By Ralph R. Reiland on 10.23.06 @ 12:07AM
The Hungarian Revolution was brutally crushed -- yet freedom ended up winning.
The first shots of the Hungarian revolution were fired 50 years
ago on this day, October 23, 1956.
An estimated 250,000 people had gathered in Budapest in front of
the Parliament, protesting against foreign rule and totalitarianism
and demanding the withdrawal of Soviet forces. Within days,
millions of Hungarians were in the streets or actively supporting
the revolt. They stormed their nation's radio stations and put the
forbidden music of Beethoven and Mozart on the air.
The Soviets responded by sending tanks.
"The fighting escalated," writes Csaba Teglas in his first-hand
account of the insurgency. "Many young people, mostly in their
teens and twenties, joined the few ill-equipped Hungarian soldiers
stationed in the city. With Molotov cocktails and other primitive
weapons they fought tanks from one of the best-equipped armies in
the world."
Teglas describes the heroism of ill-armed Hungarians, the
destroyed buildings in the heart of Budapest, the disabled Soviet
tanks, and the bodies of Russian invaders in the streets.
"By the end of October, the revolution's first phase ended in
jubilation," he writes. "The Russians withdrew their defeated
forces from Budapest. Freedom fighters tore down the large bronze
statue of Stalin. Imre Nagy, as prime minister, formed a new
Hungarian government and pledged to have free elections and
establish a democratic system in the country."
The jubilation was short-lived. "On Sunday morning, November 4,
1956, Budapest awoke to the sounds of invasion: Soviet tanks
rolling on every major artery of the city's inner area," reports
Teglas. "Their orders were clear: keep firing and terrorizing the
city's population. Even after the Russian tanks stopped shooting
continuously, they fired at anyone appearing on the streets or
looking out the windows."
The rebellion was long brewing, an expression of anger against
the Russians who came to liberate Hungary from the Nazis and never
left, a demonstration of rage against a brutal Soviet-installed
communist government.
The price of the uprising was high. "For a few weeks, violent
death was part of everyday life for the Hungarians," reports Czech
historian Karel Bartosek. "Nearly 3,000 people died in the
fighting, two-thirds of them in Budapest; and nearly 15,000 people
were wounded."
What followed the crushing of the October revolution was
increased repression by the Soviets. "Tens of thousands were
interned in camps that were officially created on 12 December;
35,000 people were prosecuted and around 25,000 jailed," writes
Bartosek. "Several thousand Hungarians were deported to the
U.S.S.R., 229 rebels were condemned to death and executed, and
200,000 people emigrated."
The message was that no country would be allowed to leave the
sphere of Soviet hegemony, no nation under Soviet domination would
be permitted to challenge the Communist Party's monopoly on
power.
Over a decade later, on November 13, 1968, Soviet leader Leonid
Brezhnev publicly acknowledged the doctrine of Soviet supremacy in
a speech at the Fifth Congress of the Polish United Workers' Party:
"When forces that are hostile to socialism try to turn the
development of some socialist country towards capitalism, it
becomes not only a problem of the country concerned, but a common
problem and concern of all socialist countries."
Brezhnev was declaring that communism was a one-way street.
Hungary or Czechoslovakia or Poland could fall into communism but
never be allowed out. Being a communist was like falling into a
well.
Three months before Brezhnev's speech, on August 21, 1968,
moving to crush a reform movement that demanded political and
economic liberalization, greater pluralism and increased
democratization, the Soviet army had invaded Czechoslovakia along
with troops from four other Warsaw Pact nations.
"October 23, 1956 is a day that will live forever in the annals
of free men and nations," said Senator John F. Kennedy on the first
anniversary of the Hungarian revolution. "No other day since
history began has shown more clearly the eternal unquenchability of
man's desire to be free, whatever the odds against success,
whatever the sacrifice required."
Those hopes for freedom have now come true, writes David
Pryce-Jones, senior editor at National Review: "A day came
in 1989 when the Hungarian authorities simply opened the Iron
Curtain; everyone and anybody could escape into the West; the
Soviet bloc was no more. The revolution of 1956 had preserved the
nation's sense of itself and kept alive everywhere the memory of
freedom. Victory was posthumous, to be sure, but the human face
nonetheless had survived the jackboot."
topics:
Russia, NATO, Socialism, Communism