FROM TRIANON'S TRAGEDY TO THE DANUBIAN CONFEDERATION
a HUNSOR Online publication
by Lipták Béla
"Every nation's homeland is sacred. If you destroy one, you mutilate the entire
human race." - Father R. P. Gratry
On the 4th of June will be the 85th anniversary of the Treaty of Trianon, the
peace treaty which in 1920 mutilated and dismembered an ancient European nation:
the kingdom of Hungary. At Trianon Hungary was deprived 63.6% of her inhabitants
and 71.5% of her territory.
This essay has three parts. It will first discuss the history of Hungary through
the end of World War One, culminating in the Treaty. Next it will describe the
Treaty, its architects, goals and consequences. It will then will discuss
"Hungary's guilt" and the events of the last 85 years to show, that just as
Nazism was not born in Germany but in Versailles, so the tragedy of Bosnia,
Kosovo, Macedonia and the fragmentation of Central Europe can all be traced back
to Trianon. It will conclude by outlining a concept, which would reconstitute
the unity and stability of the whole of Central Europe.
Pre-Trianon Hungary
For a thousand years, Hungary occupied an oval shaped central plane surrounded
by the protective bulwark of the Carpathian mountains. Like the crust on a loaf
of bread, the mountains encased the lowlands in a majestic arch from which all
waterways converge toward the center. This perfect geographic unity was matched
by complete self-sufficiency, until this harmonious symbiosis of the great
central plain and its surrounding mountains was destroyed in Trianon.
For a millennium, Hungary was the eastern bastion of European
civilization, a balancing and stabilizing power between Slavic and Germanic
nations. Hungary's first king, Saint Stephen, wrote to his son, Saint Emeric, in
1036: "Make the strangers welcome in this land, let them keep their languages
and customs, for weak and fragile is the realm which is based on a single
language or on a single set of customs" (unius linguae uniusque moris regnum
imbecille et fragile est.)
Stephen's advice was respected and obeyed during the coming centuries: Hungary
gave asylum to the Ruthenians in the north, the Wallachians (Romanians) and
Saxons in the east, the Swabians and Serbs in the south. Eventually the kingdom
possessed 14 national minorities, of which the Magyars were only one. In order
not to hurt the feelings of any of the minorities, Latin remained the sole
official language of the kingdom until 1844.
Hungary became a constitutional monarchy in 1222. Hungary's Golden Bull is
junior by only 7 years to the Magna Carta. This constitutional monarchy was
almost completely annihilated by the Mongol invasion of 1240-41, but through
that enormous struggle it succeeded in protecting Europe and her civilization.
Toward the end of the XVth century, during the realm of the renaissance king
Matthias Corvinus, Hungary's population reached that of England, the court in
Buda became a cultural center of Europe, and the library of Buda was Europe's
finest.
In 1526 Hungary was once again annihilated, this time by the Turkish invasion,
which cut her population in half and the kingdom in three. During the 150 years
of Ottoman occupation, the western part of the kingdom was taken by Austria, the
center by the Ottoman invaders and the Hungarian culture survived only in the
east, in Transylvania.
Even today, Transylvania is the land where the purest Hungarian is spoken,
where Hungarian popular art has found its most exalted, most perfect expression,
and where Béla Bartók collected his Hungarian folk tunes. Transylvania is also
the place where the Hungarian diet at Torda, in 1557, for the first time in the
world, declared the freedom of religion. Transylvania not only created the first
region of religious and ethnic tolerance, but was also the birthplace of the
Unitarian and Sabbatarian religions.
After the Turkish occupation, Austria attempted to take over all of
Hungary. This resulted in a series of uprisings. The fight for Hungarian
independence of 1703-1711 was led by Francis II Rákóczy whose insurgent fighters
were mostly Slovak and Ruthenian peasants, who proudly declared themselves to be
Hungarians, as distinct from the racial term Magyar.
The next fight for national independence was led by Louis Kossuth in 1848. The
Ruthenian and Slovak nationalities once more contributed masses of recruits for
the Hungarian revolutionary army, which, while defeated by the combined forces
of Austria and Russia, forced the Hapsburgs to accept the formation of an
Austro-Hungarian duality in 1967.
