baby bird following the first thing he sees, I followed him for many, many years. He, Father Kõvári, a Piarist priest, had no association with any parishes, churches nor was he eligible for promotion within the church’s hierarchy. He like the others in Derby, NY, were simple friars taking the additional oaths not to seek earthly goods or wealth and to educate the youth. No wondered he was peeved when I called him a parson. I finally crashed in a bed. When I awoke, I found myself in a huge room with a bunch of empty bunk beds staring at me as if they were asking “who are you, what are you doing here? Why are you here now? Everyone else is home on vacation.” I had no answer.

Christmas in America, 1956
It was Christmas Eve. The priests were readying themselves for the midnight mass, where you could hear Latin, English, Polish, and of course, Hungarian Christmas songs too. They were preparing to celebrate the infant Jesus’ birth. Gifts were also exchanged, but the only thing I could give was thanks. Thank you very much as I received a gift also -galoshes, what a practical gift that turned out to be.

I will never forget my first Christmas in America with those priests. Lest you forget, as my memories are rushing back, five decades later none of them are alive, but I will forever remember them all. There are those who joined the order later or emigrated at a later date. With them, I keep very close ties. How could I forget?! The singing of my favorite Christmas carol, Angels from Heaven, and all the other wonderful, sentimental Christmas songs, I began to feel at home. I was reborn as opposed to born again. That didn’t mean I wasn’t kissing a bunch of Jack Frost created flowers on the window pane, it didn’t mean I didn’t have nightmares or I wasn’t homesick. But, the love, care, and understanding I received here helped me to suppress these feelings. It almost seemed as if as we celebrated Christ’s birthday that we shared the same birthday – hogwash, mine is in April. I was born on April 16th, 1939 in Markotabödöge. These well-educated priests, and well-educated they were, none of them had ever heard of Markotabödöge, but “Welcome”, “God Bless”, they kept saying, one after another.

I made a promise to myself, that I would do everything to earn their trust and respect. I would never embarrass them, nor, would I let them down. All these priests, single men, and each and every one of them, in their own way, were encouraging me, helping me to start a new life. “Christ is born, Gloria. Christ is born Alleluia.” Indeed I thought and I sang along with them.

A New Home for Refugees
The boarding home in Derby opened its doors in September of 1956 for those children who escaped with their parents, or were later born here after World War II. Here, meaning the United States, Canada, and a few from Cuba and South America. Most of the parents of these children were Piarist alumni in Hungary. The purpose was to provide an additional education to the regular American school requirements in Hungarian about Hungary’s history, language, and geography. It would take an unduly large amount of time to explain the trials and tribulation of criss-crossing the Western Hemisphere before the Piarists settled in Buffalo. It was a no-brainer to establish the “motherhouse” in the geocenter of the Northeast – NY, Toronto, Cleveland, Chicago, and Pittsburgh. They bought the Frank Lloyd Wright designed mansion Greycliff for a dollar from a wealthy banker. The extraordinary effort by all the priests very quickly showed great results. They dug the foundation for the addition of the new boarding home, poured the concrete, and helped the masons with the concrete block. Soon afterwards, the local Hungarians joined them in this new undertaking. The finishing touches, like installing doors, windows, and covering all the walls with knotty pine, Gábor Bodnár brought his finishing carpenters from Garfield, NJ.

Mr. Bodnár, Gáborbá as he was endearingly was called by thousands, was one of the founders of the Hungarians Scouts in exile along with Fr. Gerencsér and Fr. Kõvári. The boarding home finally opened in September, 1956. Full occupancy meant 25 students. The rest were put on a waiting list. All the children attended the local elementary school in North Evans and the high school students attended St. Francis in Athol Springs. The lingua Franca here was Hungarian. As soon as they left their respective schools. Hungarian had to spoken in the car, on the beach, in the dining room, chapel, everywhere. Poor Jack Hanselman, the only German kid, had to learn Hungarian very quickly in order to survive the rigors of the boarding home.

Suddenly everything changed in November of 1956. The boarding home discarded the waiting list and accepted 25 refugee children. The children of the ’56 revolution. The solution was simple. To change the 25 beds to 25 bunk beds. These were the beds who were staring at me, wondering how I got here. How come I’m still here, since all the residents left for Christmas vacation. Of course, they didn’t know that I had no place else to go. Suddenly, this became my permanent residence. My new home. I guess we made peace during the next five years, since I had to wake up all the kids in the morning. And I said “good night, lights off” at night.

