In our newly born democracy, both anti‐Semitism and pro‐Jewish sentiments have become openly political. Political parties and civil organizations very quickly recognized how anti‐Semitism could be used to gain political support and sympathy at home and abroad. Anti‐Semitism has become a political card to be used.
Patterns of voting behavior and public opinion polls clearly indicate that, when it comes to anti‐Semitism, there is a substantial overlap between the electorate of the Left and that of the far‐right Jobbik Party. Does this mean that the political Left is racist or the center‐right is devoid of prejudices? The answer to both questions is no. One should not really argue that certain writings by journalists associated with the center‐right, such as the infamous commentaries of Zsolt Bayer, cannot be deemed as racist. It is also a fact that there are people associated with the center‐right political community who support the rehabilitation of the historic period of Admiral Horthy. I am personally against his rehabilitation, and that applies to a wide range of political and literary figures of that era. Let me briefly list the milestones that democratic Hungary has done as a nation since the collapse of Communism to reconcile with the Jewish community:
▪ Establishment of the Hungarian Jewish Heritage Fund
▪ The Kaddish was cited in Parliament to commemorate the victims of the Shoah;
▪ Designating April 16th as a national Holocaust Memorial Day compulsory in all public schools to commemorate the anniversary of the start of deportations in 1944;
▪ Teaching of Holocaust history was made mandatory in schools for 5th‐12th graders;
▪ The Holocaust Memorial and Documentation Center and the House of Terror Memorial Museum have been established;
▪ Restitution claims of Holocaust survivors have been settled;
▪ Establishment and financial support of the Tom Lantos Institute in Hungary in association with the Lantos Foundation on Human Rights;
▪ Doubling the pension payments of Holocaust survivors;
▪ 2012 was proclaimed as Raoul Wallenberg Memorial Year
▪ A Holocaust memorial committee chaired by the head of the Prime Minister’s Office has been set up to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Hungarian Holocaust in 2014;
▪ Each section of the bank of the Danube bears the name of people who saved lives making these unsung heroes household names for Hungarians and visitors alike;
▪ A ground‐breaking, historic data exchange agreement has been signed with Yad Vashem to open Hungarian archives so that the history of the Shoah can be more thoroughly studied and the victims accurately named, accounted for and remembered;
▪ Hungary repeatedly requested the US authorities to shut down the openly anti‐Semitic, Nazi‐style Hungarian language website called kuruc.info which operates in the United States;
▪ Paramilitary groups inciting hatred were banned and the criminal code was tightened regarding uniformed crime;
▪ The House Rules of the Parliament were tightened and now the Speaker can fine or
exclude MPs from the floor if they use hateful language;
▪ In a first, the courts convicted a Holocaust denier. In the sentence, offender was ordered to visit either the Holocaust Museum, Yad Vashem or Auswitz, and write a report about what he leant from that trip.
Is it a respectable list? Yes, it is. Has the Hungarian political and cultural elite done enough to counter racism in Hungary? No, not by a long shot. Is it true that occasionally the government side was slow and ineffective in its statements and actions? Yes, unfortunately it is true.
I earlier referred to the fact that anti‐Semitism and racism in general have been on the rise, which tells us that both official Hungary and civil society must do much more in this field. Having said this, let me conclude by a probably surprising closing statement: in terms of government actions to foster Jewish life and to combat anti‐Semitism in Hungary, all of the milestones I cited a minute ago, I mean: all of them, with the one exception of the Jewish Heritage Fund, have been introduced by either the first or the second administrations of Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Actions speak for themselves. Thank you very much for your attention. I am ready for your comments and questions.