The Jewish Community of Hatvan
Hatvan
A small town in the Heves district, northern Hungary.
The first Jewish settlement in the town was in the middle of the 19th century. The majority were engaged in commerce. There were several tradesmen and members of the free professions. Thus, Jews started a number of industrial plants in the town. An important one, a factory for the production of sugar, which established in 1889 by the family of Baron Hatvani, employed some Jewish workers and clerks.
In 1868, on account of differences of opinion that arose between the haredim (orthodox) and the maskilim (enlightened) at the Jewish Congress, the community affiliated with the Neolog (reform) movement which wanted to integrate into Hungarian society and to alter the religious way of life. The hevra kadisha (burial society) was established in 1863, and the first synagogue in 1876. The community also had charitable institutions and a school. A Zionist circle was active in the town; at the head was Dr. Ludwig Fodor, a leader of Hungarian Zionism, who wrote the book The New Way of Hungarian Jewry.
During World War I fourteen Jews were killed in action.
During the period of the White Terror pogroms organized against Jews by right wing military elements in the years 1919-1921, after the failure of the communist revolution, one Jew was murdered.
In 1930 there were 647 Jewish inhabitants in Hatvan.
The Holocaust Period
From 1940 onwards, Hatvan served as a center for Jews conscripted for forced labor. The majority were sent to strengthen fortifications on the Ukrainian front, together with other Hungarian citizens whom the authorities would not permit to join the armed forces.
In 1941 a prohibition was imposed on the Jews against having radios in their homes.
In the spring of 1944, after the German occupation, a ghetto was started in the town in the area of the sugar factory. To this ghetto were also sent the Jews of the nearby villages, totaling 4,000 people in all. For some time a communal kitchen operated here, but after the supply of food, which they had brought with them, was finished, severe starvation prevailed in the ghetto. There was also extreme overcrowding. One building was converted into a hospital staffed by Jewish doctors and nurses.
The expulsion to Auschwitz was done in stages. The first train was dispatched on June 12. On the way to Auschwitz Jews from other places were added to the train. Several more trains followed. The whole procedure was carried out in a most brutal way.
After the war, the few returnees renewed the life of the community, but during the course of time the majority left the town. In the 1960s only a few Jews remained in Hatvan.
FODOR
(Family Name)FODOR
Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. This family name derives from a physical characteristic. Fodor is the Hungarian for "curl" and also a nickname for persons with curly hair. Its German equivalent is Kraus(e). It was a popular belief that curly haired people were quick-tempered, as were the 'cohanim' ("priests") of biblical Israel. Many families took names associated with curly to denote priestly lineage, others because they had curly hair.
Distinguished bearers of the Jewish family name Fodor include the Hungarian violinist and composer Jozsef Fodor (1752-1828), the 19th/20th century Hungarian judge and jurist Armin Fodor, and the 20th century Romanian-born British physician and broadcaster George Fodor.
HATVANY
(Family Name)Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. This family name is a toponymic (derived from a geographic name of a town, city, region or country). Surnames that are based on place names do not always testify to direct origin from that place, but may indicate an indirect relation between the name-bearer or his ancestors and the place, such as birth place, temporary residence, trade, or family-relatives.
Hatvan is a Hungarian village near the country's capital city of Budapest. The word means "sixty" in Hungarian. As a Jewish family name, Hatvany became well known in Hungary through the industrialist Ignac Deutsch (1803-1873) who adopted it as a second family name.
Distinguished bearers of these names include the Hungarian anti-fascist fighter and journalist Lajos (Ludwig) Hatvany (1880-1961); the Hungarian impressionist painter Ferenc Hatvany (1881-1958), and the Hungarian industrialist and writer Bertalan Hatvany.
Jozsef II Hatvany-Deutsch
(Personality)Jozsef II Hatvany-Deutsch (1858-1913), industrialist, born in Budapest, Hungary (then part of the Austrian Empire), son of Bernat Deutsch de Hatvan and grandson of Ignac Deutsch-Hatvany, founder of the Ignac Deutsch and sons, an industrial and trading concern.
Jozsef II studied at the Commercial Academy of Budapest and at the Hochschule fuer Bodencultur of Vienna, Austria. After a year's tour of Europe, he joined the family concern in 1880. Together with his cousin Sandor he took over a bankrupt sugar factory in Nagysurany and went on to found the distillery of Szeged and Temesvar (now Timisoara, Romania). By 1887 they had built three other sugar factories including a large refinery in Hatvan. By the 1890s they controlled almost 30% of Hungarian sugar production. He succeeded in driving out Austrian competition and helped make sugar one of Hungary’s most important export products. His banking and other financial interests made him one of the wealthiest Jews in Hungary. He represented his country on the Committee on International Sugar Agreement (Brussels, 1902). In 1908 he was appointed a member of the Court of Arbitration, which dealt dealing with points of disagreement between Austria and Hungary.
