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July 10th, 2009, 04:54
I remember very well as a young boy the grainy black & white TV images of the Hungarian uprising against the old Communist regime in the USSR in 1956. I remember watching and listening to the news reports from Budapest when it became apparent how popular the uprising was, and how it appeared for a few fleeting days that the bastards from Moscow might not intervene. But that didn't last long, as they attacked very soon after in huge numbers ~ Hungary's version of Tienanmen Square it turned out ~ and the revolt was put down in a bloody (and in hindsight, predictable) manner.

One of the greatest leaders of the Hungarian revolt was Bela Kiraly, who escaped execution (one of the few leaders who did) and managed to get to the US and live a successful life there. He died on July 4 in Budapest and here's a paste of an obituary I read in The Globe this morning. Read it and be somewhat in awe of the incredibly interesting, dangerous, action-filled life this man led, from the muddy and cold escape into Austria to the a doctorate from Columbia, to years of teaching History at Brooklyn College. I would have loved to sit in a few of those lectures.


July 8, 2009
Bela Kiraly Dies at 97; Led Revolt in Hungary

By MARGALIT FOX
_____________________________________

Gen. Bela K. Kiraly, the commander in chief of the revolutionary forces in the Hungarian uprising of 1956, who for more than half a century was considered a folk hero in Hungary, and who returned there in 1989 to serve in its post-Communist government, died Saturday in Budapest. He was 97.

His death was announced by the Hungarian Defense Ministry, which provided no details, The Associated Press reported. The A.P. cited the Hungarian newspaper Magyar Nemzet for the time and place of the generalтАЩs death.

At his death, General Kiraly was emeritus professor of history at Brooklyn College, where he taught from 1964 to 1982. Before returning to Hungary, he lived for many years in Highland Lakes, N.J.

A former major general in the Hungarian Army, General Kiraly was the senior military leader of HungaryтАЩs short-lived revolt against Soviet forces in the autumn of 1956. As commander in chief of the Hungarian National Guard and the leader of the Budapest garrison, he commanded a force of 26,000 insurgents and 30,000 Hungarian Army troops who had joined them.

When the uprising began on Oct. 23, General Kiraly was weak, ill and exhausted; he had just been released after spending five years in prison, four of them on death row, on manufactured charges of espionage. After the uprising was put down violently by the Soviets less than two weeks later, he fled to the United States.

General Kiraly was one of the most highly visible Hungarian exiles in the United States, writing and lecturing widely and speaking about the uprising before the United Nations. In 1989, as HungaryтАЩs Communist government dissolved, he was able to return there; the next year, he was elected to a four-year term in the National Assembly, as the Hungarian Parliament is called. He also served as vice chairman of the assemblyтАЩs defense committee and later advised the Hungarian government on military reform.

Bela Kalman Kiraly was born on April 14, 1912, in Kaposvar, in southwest Hungary. After graduating from the state military academy in Budapest, he served as an army officer in World War II. In later years, General Kiraly said in interviews that he had tried to join the Russian side in the war rather than serve with HungaryтАЩs fascist forces, but was unable to do so.

During the war, Mr. Kiraly commanded a battalion of 400 Jewish slave laborers at the Ukrainian front. Disobeying orders from his superiors, as The Jerusalem Post wrote in 1993, he тАЬput the 400 men under his command into Hungarian uniforms and treated them humanely.тАЭ For his actions, he was honored in 1993 as a Righteous Gentile by Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial authority in Jerusalem.

Captured by the Russians in 1944, Mr. Kiraly was sent to Siberia. He and two dozen of his men managed to escape from the train carrying them there and walked over the Carpathian Mountains back to Hungary. Mr. Kiraly was made a general in 1950 and appointed leader of the military academy in Budapest.

In 1951, General Kiraly was arrested on charges of subversion, sedition and spying for the United States. (The charges are now widely believed to have been concocted by HungaryтАЩs Stalinist leaders.) He was given a death sentence, later commuted to life at hard labor. In October 1956, General Kiraly was among the prisoners paroled by the Hungarian government in a futile effort to appease mounting popular unrest.