Lenkeneni
A lovely lady was calling my name “Hegedus … Hegedus … are you awake? Are you up?” I quickly threw my clothes on and as I stepped out to the hall, a giant German Sheppard growled at me, while a small Puli was licking my hands and danced around me gleefully. I was always terrified by any dog, especially the loud ones, no matter how small they were. This giant German shepherd … yes I was frightened. But the kind lady chided the big one and shamed him into silence. The little one just needed one look to stop. “I am Lenkeneni (Auntie Lenke)” This German Shepard is “Silver” and the Puli is “Cigany”. “Welcome my son. Welcome. I will try to stand in for your mom.” Then she hugged me, but that had to be cut short because Silver got aggravated at this show of affection. “Come on my child, I made some lunch for you. I’m cooking not only for the dozen or so priests, but for all the students as well. Come, come follow me. I can hear your stomach growl. You must be hungry.” After lunch she led me into the chapel and encouraged me to give thanks to God for his guidance. “You will like it here. You will be safe here. You’ll never be lonely again. You will have the priests, who will befriend you. I am always here and I will always help you.”

This was the beginning of a friendship that lasted over thirty years. During the 70’s and 80’s I visited her with Maria many times during each of those thirty years, later having the children with us and the love between her and our children was precious. Every Mother’s day, even though she never married, we gave her flowers. She was my mom in exile.

She quickly told me about the priest, who belonged to the Piarist order, a teaching order, similar to the Jesuits. They do go out to local churches daily to say one or two masses to earn extra money, but teaching is their primary occupation. Some of their most famous, or infamous, students were Edward Teller, Leo Szilárd the creators of the atomic bomb, von Kármán – the jet and the impressive list goes on.

Life with the Priests and Students
Then Christmas Eve arrived. I’d never seen so many priests together in one room. Remember, I came from a one-horse town. There were a dozen priests saying mass. Then the singing of Christmas songs in English, Hungarian, Latin, and Polish. Yes, there were a few Polish Piarists as well. They encouraged me to participate, but those of you who know me know how well I can sing and are smiling now. The Christmas vacation came and went without much happening. I kept busy reading, and joined Father Kovari in the woodworking shop. Interestingly enough, we were both products of woodworking or construction technology school in Hungary.

When the regular students returned, it took a while to get to know each other, but we were busy studying. They, their Hungarian, and us learning English. Let me tell you, it was not easy. Writing down two dozen words ten times and read them as I was writing, and eventually just fell asleep with the dictionary in hand. It became evident rather quickly that I couldn’t graduate in ’57 even though my grades in math, chemistry and physics were 100 plus bonuses, so I decided to spend an extra year in high school. Well I had no alternative anyway. This created an opportunity for me to help the original 25 students with their Hungarian language, literature, geography, and History. I also had a chance to help my classmates with math and sciences.

Scout Activities
The routine of reveille, chapel, breakfast, school, study hall, and evening activities, lights out was well-established. The weekends were another story. We spent most of our times with Scout activities. Troop 214, which is still active in Buffalo was modeled after or was the American equivalent of 2BKG, Hungary’s first scout troop, which was established by Sándor Sik, Sch. P. the head of the Piarists in Hungary. So, it should be no surprise to anyone that scouting was on the same level of importance as Hungarian history and geography. Our scout master, Fr. Kõvári had an almost legendary reputation for strictness. He didn’t seem to have much kindness in him until you got to know him. His demands in practicing tent setups, marching practices, earning merit badges, living within the scout laws did pay off.

Every time we performed or marched in parades (St. Patrick’s Day, Loyalty Day, etc.), we sang the beautiful folk songs that I envied when our black Szekely bus driver’s had sung them. We always performed for the October 23rd commemoration of the 1956 revolution. We were down right impressive in the St. Patrick’s day parades in Buffalo. Just imagine for a moment fifty kids in shorts and short sleeve shirts marching with the precision of a 17-jewel Swiss watch. Oh how cold we were before and after, but our pride in our achievement kept us warm as we marched in quick time in front of the podium where the dignitaries and judges stood and applauded us. I wouldn’t say that my half dozen or so years were uneventful, even before I graduated from high school; I was already assisting Fr. Kõvári in all aspects of the boarding homes’ life.

