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CURPH Interview with a Franciscan Monk

Columbia University School of International Affairs1957-08-01

Open Society Archives

Open Society Archives
Budapest, Hungary

CURPH Interview 478 with a 1956 Hungarian Refugee: 28-year-old male, Franciscan Priest, and Prefect in Boys' Home. Interview talks about how he left the Franciscan school in Esztergom to work as a reporter for "Egyetemi Ifjúság" (University Youth) and take part in the fighting at Buda Castle.

Details

  • Title: CURPH Interview with a Franciscan Monk
  • Long Description: On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian revolution, OSA copied, digitized and put online the complete series of the English transcripts of those Hungarian refugee interviews that were conducted in 1957 and 1958 within the framework of the Columbia Research Project Hungary (CURPH). On 4 November, 1956 Soviet forces launched their second attack against Budapest in order to replace the legitimate Hungarian government. OSA opened the online collection of its holdings relating to 1956 on 4 November, 2006, commemorating this tragic event of 20th century Hungarian history. After the suppression of the revolution almost two hundred thousand Hungarian citizens opted to escape and find a new home abroad. They were not only the primary eye-witnesses to the revolution itself but also to life under Communism. The Soviet bloc, during and after the Stalin era, was a hermetically closed orbit. The self-image projected by these regimes seemed both enigmatic and threatening to outside observers. Therefore, like other Eastern European refugees who managed to flee to the West throughout the 1950s taking with them their experiences and knowledge, the Hungarian refugees were a vital source of information on everyday reality under Communist rule. What made the Hungarians particularly important was not only their arrival in one great wave but also the fact that they had witnessed something inconceivable at the time: the people had brought down at one blow a regime that had been deemed unshakable. Western observers hoped that the eye-witness accounts of the Hungarians would reveal the concealed mechanism of the Stalinist state and also the mystery of its collapse. Prominent scholars Henry L. Roberts and Paul E. Zinner, the forerunners of Kremlinology, worked on setting up the project and evaluating the results alongside Siegfried Kracauer and Paul Lazarsfeld, philosophers and sociologists from the former 'Frankfurt school'. The researchers did not limit their inquiry to the events of the revolution. Hundreds of questions aimed at uncovering the details of everyday life, the living standards, working conditions, social changes, cultural developments, changes in public mentality and morality, ideological indoctrination, religious matters and the survival of traditional values. All in all, the survey targeted the elusive totality of the human condition under totalitarian rule.
  • Creator: Columbia University School of International Affairs
  • Date: 1957-08-01
  • Location: Vienna, Austria
  • OSA website: CURPH Interview 478 with a 1956 Hungarian Refugee: 28 Years Old, Male, Franciscan Priest, Prefect in Boys' Home
  • OSA Holdings: HU OSA 414-0-2-212 Collection of Research Project on Hungary at Columbia University, 1957-1958 Suggested citation: "CURPH Interview 237 with a 1956 Hungarian Refugee: 31 Years Old, Female, Opera singer", 1957. HU OSA 414-0-2-212; Donald and Vera Blinken Collection on Hungarian Refugees of 1956: Transcripts of Refugee Interviews; Open Society Archives at Central European University, Budapest.

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