Jozsef was concerned with social welfare. For some time he was president of the National Labor Insurance Bank, an organization founded to extend medical and financial aid to workmen during periods of sickness and was vice-president of the National Association of Manufacturers. Jozsef also established pioneering welfare and sickness benefit schemes for workers in his own factories
Jozsef was a man of extensive worldly knowledge, and a connoisseur of music and a patron of the arts. He helped to establish various charitable organizations. Active in Jewish communal affairs, he was a trustee and benefactor of the Budapest rabbinical seminary and a generous supporter of the Hungarian Jewish Literary Society (IMIT). He was a Hungarian delegate to the Alliance Israelite Universelle.
In 1908, Jozsef II, was made a baron and in 1910, became a member of the Hungarian parliament's Upper Chamber. Jozsef Hatvany-Dutsch died in Bad Nauheim, Germany, in 1913.
Jozsef’s daughter Lilly (1890-1968) was a playwright. She converted to Christianity.
Pecel
(Place)Pecel
A small town in the Pest-Pilis-Solt-Kiskun district, central Hungary.
Jews first settled in Pecel in the first half of the 18th century. From the second half of the century, when the estate owner, Count Raday, permitted Jews to settle on his estate, Jewish settlement developed rapidly under his patronage.
The Jews were engaged mainly in small scale business, with their chief market being Pest. When the towns of Hungary were opened to the Jews in 1840, many of the traders who travelled daily to Pest remained there.
The community was organized in the second half of the 18th century. The synagogue, which dated from the same period, went up in flames and was rebuilt in 1828. There was a women's society and a school which was opened in 1850 and functioned until after World War I.
In 1930 the community numbered 194.
The Holocaust Period
In 1938, after the publication of discriminatory laws which aimed at limiting Jewish participation in the economic and cultural fields, many Jews were deprived of their means of livelihood and the general situation of the community worsened.
In 1942 the young people were mobilized for forced labor and sent to various fronts. The majority of them perished.
In 1944, after the German occupation, the Jews were sent to the ghetto in the neighboring town, Rakoskeresztur, and were housed in the cowsheds. After a while all the fit people were mobilized for forced labor. They were sent to a special camp. After a number of weeks the gendarmerie came to the ghetto and robbed the inhabitants of their money, valuables and papers. In particular, the wealthy people were tortured to make them reveal where they had hidden their valuables. Immediately thereafter they were loaded into cattle cars and sent to Hatvan, where they were employed on various jobs for four days, remaining all that time without shelter. On June 1 they were again loaded into overcrowded cattle cars and transported to Auschwitz.
In the autumn of 1944 units of Jews were brought from Budapest to dig trenches against the oncoming Russians. Four of the workers were murdered by members of the Fascist Arrow Cross party.
After the war only a few survivors, mainly from forced labor, returned. They tried to renew communal life but slowly they began to leave the place. In 1950 the community officially ceased to exist.
Jaszbereny
(Place)Jaszbereny
Jászberény
A town in the Jasz-Nagykun-Szolnok district, central Hungary.
Jews were living in Jaszbereny already in the days of the Turkish conquest, in the 16th and 17th centuries. They were employed mainly in the buying and selling of agricultural produce, and supplying the local people with their needs. After the period during which Jews were not allowed to live in the town, Jewish settlement was renewed in 1850 after the gates of the towns of Hungary were opened to Jews. A Jew, by the name of Buk Gabor, set up the foundations for the community. The community started a hevra kadisha (burial society) and many additional charitable institutions. The large synagogue was built in 1890.
Also active in the town was a school, founded in 1855 and a Talmud torah. From 1871 - 1885 the community was divided into two, the Status-quo group and the Neolog (reform) group, which advocated integration into Hungarian society and amendments to the religious way of life, after which they reunited.
Relations with the other inhabitants were good.
In 1860, many Jews turned to vine growing, after they were permitted to buy and own land.
During World War I, 117 Jews were conscripted of whom 23 fell in action.
During the period of the White Terror, pogroms against the Jews instigated by right wing military elements (1919-21) after the fall of the communist regime, two Jews were murdered, one of whom was a district judge.
In 1936 the community numbered 676, a drop from the 1,017 Jewish inhabitants in 1910.
The Holocaust Period
In 1938 Jews suffered at the hands of nationalist gangs who were on their way to the Czech border. They broke windows in Jewish homes and beat Jews up in the streets; many Jews fled the town in terror and only returned when order was restored. The discriminatory laws of that year affected the economic position of the Jews, even though the authorities didn't implement them to the full.