To supervise and teach the children of General Pál Maléter., the grandson of Nobel Laureate Szentgyörgyi, the grandson of the former Premier of Hungary, Gömbös, and other important children of renowned heritage was not as easy task. Some of us, including myself, were simple folk, refugees. The big difference was that everyone other than me was able to go home to someone at vacation time – a relative or loved one, but I had no one. Even the other kids who escaped in ’56 had come with their families.

I was paid $40 a month for my efforts, but as I started my two year construction technology education at what is now E.C.C., I spent $60 a month on the greyhound bus and city bus to go to school. I did odd jobs here and there. I spent an entire summer with Mr. Bodnar in NJ as a carpenter’s apprentice and the following summer I built a house for the cook and caretaker. I still have my hammer, my measuring tape and saw that the priests gave me and they also paid $1 for every hour I worked. Trust me, I worked long hours. So I managed to live, study, read, and work. I spent many nights dreaming. Most of them were nightmares.

Overcoming Nightmares and Homesickness
Since my return to Hungary 34 years after 1956, I had no more nightmares. I not only had a roof over my head, and was well-fed, but forged a friendship with the priests. I invited them all to our wedding and they all honored us with their presence. No wonder that our marriage is rock solid even after 40 years.

I controlled my homesickness by not even allowing any thoughts to creep in while I was alone. I wrote in innumerable letters to home at first, but the responses became more and more censored, some looking like Swiss cheese, so full of holes. Eventually, I didn’t even get the responses. And so there was no point in writing any more. The reason had to be my refusal to join the Hungarian governments spy system. In fact I reported the individual to the FBI, who solicited my services, but then he mysteriously died a few months later. There was no chance of going home. I’m done. My goose was cooked.

A couple more things I’d like to say here. I was Hegedüs László Jenõ and my papers that brought me here listed me as Jenõ László Hegedüs. The priest called me Jenõ, since there were 8 or 9 other Lászlós in the boarding home. When Fr. Kovari called for Laci (short for László), either nobody or everybody moved. He could get so very angry if the right one didn’t show, so I became Jenõ (Eugene). My mother used to write “my son, Laci, that you pastors call Jenõ, how is he? God bless every one of you for helping him. I go to church every Sunday and pray with our “peace priest” (a communist sympathizer, not really a priest) for all of you and for my son. How can I ever repay you? Can you tell me how much I owe you?” Little did she know that the Hungarian money here would have had basically no value to repay her debt. This put a smile on the priest’s faces. “She must have loved you very much. Well, we don’t hate you either.” They kidded me often.

50 Years Since My Escape
It will be 50 years since I left. I have built a rather sizable circle of friends, my wife of forty years, Maria Jósa, who left Hungary at the age of 3 and yet she still speaks fluently in Hungarian. Every 4th of July there are three generations of us gathering at a friend’s house whom God blessed with both of his hands. The grandchildren alone are enough to fill the pool that he so generously shares with us. Our grandchildren are friends with each other which obviously makes our children friends with our friend’s children. We all feel that this is our extended family. We feel like we are kin. We have not inherited this kinship, we chose it.

We miss the old timers, the wise. We have no one to ask for advice or information about facts. We became the old timers. Most of us are retired, senior citizens, golden-agers, whatever the moniker. Needless to say, our grandchildren love us, and if they only knew how much them, they could easily twist us around their little fingers. Sure, we are ready to spoil them, much to the chagrin of our children. Most of our children didn’t have the luxury of having two sets of grandparents, some had none, so we try to make up for it. We are telling stories about our beautiful homeland, Hungary. Hungary’s people, history, heritage, it’s only the nice thing we talk about. They are too innocent yet. They love us even with a bald head, false teeth and our blazing speed with a cane. I love them even more when they childishly correct our accents. To them I don’t complain. They don’t need to know how destiny short-changed us. They cruelty of not being able to visit my parents for over 3 decades, the nightmares, the lack of friends in the first few years, the struggles in school, but they don’t have to know.

