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Home News In Memoriam: 1956 Hungarian Freedom Fighters
In Memoriam: 1956 Hungarian Freedom Fighters |
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Sunday, 23 October 2016 |
In Memoriam: 1956 Hungarian Freedom Fighters
Sunday, October 23, is the 60th
anniversary of the Hungarian Revolution.
Having just returned from my first visit to Hungary,
this anniversary carries a special poignancy to me.
Visiting Budapest's University of Technology where the
Freedom Manifesto was written, the Radio building where the
Manifesto was announced and the Parliament square where the
massacre of October 25, 1956 occurred, reminds us that the human
desire for freedom can never be extinguished.
For the Hungarian Revolution, parallels to China's
1989 pro-democracy movement and its subsequent Tiananmen
massacre on June 4 are unmistakeable. Both protests were
started by students and subsequently spread to all walks of life
and to the rest of the country. Both ended in tragedy with
tanks rolling into the city. Yet both inspired generations to
come.
The Hungarian Revolution brought forth the Prague
Spring of 1968 no matter how short lived and the formation of
Solidarity in Poland in 1980.
China's 1989 pro-democracy movement though crushed,
nevertheless led the water shed changes in eastern Europe that
year.
History does not happen in a vacuum. In 1956, China's
Mao Zedong had urged Khrushchev to send in the troops to
Budapest to put down the revolution just as in 1989 when Burma's
military dictator advised China's Deng Xiaoping to use force
against the student demonstrators in Beijing.
The Hungarians in Hungary refer to the period of
Communist rule as the Communist Era. I had asked a Chinese
friend when can the Chinese people refer to this current period
as the Communist Era? He responded it would be soon and that he
would call it the Period of Tyranny.
To the Hungarian Freedom Fighters who are with us now,
to those who had passed from us and to those who sacrificed
their lives so others may have freedom, we honor you and thank
you.
May the Hungarian Revolution be not just the beginning
of the end of Communist tyranny in Eastern Europe but will soon
be the end of Communist tyranny in China as well.
Ann Lau
Chair, Visual Artists Guild
A Commemoration will be held
at MacArthur Park, in Los Angeles at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, October
23. (corner of S. Park View St and W 6th Street)
*******
In
2006 Visual Artists Guild honored twelve Hungarian Freedom
Fighters at the 17th Tiananmen Commemoration event. Among
those honored were John Dolinsky, Julius Jancso, Laszlo Sandor
and others. Eva Szorenyi could not attend that year and was
honored in 2007 and also had her 90th birthday celebration at
the event.
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