In 1942, many young Jews were conscripted for forced labor, work on fortifications and in services together with other Hungarian citizens whom the authorities did not want to join the armed forces. They were sent to help the Hungarian-German war effort on the Ukrainian front where most of them perished.
Jaszbereny served as the district centre for the mobilization of young Jews for forced labor camps in Hungary and outside the country. Commanding the head-quarters was general Ivan Zentai, known as Ivan the Terrible, because of his maltreatment of the conscripts. In the summer of 1944 about 1o,000 people were brought to Jaszbereny, among them the handicapped and sick. They were sent to Budapest, but on the way there they were taken from the train on the orders of Marton Zoldi, an officer of the Hungarian gendarmerie, and held in the ghetto in Hatvan. From here they were transported later to Auschwitz. Zentai was sentenced to death after the war on account of the war crimes he committed.
In the spring of 1944, all the Jews were confined in the ghetto which was set up in a number of buildings, mainly in the vicinity of the synagogue. They were permitted to arrange for the supply of food and care of the sick, and even managed to organize their religious life. On July 30, soldiers of the Hungarian gendarmerie attacked the ghetto, robbed the inhabitants of their valuables and even tortured several in order to find out where they had hidden their valuables. Many went out of their minds as a result of this treatment. Later, they were sent to Monor, where they were kept in a brick field for three days, and from there transported to Auschwitz.
After the war a few survivors returned from Auschwitz and forced labor, but the community was renewed only on a temporary basis. The majority left the town a second time, many of them going on Aliyah to Eretz Israel. In 1947, a memorial was built to the 560 martyrs.
Apc
(Place)Apc
A village in the Heves district, northern Hungary.
Jews first settled in the village at the beginning of the 19th century, under the protection of the local estate owner.
The majority made a living from commerce and only a few owned plots of land. The community established a hevra kadisha (burial society), two cemeteries, a synagogue and a school. Relations with their Christian neighbors were generally good until the Holocaust.
In 1930 the community numbered 116.
The Holocaust Period
In 1938, after the publication of discriminatory laws which aimed at limiting Jewish participation in the economic and cultural fields, a large number of the Jews of the village lost their means of livelihood.
In 1941 many of them were conscripted for forced labor, work on fortifications and in services together with other Hungarian citizens whom the authorities did not want to join the armed forces. The majority perished.
On May 9, 1944, after the German occupation, all the Jews of the village were sent to the Hatvan ghetto, and after a few weeks a number were transported to Auschwitz.
After the war 15 survivors returned. They did not renew communal life. They left the place one by one, and by 1962 not a single Jew remained.
Paszto
(Place)Paszto
A small town in the Heves district, northern Hungary.
According to Christian sources there were Jews living in the town already in the 15th century.
The majority of the Jews made a living from commerce and trades. There were a few landowners and clerks, the latter employed mainly by Jews.
Relations on the part of the Christian inhabitants were generally inimical.
The community was organized in the first half of the 18th century. In 1869, because of differences between haredim (orthodox) and maskilim (enlightened) at the Jewish Congress, the community affiliated with the orthodox stream, which refused to accept the decisions of Congress.
A synagogue was built in 1840. There were also a hevra kadisha (burial society), women's society, Talmud torah and heder.
In World War I 40 Jews served in the armed forces; 14 of them were killed in action.
After the war, during the period of the White Terror, pogroms against the Jews instigated by right wing military elements (1919-21) after the fall of the communist regime, gangs of hoodlums came to the town. They beat up six Jews badly and looted most of the Jewish shops.
In 1930 the community numbered 414.
The Holocaust Period
In march 1944, a unit of the German army entered the town accompanied by some gestapo men. The wealthy Jews were taken from their homes which were requisitioned by German officers. The local anti-semites used this opportunity to harm the Jews and drive them away.
In May 1944, the Jews were taken to the ghetto in Hatvan, and after a week they were marched to a tile factory on the outskirts of the town. Here they were victims to the torture and brutality of the police and SS. On July 12 they were transported to Auschwitz; a terrible journey that lasted seven days.
After the war 20 survivors returned from forced labor and from Auschwitz.. The inhabitants, who refused to return the property which they had stolen, displayed great hatred towards them. With the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 the majority went on Aliyah.
Rakosszentmihaly
(Place)Rakosszentmihaly
A town in the Pest-Pilis-Solt-Kiskun district, central Hungary.
The industrial development of Budapest early in the 20th century was felt in the town, which established itself as a resort for the wealthy. Jews began to settle here because of the favorable conditions concerning the acquisition of land for residential purposes. The majority were engaged in commerce and in trades.
The community was organized in 1900 and affiliated with the Neolog (reform) movement which advocated integration into Hungarian society and amendments to the religious way of life.
There was an old-aged home and a school. A synagogue was built after World War I. In 1932 a cultural center was opened which offered lectures and activities for the residents and Jews of the surroundings.