Eugene Laszlo Hegedus
Eugene Laszlo Hegedus was a 17 year old high school student in a construction technology high school in Gyõr, Hungary when he had to escape in November of 1956 to the United States of America. He arrived to the Buffalo area, spending the next 6 years at the boarding home run by the Piarist fathers at Greycliff. He became a scout and a scout master. After fulfilling his military and university obligations, he spent 20 years as a mathematics teacher and eventually the Assistant Headmaster at the Calasanctius School for the Gifted and Talented. Then for another 20 years, he worked as the manager of a multi-cultural, ethnic radio station in Niagara Falls. He fills his retirement years with creative endeavors: writing several volumes of poetry-all related to the 1956 revolution and his trials and tribulations, and carving a zooful of buffaloes and other animals from driftwood (www.buffalowoodzoo.com). After over 40 years of marriage, he is now busy with the five grandchildren that God blessed him with.

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Sándor T. Halász – What should have happened 11 years ago… https://freedomfighter56.com/sandor-t-halasz-what-should-have-happened-11-years-ago/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sandor-t-halasz-what-should-have-happened-11-years-ago Thu, 17 Oct 2019 10:27:07 +0000 https://freedomfighter56.com/?p=1920 Print version SummerDuring the summer of 1956, a Budapest streetcar conductor whose living conditions had been startlingly primitive even by those current-day standards – he lived in a one-room pantry cottage with several children – broke open a store that had been…

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Summer
During the summer of 1956, a Budapest streetcar conductor whose living conditions had been startlingly primitive even by those current-day standards – he lived in a one-room pantry cottage with several children – broke open a store that had been unoccupied for several years, but at least had running water and a washroom, and moved in with his family.

The Communist authorities allowed them three days to vacate the store, otherwise they would be removed by the police. The deadline passed, and when the conductor did not move, the police came to carry out their task. However, they were greeted by more than one hundred conductors standing in front of the building who let them know that they would have to count on the resistance of the conductors. After consulting their superior officers, the police withdrew and our streetcar conductor and his family were free to enjoy their new living quarters.

This was how the Hungarian workers learned they had power. The opportunity to use this power came soon enough.

At the Steel Mill
On October 23, 1956, I had to visit a large steel mill in the east of Hungary for a consultation. The train was slow, so I arrived at around noon at the factory. There was unusual silence because no one was working. The workers were instead sitting around their machines. They were on strike, the first in 25 years.

The party bosses tried to persuade the men to pretend to work or at the very least to stop playing cards. I could not do my job either, so I took the evening train back to Budapest. There was no sign of disturbance on the train and I ate a nice meal in the dining car. I still remember how good the beef soup was. At around 10 PM the train reached the Eastern Railroad Station. The general atmosphere in the rail hall was somewhat unusual as there were crowds of people milling around despite the late hour. There was also a strange smell in the air – fog and perhaps gunpowder? Some three or four trucks rolled by loaded with young men who chanted, “Russians, Go Home!” The air was now heavy and guns crackled in the distance. At the bus stop a crowd of perhaps one hundred people waited for the bus.

I asked, “What happened here?”
“What should have happened 11 years ago!”

This was quite clear. I was quite tired, however, and wanted to get home. But how? The only possible way was to walk 3 miles, so I started out on foot. On the way home, I heard some small arms fire in the background and saw a crowd besiege the building of the chief communist daily newspaper – what an incredible sight! I also passed a military barracks and saw Hungarian soldiers throwing weapons out the windows for the Revolutionaries. The rest of the walk home was uneventful. In the Buda district, the trams were even running. I found my family in good health.

The next morning, I hastened to my workplace where the discussion centered on the events of the previous day. A meeting of all employees was called by the newly formed “workers” council. The modern reader probably cannot appreciate how volatile the situation was at the time, and that the whole question of whether there would be a Revolution or other serious developments was still in doubt.

It was announced that an emissary of the Hungarian Labor Party (Communist Party) would also be present at the meeting and planned to address the people assembled.

“Question even before the Labor Party delegate speaks,” a colleague of mine got up. He was a short, little man who walked with a cane. Most of us did not even know his name. “I am pleased that the Labor Party delegate is here. I hope he will explain what I have been wondering about for the past 11 years. Who does the Hungarian Labor Party really represent?”

All hell broke loose. Everybody rushed to shake hands with the unknown speaker. He was one of the few real heroes whom I personally met in my lifetime.

The Labor Party delegate made a hasty exit through the back door. Somebody started to recite the Lord’s Prayer.

And so it began.

Sándor T. Halász
Finishing his studies in Budapest in 1949, he worked as a mechanical engineer until the events of 1956. After fleeing his homeland in 1957, he eventually settled near New York. He earned a Masters degree in Engineering from Columbia University and was Chair of the Department of Technology at the City College of the City University of New York until his retirement. He and his wife (see also her submission in Hungarian) currently live in New Jersey.