It was Kossuth who later proposed to convert the Austro-Hungarian empire (of 24
million Slavs, 12 million Germans and 12 million Hungarians at the time, a
population larger than that of France at the time) into a Danubian
Confederation. Kossuth was also the second foreigner (second only to Lafayette)
ever invited to address the United States Congress in January, 1852.
From Sarajevo to Trianon
At the beginning of this century, Russia sponsored an intensive effort at
panslavic agitation in the region. Because Archduke Francis Ferdinand was the
main opponent of the creation of a Greater Serbia, Russia engineered his murder
on June 28, 1914 in Sarajevo by Serbia.
The only member of the Council of Ministers of the Dual Monarchy who was opposed
the war of retaliation against Serbia was the Hungarian Premier, Count Stephen
Tisza. When he was voted down, Hungary occupied Serbia and by 1915 would have
considered the war over, if Russia did not have scores to settle with the
Ottoman empire, if France did not have similar scores to settle with Germany,
Italy with Austria, and so forth. Therefore the war went on.
During the war, the Czech allies of Serbia, Eduard Benes and Thomas
Masaryk, transformed themselves from consultants of the allies into architects
of allied policy for Central Europe. They organized a deceitful propaganda
campaign for the dismemberment of Hungary and in their efforts succeeded in
obtaining the support of two criminally ignorant French politicians, Georges
Clémenceau and Raymond Poincaré. Their propaganda exploited the fact that Lenin
came to power in Russia in 1917 and that Hungary temporarily fell under
Communism in 1919. This allowed them to claim that the dismemberment of Hungary
will also save Europe from Communism.
President Wilson refused to cooperate in this conspiracy. He wanted
Europe's new borders to correspond with her ethnographic boundaries and he
wanted the principle of self-determination to prevail, but his views were
disregarded. On January 24, 1919, he protested the illegal Serb and Romanian
occupation of parts of Hungary and on March 31, 1919, he called the proposed
dismemberment of Hungary absurd, but his objections were overruled by the
French, who argued that the Romanian and Serb occupation prevents the spread of
Communism. As a result, all the United States Congress could do was to refuse to
approve the Treaty of Trianon. Yet, this product of Neronian insanity, this
plan, unjust in substance and tragic in consequence, was implemented anyway.
The Treaty of Trianon
On the 4th of June, 1920, one of the cruelest treaties of human history was
signed. Never before had a peace, imposed by violence, been more brutal in its
bias, madder in its destructiveness, more forgetful of the lessons of history
and better calculated to create future upheavals. The treaty cut mercilessly
into the flesh of compact Hungarian populations. Hundreds of towns were
separated from their suburbs; villages were split in two; communities were
deprived of their parish churches or cemeteries; townships were cut off from
their railroad stations and their water supplies. A 1000-year-old European
country was made into an invalid as its territory was reduced by 71%. In the
process, 35% of all Hungarians were turned into foreigners without moving a
step, while staying within the towns built by their fathers, as the borders were
redrawn around them. In this way, the Hungarians (with the Albanians) became
Europe's largest minorities.
In comparison, the leader of the central powers: Germany lost only 9.5% of its
territory. The outrage of this mockery of justice is illustrated by the fact
that even Austria lined up at the carcass and received some parts of the
dismembered Hungarian Kingdom.
From the fragments of Hungary, the unnatural successor states of
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and greater Romania were created. These artificial
entities forced Croats to live with Serbs and Czechs to live with Slovaks,
demonstrating both the arrogance and the ignorance of Trianon's architects.
These successor states were not only geographic monstrosities but also were
economic absurdities and therefore their self-destruction was just a matter of
time. As we know, two of the three successor states have already disintegrated.
One of the purpose of this writing is to suggest a plan to construct a healthy
entity from the disintegrated remains of Trianon, which can be achieved without
violence.