Relations with the Christian inhabitants were generally good, and little heed was paid to anti-semitic propaganda.
Even during the period of the White Terror, pogroms against the Jews instigated by right wing military elements (1919-21) after the fall of the communist regime, Jews were not harmed.
In 1930 the community numbered 829.
The Holocaust Period
In 1938, following the publication of discriminatory laws which aimed at limiting Jewish participation in the economic and cultural fields, the Jews suffered from harsh oppression and maltreatment. The district commissioner, Laszlo Endre, was responsible for this situation.
In 1944, after the German occupation, the Jews were kept in several of their houses which were daubed with yellow stars. The men were taken for forced labor; the majority perished. The people left behind - women, children, the sick and the aged - were sent to the ghetto in Godollo and then to the ghetto in Hatvan. In the first half of June they were transported to Auschwitz. Imnmediately after their departure, German soldiers and members of the Hungarian gendarmerie emptied the houses of their possessions. The cemetery was vandalized.
After the war 124 survivors returned who renewed communal life. In 1949 a monument to the martyrs was erected in the grounds of the synagogue. Religious life was resumed and a rabbi officiated until 1956. By the 1970s only a few Jews remained in the town.
Godollo
(Place)Godollo
A town in the Pest-Pilis-Solt-Kiskun district, the Godollo region, central Hungary.
Jews began to settle in Godollo at the beginning of the 19th century. They were engaged in the marketing of agricultural produce of the local farmers. In 1867 a recreation place was built in the castle of the estate owner, for the family of Emperor Franz Josef I, and the town became a meeting place for the nobility. Jews of Godollo supplied all that was needed for the management of the castle. The community was organized in 1850, and three years later the hevra kadisha was established. A synagogue was built in 1870. A women's society was founded in 1892, and a school was opened in 1857 and closed early in 1944. After the Jewish Congress in 1868, at which there were differences between Haredim (orthodox) and Maskilim (moderates), the community affiliated with the Neolog (reform) movement which wanted to integrate into Hungarian society and amend the religious way of life.
During the period of the White Terror, riots against Jews instigated by right wing military elements (1919-21), after the fall of the communist regime, Godollo served as one of the strong points for the pronay terror gangs. This anti-semitism continued until the late 1930s.
In 1930 the Jewish population was 276.
The Holocaust Period
In 1937, even before the publication of discriminatory laws which aimed at limiting Jewish participation in the economic and cultural fields, the validity of passports held by Jews expired, special heavy taxes were imposed on Jewish merchants and licences of Jewish artisans were expropriated. In 1942 a center for the conscription of Jews for forced labor was set up in Godollo. This work was on fortifications and in services together with other Hungarian citizens whom the authorities did not want to join the armed forces. They were sent to help the Hungarian-German war effort on the Ukrainian front, where they perished under the harsh conditions.
At the end of April 1944, a temporary ghetto was set up in the town. After a short period of time, the inhabitants were transferred to the Hatvan ghetto, and from there transported to Auschwitz. Several families poisoned themselves in the sealed freight cars.
After the war not a single survivor returned and the community officially ceased to exist in 1947.
Hungary
(Place)Hungary
Magyarország
A country in central Europe, member of the European Union (EU).
21st Century
Estimated Jewish population in 2018: 47,000 out of 9,800,000 (0.4%). Hungary has the largest Jewish population in central and eastern Europe. Most Jews live in Budapest, with a minority living in a number of other communities of them the largest are located in Debrecen, Szeged, and Miskolc. The umbrella organization of the Jewish communities:
Mazsihisz
Phone: 36 1 413 55 00
Email: info@mazsihisz.com
Website: www.mazsihisz.hu
HISTORY
The Jews of Hungary
Antiquity
Jewish presence on the territory of Hungary is documented during the 2nd and the 3rd centuries CE, when the country, then known as Panonia, was part of the Roman Empire. Various archeological findings attest Jewish settlement in a number of places, most of them on the banks of the Danube river or close to it. A few inscriptions mentioning the word Judaeus (“Jewish”) and Jewish symbols, including the menorah – the seven branch candelabrum, were found on tombstones unearthed in Brigetio (now Szőny Komárom), Solva (Esztergom), Intercissa (Dunaújváros), Acquincum (Budapest), Triccinnae (Sárvár), Sopiane (Pécs), and Savaria (Szombathely). About two-thirds of the extant inscriptions referring to Jews belong to soldiers. They probably served in the Roman legions recruited in the Middle East, like the First Cohort of the Syrian Hemesian Archers that originated in the Syrian town of Hemesa (the modern Homs) and included Jews from that town. It seems that the worsening security situation in the Middle East due to the 3rd century attacks of the Sasanid Persians led to additional Jews from Antioch, Hemesa and other places in Levant to join their relatives in Panonia. The ties between the Jews of Panonia and the Levant ceased after mid-4th century following the split of the Roman Empire and then the evacuation of Panonia by the Romans.