When the uprising started, General Kiraly was in a Budapest hospital. тАЬI was skin and bones coming out of five years of imprisonment,тАЭ Agence France-Presse quoted him as saying in 2006. тАЬI was far from being healed, so I had to slip out of the hospital because the doctors would not let me go.тАЭ

At the request of Imre Nagy, a liberal Communist who was HungaryтАЩs prime minister from 1953 to 1955 тАФ and who was returned to office at the start of the uprising тАФ General Kiraly organized the loose confederation of students, workers and other insurgents into a well-oiled fighting force.

тАЬIn 24 hours, I created a professional military staff,тАЭ the general said in the Agence France-Presse interview.

But it was no match for the hundreds of Soviet tanks that rolled into Budapest on Nov. 4. Pursued by two tank divisions, General Kiraly and a small band of resistance fighters headed for Austria. As they approached the border, the general ordered his men to blow up a nearby ammunition dump. With the Soviet tanks enveloped in the resulting cloud of smoke, General Kiraly and his men slipped through the border fence.

General Kiraly made his way to the United States, where he remained for the next 33 years. In 1958, Mr. Nagy and other leaders of the uprising were executed by HungaryтАЩs post-revolutionary government. Had General Kiraly returned, he would most likely have met the same fate.

After receiving a masterтАЩs degree from Columbia University in 1959, General Kiraly earned a Ph.D. from Columbia in 1966. His many books include тАЬHungary in the Late Eighteenth Century: The Decline of Enlightened DespotismтАЭ (Columbia University, 1969) and тАЬBasic History of Modern HungaryтАЭ (Krieger Publishing, 2001).

In the mid-1970s, General Kiraly started a nonprofit organization, Atlantic Research and Publications, which has published more than 100 monographs on Central and Eastern Europe. Through the organization, he also convened a series of seminars about the region, held in the United States, Western Europe and the East Bloc.

General Kiraly married and divorced in Hungary. His survivors include a son and a grandson, said John A. Parmelee, the comptroller of Atlantic Research and Publications and a longtime friend. Information on other survivors could not be confirmed.

During his exile in the United States, General Kiraly vowed not to return to Hungary until the remains of Mr. Nagy and other executed leaders of the uprising were taken from their unmarked graves and properly reburied. In June 1989, the general was an invited guest at the public funeral and heroтАЩs burial for Mr. Nagy and several associates in Budapest. At the ceremony, which was organized by members of HungaryтАЩs anti-Communist opposition, four Hungarian Communist Party officials laid wreaths. << http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/08/world ... nted=print (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/08/world/europe/08kiraly.html?_r=1&ref=obituaries&pagewanted=print) >>

July 12th, 2009, 16:19
Bela Kiralywas a considerably more controversial and contradictory figure in Eastern Europe than is often recognised in the West.

While many of his obituaries minimise his wartime role as a senior officer in the Hungarian Army, some saying that he always said he would have preferred to be fighting on the other side, some making much of his putting 400 Jews in Hungarian uniform to save their lives, and some claiming, totally wrongly, that he was in the Hungarian Resistance, the reality was that he played a very active part in WWII fighting alongside the Nazis. He was a key figure in the Hungarian forces involved in the siege of Stalingrad, where he was a 32 year old Brigadier-General - a position he is hardly likely to have achieved without playing his full part, and which casts more than a little doubt on the claims he later made to have attempted to join the Russians.

His imprisonment as a spy for the Americans is similarly controversial - some believe that he was set-up as a scapegoat or to keep him out of possible power, while others believe that the charges were proven and that his subsequent decision to go to America rather than to remain in Austria, where he was granted asylum and a hero's welcome, lends this weight.

His exact role at the time of the Hungarian Revolution is also unclear. Some reports say that he was released from prison, re-instated in the Army and promoted in order to lead the combined Hungarian military in the actual revolution, while others are that he was put in command after the revolution failed and the Russians invaded, to try to establish an armed resistance movement.

While the exact details are unlikely to ever be known beyond any doubt, there is no denying that his was a very unusual one and an interesting life.


My own earliest "TV memory" was rather later, as we were somewhat slow to embrace the tele-visual revolution and we watched Winston Churchill's funeral live on my riding instructor's TV - he, co-incidentally, had been a Captain in the Hungarian cavalry before deserting when WWII started and joining the resistance to fight for the Allies and was, not surprisingly, a staunch Winston Churchill supporter. Churchill was, in some ways, a similarly controversial and contradictory figure - had it not been for WWII he would have been remembered not for his undoubted rhetoric, but for his total incompetence as a military strategist in WWI, which was remarkable even by the standards of that time.