Self-Determination Through Plebiscites
The very foundation of the 14 Wilsonian Principles was that people have an
unalienable right to determine their own destiny. Yet in drawing the new borders
at Trianon, self-determination and the use of plebiscites was totally
disregarded. Although Field Marshall Ian Smith recommended to the Peace
Conference to hold plebiscites in Transylvania, Slovakia, Ruthenia, Croatia and
Slavonia, his advice was rejected. Therefore, he was correct in declaring: "A
plebiscite refused is a plebiscite taken."
By not allowing plebiscites, the dismemberment of the Austro-Hungarian empire
and the redistribution of her 48 million citizens resulted in the creation of 16
million oppressed ethnic minorities. These were not emigrants who voluntarily
left their old country, but people who never in their life moved from their home
towns and became foreigners, just because Clémenceau and Benes decided to redraw
the borders around them.
When the Wends and Slovenes of the Muraköz protested their separation from
Hungary, when the Ruthenians expressed their desire to remain part of the
kingdom, which they shared for a thousand years, when the Swabians of the Banat
protested their annexation into Romania and Yugoslavia (Vojvodina), the answer
of Clémenceau was always no. There was only one exception to the arbitrary
drawing of the new borders (mostly by Eduard Benes), there was only a single
case where President Wilson's principle of self-determination prevailed: It was
in the case of the city of Sopron, which was allowed to hold a plebiscite and
voted by a majority of 65% to remain part of Hungary and not to join Austria.
The "Guilt" Of Hungary
The real reason for dismembering Hungary was the desire of the powers of Western
Europe to eliminate a powerful state which could compete with their influence
and bring balance to the continent. The excuse used by the French was that it
would prevent the spread of communism. But Hungary was also dismembered because
she could not defend herself and because her greedy neighbors decided to help
themselves to the unprotected carcass.
Naturally, the architects of Trianon could not admit this and therefore invented
the theory of Hungary's Guilt, claiming that 1) She started the First World
War and 2) She was a historical German ally and as such a destabilizing force
in Europe. Neither were true.
As to the first claim, it was the Serb para-governmental organization,
Narodna Obrana, which, with the encouragement of Russia and with the goal of the
creation of a Greater Serbia, assassinated Archduke Francis Ferdinand in 1914
and it was the Premier of Hungary, who alone in the Austro-Hungarian Council of
Ministers, voted against a war of retaliation against Serbia.
As to the claim of being a natural German ally, history proves just the
opposite. Whenever Hungary was independent, she acted as a keystone of balance
between the Germanic and Slavic peoples and prevented attempts at both
Pan-Germanic and Pan- Slavic expansions. In the first 500 years of her
existence, starting with the battle of Lechfeld in 955, Hungary fought to block
the spread of German influence towards the East and created stability by filling
the power vacuum in the region. When under Germanic (Austrian) occupation
between 1688 and 1867, she twice rose against the Germans and eventually gained
her independence from them.
Tacitus: "We Hate Whom We Hurt"
In any society, the acid test of civilization is the respect for minority
rights. The Great Powers attempted to guarantee these rights by making the
successor states sign minority treaties, which outlined the language, religious,
cultural and property rights of the minorities. For example, the minority treaty
signed with Romania on the 9th of December, 1919 in Paris, a treaty guaranteed
by the United States, Britain, France, Italy and Japan, stated the following:
Article 8: No restriction shall be imposed on the free use of any
language.
Article 9: Equal rights to establish, manage and control religious
institutions, schools and other educational establishments.
In Article 11: Roumania agrees to accord to the communities of the
Szecklers (Hungarian Székelys) and Saxons in Transylvania local autonomy in
regard to scholastic and religious matters.
Article 12: Roumania agrees that the stipulations in the foregoing
Articles, constitute obligations of international concern.
Similar treaties were signed with the other successor states, but none
were ever enforced. In fact, the Great Powers looked the other way while the
successor states attempted to "solve" their minority problems, first through
denationalization, then by ethnic cleansing through deportations, expulsions,
transfers, dispersions and other forms of uprooting. Hungarians had to choose
between their nationality and their property. Because of the savage oppression,
intimidation and coercion, 350,000 Hungarians decided to leave all their
possessions behind and flee to rump Hungary.