1251 | In the Land of Hagar
In the second half of the 11th century, some Jews migrated from the regions of Bohemia and Moravia, in today's Czech Republic, and settled in a part of the Pannonia region located in what is now Hungary. Documents from the time show that the local church issued edicts prohibiting marriages between Christians and Jews, as well as employing Jews at festivals and fairs.
This attitude changed in 1251 when King Bela IV issued a bill of rights that regulated trade relations between Jews and Christians and protected the Jews from harassment by Christians. This royal act caused Jews from all over Europe to start immigrating to Hungary, “Land of Hagar”, as it was called in Rabbinical literature of the Middle Ages.
But not all was rosy in the land of goulash and blintzes. The reign of King Lajos I saw a rise in the influence of the Catholic Church, which was displeased with the rights given to the Jews, and in 1360 this king decreed that the Jews be expelled from his kingdom. Four years later the decree was annulled due to financial reasons, but many of those expelled never returned.
1526 | Three States for One People
In the 16th and 17th centuries the Hungarians, Turks and Habsburg emperors all fought over the coveted Hungarian real-estate. The people of Hungary – and the Jews among them – passed from hand to hand and from sovereign to sovereign like second-rate goods at a country fair.
The story begins with the Battle of Mohacs, which took place in 1526 and ended with a fateful defeat for the Hungarians at the hands of the Turks. Following this clash Hungary was divided into three parts: The southeastern part fell into Turkish control, the northwestern part under the rule of the Habsburgs, while the eastern part – the region of Transylvania, which remained under Turkish sovereignty (but not Turkish rule) – became an independent principality.
The Jews who lived under Turkish rule enjoyed relative freedom. The most significant community in this area lived in the city of Buda (later to become part of modern-day Budapest). This was a community of Jews from the west and east alike, and the blend of cultures enriched the Torah life of Buda Jews thanks to the fruitful mixture of the study techniques perfected by the sages of Spain and the Ashkenazi principles of 'pilpul' – the nuanced legalistic mechanism of Talmud study.
The economic situation of the Jews in the city, which sat on a major trade route, on the banks of the Danube, was likewise improved, and they traded in all goods – from hides and rugs to cattle and liquor.
The Jews living in the eastern part of the country – as explained, under Turkish sovereignty but not direct Turkish rule – enjoyed relative prosperity, influenced by the Calvinists of the Hungarian Reform Church, who were more tolerant than their Catholic predecessors were.
The state of the Jews who lived under the Habsburgs, however, went from bad to worse, and many of them were expelled from the Crown cities.
1781 | The Edict of Toleration
Many historians mark the day on which Emperor Joseph II issued the “Edict of Toleration” for the Jews as the day on which the walls of the ghetto came down, at least metaphorically, and Jews began to integrate into the European sphere. The edict, issued in the year 1781, abolished the residential restriction that had been placed on the Jews, granted them freedom of movement throughout the empire and allowed them to take part in commerce and the economy, to enroll in institutions of general studies and practice free professions.
At the same time, the edict prohibited the operation of synagogues, as well as the use of Yiddish and Hebrew in official documents. Jews lacking formal education were not allowed to marry until age 25, as a way to encourage education.
But despite the restrictions on religious freedom, many Jews immigrated to Hungary, mostly from the regions of Galicia (now southern Poland) and Moravia (now in the Czech Republic). In time, the Jewish community of Hungary would split into two opposite schools: most of the Jews arriving from Moravia were enamored with the ideas of progress and adopted the values of the Enlightenment, and within 100 years they produced many thinkers and intellectuals, among them Theodore (Binyamin Zeev) Herzl, many of whom left an indelible impression on European culture.
The Jews who came from Galicia, on the other hand, adhered to their traditional Judaism, and in time founded the Hasidic courts of Satmar, Munkacs and others.
1848 | Amen-cipation
The history of the Enlightenment and its attitude towards the Jews is complex and inconsistent. One the one hand, those upholding the values of equality, which are the very heart of the Enlightenment movement, could not exclude the Jews, lest they be accused of double standards. On the other, the ancient European aversion to the notion of the Jew as an equal among equals made it hard for the Europeans to put their ideals into practice.
Hungary was not unique in this regard. Between 1815-1840 the number of Jews in Hungary grew by approximately 80% due to accelerated immigration, stemming from the reforms of Joseph II and the Edict of Toleration. On the face of it, Jews integrated into Hungarian society and received equal treatment, but the excuses for Jew-hatred always found willing ears.