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Imre Farkas Miracle of October 27 – The Vác Prison Break https://freedomfighter56.com/imre-farkas-miracle-of-october-27-the-vac-prison-break/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=imre-farkas-miracle-of-october-27-the-vac-prison-break Wed, 16 Oct 2019 11:17:23 +0000 https://freedomfighter56.com/?p=1867 Print version On that day the dream of 1200 political prisoners held captive in the infamous Political Prison of Vac came through. I was serving the sixth year of my life imprisonment, which had been commuted from a death sentence for “anticommunist…

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On that day the dream of 1200 political prisoners held captive in the infamous Political Prison of Vac came through. I was serving the sixth year of my life imprisonment, which had been commuted from a death sentence for “anticommunist activities, Western connections and conspiracy and treason against the People’s Democracy and the Soviet Union.” Among the 1200 prisoners were about 500 with life sentences.

In the morning of October 24th the guards didn’t wake us at 6 AM as usual and later told us that the prison factory would not operate that day. The cell doors were locked all day. First we were happy that we didn’t have to work, but later we became suspicious. We felt that something was happening which would decide our future. In the evening of October 25th an AVO officer distributed cigarettes among the prisoners, saying “Men, everybody is entitled to one pack.” We couldn’t believe our ears – he called us “men.” After so many years of humiliation, torture and suffering, we were suddenly treated as human beings by our captors?

The next day we were allowed to walk in the prison yard. All the usually bloodless, pale faces were glowing with excitement. From snippets of overheard conversations we managed to put together that there was a revolution going on in Hungary! The people, in whose name Moscow’s lackeys committed all the atrocities, the people said “enough!” and revolted against the Communist regime.

We couldn’t sleep all night. Then came the morning of October the 27th. During the last 3 days tremendous tension had been building up in all of us. We rushed to the windows and saw that the red star – symbol of the Soviet tyranny – had disappeared from the caps and uniforms of the guards. Instead they wore the red-white-green national colors.

We started to sing the National Anthem, and somebody recited the “Nemzeti Dal” by Petofi. We reached the limit of our patience and shouted: Let’s break out! With our iron bedframes and every other possible means we hammered on the cell doors and succeeded in breaking them open. In 20 minutes everybody was out of the cells. We agreed that we would not harm the prison guards, regardless of how cruel they had been during the past years. Nobody touched them. We were proud that our liberation was free from vengeance and retaliation. We had to decide how to break out of the prison complex through 4 consecutive heavy iron gates leading to the main street of the town of Vac.

Some people suggested negotiating with the commander of the Security Police, but about 50 of us, the younger ones, insisted on going all the way. We were unsure how the armed Secret Police troops would act who guarded the prison from outside, but we took the risk. We started toward the iron gates and with the help of some friendly, non-AVO guards we broke open the last iron gate. Outside the gate several thousand people, the inhabitants of Vac, were waiting for us, crying and embracing us. The people, in whose name we were sentenced, were welcoming us. We sang the National Anthem again. Suddenly, in this emotional moment, shots of automatic weapons rang out. The crowd tried to disperse quickly but some fell already dead or wounded. The Secret Police, the AVO men were shooting at us from the roof of the prison building. We ran as fast as we could, still in our prison uniforms. As we ran through streets, backyards, over fences, the people were throwing civilian clothes to us. An old man gave me his only top coat; children brought their parents’ jackets. One of the most poignant scenes was when a little boy about 8 years old, ran to me and said :”I can’t give you anything else, but here, take my comb, you might need it!”

In a few days, on October 30th I arrived to Budapest and after 5 & 1/2 years if confinement was finally reunited with my wife!

Imre Farkas
Sentenced to death for anticommunist activities, Western connections and conspiracy and treason against the People’s Democracy and the Soviet Union, Imre Farkas arrived with his wife Lily to the United States on Christmas Eve, 1956. With a Rockefeller Foundation sponsorship he became a teaching fellow at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He worked for W.R. Grace and Company as a chemical engineer, retiring in 1994 as Vice President. He was the President of the American Concrete Institute in 1986 and Chairman of the American Society of Testing Materials in 1992. Imre Farkas has lived with his wife Lily (see her submission), in Sarasota, Florida since 1994.

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