The institutions and possessions of Hungarian communities were also
targeted. In Transylvania alone, the Hungarian community lost 1,665 of her
schools, including the world famous János Bolyai University, named after
Einstein's predecessor, the inventor of the new (non-Euclidean) geometry.
The Paris Peace Treaty
On February 10, 1947, the Great Powers had another opportunity to enforce the
until- then-disregarded minority treaties. This was expected because on August
14, 1941, the Atlantic Charter was signed, and it too (like the earlier
Wilsonian principles) emphasized the right to self-determination and to
plebiscites. Yet, not a single plebiscite was allowed. In fact, rump Hungary was
further violated by the transfer of additional land to Slovakia. This transfer,
later, made possible the building the monstrous Gabcikovo dam project, which
unilaterally and illegally transferred the Danube, Hungary's border river, onto
Slovak territory (in 1992), thereby destroying Europe's oldest wetland region.
At the end of the Second World War, the worst crime of legalistic
hypocrisy occurred. Eduard Benes, with the scandalous connivance of the Western
Allies, invented the concept of "collective responsibility" and used it to
confiscate the properties of the Hungarian minorities in Slovakia and later, to
deport them in cattle cars.
To understand the hypocrisy of this deed, one must realize that wartime Slovakia
under Tiso was a protectorate of Nazi Germany. It was the representative of the
Hungarian minority in the Slovak parliament, János Esterházy, who cast the only
dissenting vote against the Jewish laws, which were passed by that body. Yet,
after the war, Esterházy died in Czechoslovakian jail and the Hungarian
minorities he represented were collectively sentenced as war criminals. Thereby,
when the deported Jewish Hungarians returned from the death camps, they found
their properties confiscated, because of their collective responsibility.
The Last Decades
By the late 1940s, the last protection of the Catholic Hungarian minorities were
their churches. In 1948, 600 Hungarian Catholic priests and all six of their
bishops were arrested in Transylvania. As the Romanians belong to the Eastern
Orthodox faith, Rome later agreed to gerrymander the Catholic sees and to
appoint Romanian bishops to lead the all-Hungarian church. As of this day, the
Hungarian church properties in Romania have not been returned and the United
States Congress just passed its House Resolution HR191, demanding that it be
done.
In the other "successor" states, the fate of the Hungarian Catholics was
similar. In 1949, in Ruthenia, the bishop of the 500,000 Catholics was murdered
and the parishioners were forced to merge into the Orthodox Chrurch. In
Slovakia, in April, 1950, the bishop of 320,000 Catholics was arrested and his
parishioners were also forced into the Orthodox Church.
In 1956, 2,700 Hungarians died in fighting the Soviet tanks, later 289
were hanged and some 300,000 escaped, yet the Hungarian Freedom Fighters of
Budapest still succeeded in mortally wounding the Goliath of Communism. They
showed that tanks can not kill ideals as they unmasked Soviet brutality.
Yet the rulers of the successor states used the uprising as a pretext to speed
the forced assimilation of their Hungarian minorities. It was after the
Revolution that the remaining autonomous Hungarian regions: Transylvania in
Romania and Vojvodina in Yugoslavia were abolished. Today, the more than 3
million Hungarians have no autonomy at all, although that autonomy been
guaranteed by the Great Powers in 1920, again in 1946 and once more by the
European Parliament in 1993, in Article 11 of Recommendation 1201.
After 1989, there was a short period of hope, when for example the
Hungarian bishop, László Tôkés, was temporarily heralded as an all-Romanian
national hero, for leading the successful revolution against Ceaucescu, or when
Miklós Duray, the Hungarian leader of Charter 77, was released from jail in
Slovakia. Unfortunately, this did not last. By 1991, the formerly Communist
leaders of the successor states (Milosevic in Yugoslavia, Iliescu in Romania,
Mechiar in Slovakia) once again started to use nationalistic and anti-Hungarian
propaganda to distract public attention from the pressing economic problems of
their nations.