One of many examples can be found in the words of one of the leaders of the Liberal movement in the lower house of parliament regarding the production of alcohol, one of the main occupation of the Jews in that period: “Those who live in areas where every saloon is in the hands of the Jews know what danger they pose to the people […] as they constantly hold the white poison.”
Another expression of anti-Semitism which no “edict of toleration” could undo came in 1848, during the “Spring of Nations” revolution. Although Jews took an active part in the revolution, the Liberal-controlled National Assembly refused to grant them fully equal rights. Following this decision, which of course caused much disappointment, many Jews argued that this was proof that the integration into Hungarian life must be increased and Jewish national identity should be blurred.
Despite the hostile environment, in 1860 the steamroller of enlightenment overcame racism and almost all restrictions on the Jews were lifted. The revolution was completed in 1867, when the Jews were granted full equality.
1868 | The Triple thread
What does one do when one is told, one fine day, that he is free?
The ideas of Enlightenment and rationalism, which had spread through the Jewish communities in relatively short order, caused deep changes in them. While in the pre-modern era the community was the legal, political and social framework that shaped the life of the Jew, after emancipation it was left with only religious authority.
The “Problem of the Jews,” as Achad Ha'am (Asher Ginzberg) called it, was paradoxically expressed in their successful integration into European life. For now the Jewish community had to decide the greatest question of all: What shall the unique Jewish identity consist of, now that there was no ghetto? How to act when cultural and corporeal walls no longer separate Jew from Gentile?
In 1868 these questions were laid before the Jewish congress organized by the community of Pest (soon to become part of Budapest), one of the largest and most important communities in Hungary. Three major schools of thought faced off with each other at this congress: The Orthodox, who believed in religious conservatism, seclusion, and a minimum of religious reforms; the Neologists (reformists), who called to accept the social changes willingly, use the Hungarian language in sermons and open the synagogues to the winds of change blowing through the world; and the “Status Quo” group, which favored maintaining the existing arrangements.
The Neologists won the majority of the votes at the congress, representing the desire of most Hungarian Jews to integrate into general society. The other schools of thought refused to accept the result, and organized in separate communities. A Jew visiting a Hungarian city in those days could have prayed Shacharit at the Neologist temple, Mincha at an Orthodox shul, and Arvit at a synagogue affiliated with the “Status-Quo” group. Such sharp polarization among the members of a Jewish community was a phenomenon unique to Hungary, and scholars believe that the deep rift left such a lasting impression on the community that its impact continued to be felt until the community was destroyed in WW2.
1882 | Same Solution, Opposite Reasons
Before a Hungarian Jew named Theodore (Binyamin Zeev) Herzl even began to think of the first draft for his book “The State of the Jews”, another Hungarian, Victor Istoczi, a Member of Parliament from a noble family, suggested the establishment a separate state for the Jews. Unlike Herzl, who developed the idea of the Jewish state out of concern for his people, Istoczi formulated the idea due to his fear of the Jews. In other words, they both thought of the idea for the same reason: Anti-Semitism.
Istoczi argued that Judaism is not just a religious community, but a social sect which shared blood, ancient tradition, common interests as well as religion turn into a tight-knit, closed unit. To him, the Jews were nothing but clever parasites planning to take over Hungary, and the internal division among them was but a nefarious plot: The task of the Orthodox was to preserve Judaism and its religious lifestyle, whereas the Neologists were to cunningly make their way into the front lines of Hungarian politics.
Istoczi's words found receptive ears and laid the foundation for the dual experience of the Jews of Hungary: On one hand, escalating anti-Semitism that peaked in the affair of “the girl from Tisza Eszlar”, a famous blood libel that took place in 1882, in which a shamash (synagogue attendant) and a Jewish shochet (ritual slaughterer) were accused of murdering a girl (a charge of which they were acquitted at trial and on appeal as well); on the other hand, an accelerated increase in the number of Jews who moved to the cities and integrated into the general fabric of life. The lesson was unmistakable: Hungarian society was unwilling to accept the Jews as they were. In order to integrate into it, they must renounce their social and religious uniqueness and adapt to the ways and customs of the non-Jewish population.
1886 | The Hungarian-Jewish International
One of the common responses to the non-acceptance of Jews in Hungarian society was that of assimilation. But in accordance with the famous observation by French philosopher Sartre, that “A Jew is one recognized as a Jew,” the fact that they had assimilated among the Hungarians didn't really help the Jews. The prevalent view was that the Jew was a foreign race in Europe and even if he really wanted, he could not become one with the Slavic races. “Judaism is a malignant infection everywhere,” a respectable Catholic journal declared in those days, “and it ruins the mores most particularly in the world of trade, degrades morality and turns corruption into a general fashion.”
One of the solutions for the catch-22 in which the Jews found themselves was to be found in a new ideology that began to spread in Europe at the end of the 19th century: Socialism.
