Czech Refugees in the Papers of the National Archives of Hungary (original) (raw)

In the Czech Republic, the history of the Czech refugees who used the " Balkan Way " – that went through Hungary as well between 1939 and 1945 – is well known. However, due to the lack of knowledge of the Hungarian language, the Czech historians did not research the sources that can be found in the Hungarian archives. Although the Hungarian scholars could use those documents, they denied them, because – de iure – the Czech exiles weren't refugees according to the Hungarian government during World War II. This essay tries to demonstrate that the National Archives of Hungary have important and nearly unknown documents about the Czech refugees. These people came through Hungary from the Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia in order to join their Army in Exile in France or in the Middle East. The sources in the archives are documents of the Hungarian ministries, which can be essential for the Czech or Hungarian historians. By using them, we can examine the official treatment of the refugees in a broader perspective: for example, we can now answer questions like how the Hungarian government differentiated between the Poles and Czechs; or how could the Czechs reach Budapest after their illegal entry to Hungary.

The Picture of the Czechs through the Eyes of Hungarian Politicians

Az első világháború irodalmi és történelmi aspektusai a kelet-európai régióban - Tanulmánykötet, Trefort-Kert Alapítvány - ELTE Doktorandusz Önkormányzat, Budapest, 2017

The concepts and thoughts about the Czechs of the Horthy era are not particularly researched in Hungary. However, a lot of publications about the revisionist movement and about the politics of the neighbour states circulated during the interwar period. is paper intends to give a short insight into the way how the Hungarian politicians from the lee wing progressives to the far right radicals thoughts about the Czechs who were mostly judged negatively because of the politics of Prague and Edvard Beneš, but how some of them also imagined that the cooperation between the Czechs and Hungary is possible under certain circumstances.

Czech Refugees in Austria 1968–1985

Prague Papers on the History of International Relations, 2016

After the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, which ended up Prague spring in August 1968, thousands of Czech (and Slovak) citizens went into exile. Out of estimated 162,000 people, who came to Austria within the next few weeks, some 12,000 refugees decided to stay there. The majority of them chose Vienna to be their new home. My paper deals with this group of the Czech refugees and analyses a process of their integration into the Austrian majority. The key question was how the process, which they had to undergo, changed their national identity. In the paper, which is based on various archive materials and my field research among Czechs in Vienna, I also deal with different concepts of national identity and integration. I applied Cooper´s and Brubaker’s concepts of ‘identification’ and ‘self-understanding’ to analyse the various contexts of Czech refugees’ behaviour. Why was more difficult for Czech refugees to integrate into the existing Czech minority associations in Austria than into the Austrian majority itself? The paper brings the answer.

My grandpa wasn't a Hungarian! The Stigmata of home comers to Czechoslovakia through the second and third generation viewpoint

IOHA 2018 MEMORY & NARRATION, The XX International Oral History Association Conference, June 18–21, 2018 , 2018

After the World War II was realized a population exchange between Czechoslovakia and Hungary. The winning powers denied one-way transfer of Hungarians from Czechoslovakia as it was used at German minority. Therefore, the population exchange was considered as the only option. Some of Slovaks who lived in Hungary in diasporas for decades the population exchange report did not receive very well. The others were enthusiastic of it. The fact remains that returnees Slovaks were not considered as Slovaks in their homeland in general and their lives were marked by the exchange forever. How they identified themselves? How did they say about the exchange to their children and grandchildren? The aim of contribution is to elucidate the collective memory and collective remembering issue on Slovaks returnees from Hungary example. How narrative of the population exchange remains in the families from generation to generation? The collective memory is related to common remembering. This contribution would focus on self-identification of population exchange returnees and compare it with the second and third generation perception. Has the opinion changed through several generations? What Stigmata caused the population exchange? The oral history like one of the research methods is suitable to study the collective memory. It is capturing of personal references, which are irrecoverable in population exchange transgenerational memory phenomenon. Thanks to families' memories of individual narrators, we can observe the stories of pleasure, happiness but even haunting, misery and misunderstanding.

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Cristian Sandache, Nostalgia of Saint Stephen. Hungary, the Transylvanian Hungarians and the Problem of Transylvania. 1918-1947, Cluj-Napoca, Argonaut, 2019, în „Rivista di Studi Ungheresi”, XXI, Roma, 2022, pp. 277-280.