Today, these three demagogues are gone from the political scene. Yet
conditions have not changed much and the restoration of cultural autonomy has
still not occurred. The worst of all tragedies is occurring in Vojvodina, where
the Serb refugees from Krajina and Kosovo are "ethnically cleansing" the native
Hungarian population.
One wonders if there is a limit to the patience of the second largest
minority of Europe (second only to Russians), and what will happen when that
limit is reached?
The Lesson
It takes time for historic events to reveal their consequences. It took nearly
80 years for the unnatural creations of Trianon, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia,
to self-destruct. It took some 85 years to realize that it is the legacy of
Trianon, which is destabilizing and balkanizing Central Europe. By now we see
that Trianon did not eliminate the causes of the 1914 murder in Sarajevo and we
also realize that no unjust "solution" can stand the erosion of time, and that
Trianon did not provide justice.
But what is justice? In this relativistic age, - when my terrorists can be
your freedom fighters, when the life of one UN or NATO soldier can be more
valuable than that of a thousand civilians, when the Chechen, Tibetian or Kurd
nations are less deserving of self-determination than some others, - it is
desirable to remind ourselves of what justice is?
On the pulpit of the Notre-Dame Cathedral, Father R. P. Gratry has put
it this way: "Every nation's homeland is sacred. If you destroy one of them, you
mutilate the entire human race."
Therefore, the main mistake of 1920 was that it attempted to satisfy the
desires of a Benes and a Clémenceau, instead of attempting to apply just
principles to solve the nationality problems of Central Europe. Unfortunately,
this approach has not changed during the last 85 years. The only thing that
changed are the names of the architects of injustice. The principles of a
permanent "solution", must involve self-determination through plebiscites,
autonomy for ethnic minorities and a Danubian or Central European Federation as
the ultimate goal.
The United Nations should declare that all national minorities anywhere in
the world, have the right to hold UN supervised plebiscites and receive cultural
and linguistic autonomy, if the majority so desires. It should make no
difference how these minorities evolved, how long they lived in the particular
area, or what their language or religion is. Regardless of all that, they all
have the right to maintain their heritage and the right to determine their own
cultural destiny. Once cultural autonomy is guaranteed, the main cause of
tensions between Central European neighbors will also diminish.
When the Hungarians enjoy the same autonomy in Romania as the Romanian
minorities do in Hungary, when the Serb, Russian, Roma, Turkish, Albanian,
German, or other minorities of the region, are also treated equally, the
tensions will disappear and the rebuilding can start.
The Danubian or Visegrad Confederation
It is not enough for the Danubian nations to individually rush into the European
Union. A much better goal is to simultaneously work for the establishment of an
economically self-sufficient, politically stable and geographically large enough
federation of say 100 million, which by itself is able to fill the power vacuum
of the region.
It should by now be obvious, that neither Western Europe, nor the UN or
NATO can fill the present power vacuum in Central Europe and therefore they are
not competent to resolve the problems of the region. History teaches us, that
the Balkans became unstable whenever a power vacuum evolved in the Carpathian
Basin. The wise learn from history, instead of repeating it's errors. We should
learn from history, that the tragedy of Trianon will not be corrected and
justice and stability will not be obtained, by maintaining the status quo.
What is needed - once the minority problems are solved through autonomy - is to
build a federation like that of the Baltic states within the European Union. A
strong Danubian Federation, one that can be crystallized around the nucleus of
Hungary, Slovakia, Ruthenia, Slovenia and Croatia. A federation that would be
larger than France and could later could expand to include Romania, Yugoslavia
or even Poland, the Czech Republic, Austria and more.
History does not solve problems accidentally. Those who want a better
future must first have a plan, a concept of that future. For the stability and
prosperity of Central Europe, that plan should start with the autonomy for all
the minorities and should end with a voluntary federation. It would be fitting,
if on the 85st anniversary of the dismemberment of the Hungarian Kingdom, after
the unnecessary and undeserved suffering of three generations of innocent ethnic
minorities, we would start the process of rebuilding, not an ancient nation
state, but the Federation of Central Europe.
/HUNSOR Monitoring/ © HUNSOR
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