Socialist thought stated that national and religious categories are a capitalist invention designed to obfuscate the gap between the classes. The Jews, who paid a heavy price for their ethnic identity, joined the movement in droves.
One of the main socialists in Hungary was Bela Kun, who was born in Transylvania in 1886. His father was a converted Jew and his mother a protestant. Kun belonged to a circle of well-known Jewish artists and writers, among whom were literary critic Gyorgi Lukacs, novelist Lajos Biro and others – all adherents of the communist ideology and key officials of the Hungarian Soviet Republic. In 1919 Kun was appointed Foreign Minister in the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic that was established after WW1.
1903 | Got a Shekel?
It is ironic that of all people, the visionary of Zionism, Theodore Herzl, was born in a country where the majority of Jews firmly rejected the Zionist idea, as most Hungarian Jews indeed did. The Orthodox community saw Zionism as a false messiah movement that could hasten the end of days, whereas the Neologist community supported assimilation and defined its members as “Hungarians of Mosaic Faith”, which is to say, Hungarian patriots like any other, who just happen to be Jews.
And yet, seven Hungarian Jews, arriving in Basel as self-appointed delegates, took part in the first Zionist Congress. The most notable among them were Janos Ronai, who in 1897 founded the first Zionist association in Hungary, and Shmuel Bettleheim, who founded the Zionist Organization of Hungary along with Ronai in 1903.
Over the years the Zionist movement grew stronger in Hungary. Indication of this can be found in the number of those who purchased the Eretz Israel Shekel, which rose from 500 to 1,200 people. (The Shekel was the annual dues collected by the Zionist Organization and which bestowed upon the purchaser the right to vote and be elected at Zionist congresses.) “The cream of the crop,” in the words of Dr. Hajim Weissburg, one of the founders, were the members of the Makkabea Club in 1903. The aim of the founders of the Makkabea Club was to provide the members of the Zionist Organization with Jewish and Zionist cultural values and to arouse Jewish awareness, self-respect and national pride among the Jews. Their activities followed those of student organizations and was characterized by communal meals, symbols, slogans, and even dueling when Jewish pride so required.
1910 | The “Big Bang” of Hungarian Jews
At the end of the 19th century, an era when Enlightenment and modernization reached a peak in western and central Europe, an enormous amount of intellect, ability and talent, that had been cooped up for hundreds of years in the yeshivas and batei midrash, exploded into the Hungarian atmosphere.
Hungarian Jews recorded immense achievements in all fields: From the great inventors Laszlo Biro and David Gestetner, through talented mathematicians such as Mano Beck and Miklos Schweitzer, through Nobel-winning chemists George Olah and Michael Polanyi.
More than any other field, Jews stood out in the world of journalism. Among the most influential media personalities in Hungary a special mention should be made of the writer Adolf Agai, who edited the popular satirical Borsszem Janko and publisher Sandor Braun, who invented new color printing formats, including the daily “Az Est”. Strong Jewish roots can also be found in the famous “press halls” of Budapest, which for the first time concentrated the entire journalism production chain - writing, editing, proofreading, printing, marketing and distribution – under one roof.
The field of literature and the humanities was another in which the Jews gained much success. One of these for example was the poet Jozsef Kis, who founded “A-Het”, a periodical which served as a home for Jewish poets and writers, including short story master Tomas Kobor. Upon the decline of A-Het it was replaced by the leading literary periodical “Nyugat”, which featured the works of Hungarian prose pioneer Sandor Brody and novelist and playwright Dezső Szomory Hungarian Jews and Hungarians of Jewish descent made a crucial contribution to the local theater and film as well, including actor Bernard Schwartz, better known as Hollywood star Tony Curtis, who was born in New York to Hungarian parents, and Casablanca director Mihaly Kertesz, who changed his named to Michael Curtiz when he immigrated to America.
Even in sports, considered a quintessentially “non-Jewish” activity, Jews stood out, winning almost 33% of all Olympic medals awarded to Hungarian athletes in the early 20th century.
1920 | The Jewish Laws
After WW1 Hungary lost some two thirds of its territory. Many Jewish Hungarians found themselves overnight living under the sovereignty of new states: Romania, Yugoslavia, Austria and others.
During the Great War (1914-1918) approximately 10,000 Jewish Hungarian soldiers fell in the killing fields, but the patriotism they showed didn't stop the anti-Semitic winds blowing through the streets of Hungary, intensified by the many Jewish refugees streaming from Galicia in search of shelter in the Hungarian lands.
Like many countries attempting to forge a national identity between the two world wars, Hungary too tried to establish a communist regime, but it lasted only 133 days, followed by the regime of Miklos Horthy, a conservative national war hero with anti-Semitic tendencies. The suppression of the communist regime was accompanied by pogroms against the “cosmopolitan” Jews, in which the “white terror” fascist gangs murdered some 3.000 Jews.
During the 1920's Hungary was home to a sort of “soft anti-Semitism”. On one hand, discriminatory quotas on Jewish enrollment in universities, which stood at only 5%. On the other – the Jews were awarded a certain representation in the Hungarian parliament.
At the end of the 1930s the Jews of Hungary, numbering some 450,000, lived under an anti-Jewish assault. It was a slippery slope: In 1938 parliament passed the first “Jewish Law”, which restricted their freedom of occupation in many fields and broadened the definition of “Jew” to those who had converted after 1919. A year later the Hungarian parliament passed “The Second Jewish Law” which expanded the definition of “Jew” even further, to include another 100,000 people who had converted before 1919, as well as their children.
These moves were the barbaric constitutional foundation for the annihilation of the Jews of Hungary during WW2.
1944 | Goods For Blood
The Jewish community of Hungary had the dubious honor of being among the few which the Nazi extermination machine left for the end of the war; but when it did happen, the annihilation was deadly, methodical and quick, even for the Nazis.
Unlike the Jews of Poland, many of whom believed the lies of the Nazi propaganda machine, the prevalent view among scholars is that the Jews of Hungary were indeed aware of the horrible atrocities of the Nazis, but until the last moment could not believe that such barbarity could take place in a civilized country like Hungary.
When the Nazis conquered Hungary, in March 1944, there were some 750,000 Jews living in it, of whom about 300,000 were refugees and displaced persons from the east. Over the course of two months about half a million Jews wearing yellow stars were concentrated in ghettos established by the Nazis in every Hungarian city, and in May 1944 they began to be transported en masse to Auschwitz. It is estimated that within a few weeks approximately 450,000 of Hungary's Jews were murdered in this fashion.
In October 1944 the Nazis deposed the Hungarian Regent Horthy and appointed anti-Semitic fascist Ferenc Szalasi, head of the Iron Cross Party, as Prime Minister. As soon as Szalasi took office, the authorities no longer protected the Jews of Budapest. Death ran wild in the streets of the city, and the Danube turned red with the blood the elderly, women and children who were shot in the back and dumped in the river.
One of the most controversial episodes in the Holocaust of Hungary's Jews has to do with Israel Kastner, Deputy Head of the Zionist Organization in the country and one of the founders of the “Aid and Rescue Committee of Budapest”. Kastner saved some 1,700 Jews thanks to a deal he signed with Adolf Eichmann, which can be summed up in three terrible words: “Goods for blood”.
In the 1950s the “Kastner Affair” exploded in Israel after the latter was accused by District Court Judge Binyamin Halevy of “selling his soul to the devil”. Three years later the Supreme court cleared Kastner's name, but he didn't live to see it: A few months earlier, on March 4th, 1957, Kastner was gunned down by three Jewish assassins in Tel Aviv.
2001 | From the establishment of Israel until today
After the Holocaust approximately 145,000 Jews remained in Hungary. During these years the Zionist movement operated at full steam, and many of Hungary's Jews moved to Israel. Among the most prominent were journalist-cum-Justice Minister Yosef (“Tommy”) Lapid, satirical writer Ephraim Kishon and Bank of Israel Governor Moshe Zanbar. The Jews remaining in Hungary mostly turned their backs on Jewish tradition, whether due to the trauma of the Holocaust or the influence of the atheist communist regime. In the late 1940s the Communist Party came to power in Hungary. Jewish educational institutions were closed down, and all Zionist activity was banned. Jews who were of a clear communist bent found key positions in the party. One of these was the dictator Matyas Rakosi, who ruled the country from 1949 to 1956.
During the Communist era the Jewish community in Budapest was under the jurisdiction of the Department of Religious Affairs at the Hungarian Ministry of the Interior. Since 1968 each of the city's 18 districts had at least one synagogue. The one on Dohany Street is considered the largest synagogue in Europe. The disintegration of the Communist regime and the democratic reforms in Hungary rejuvenated the Jewish community. About 20 new synagogues opened, as well as community and social institutions. But anti-Semitism has not abated in Hungary, and has reached new heights in the second decade of the 21st century, with the nationalist Jobbik party receiving approximately 16.5% of the vote in 2010, and over 20% in 2014. Among the anti-Semitic incidents recorded was the throwing of a dead pig on the statue of Raoul Wallenberg, famous for saving Jews during the Holocaust, and naming a square after Albert Wass, a notorious anti-Semite accused of murdering Jewish women in Transylvania.
As of the early 21st century the Jewish community of Budapest numbered approximately 80,000 people – the largest Jewish community in Central Europe, operating 23 synagogues and places of worship, two colleges, three elementary schools, three kindergartens, a hospital, two nursing homes and several cemeteries.