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- Message-ID: <199211112103.AA07701@metz.une.edu.au>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.mideur-l
- Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1992 08:03:11 EST
- Sender: Discussion of Middle Europe topics <MIDEUR-L@UBVM.BITNET>
- From: George Antony <gantony@METZ.UNE.EDU.AU>
- Subject: Crossposting on nationalism and Hungarian minorities
- Lines: 108
-
- Emboldened by George Frajkor's call for greater cross-posting to appropriate
- mail-servers, I am enclosing my recent article to the list HUNGARY, on the
- issue of Hungarian minorities in Hungary's neighbours and the broader topic
- of nationalism in Central-Eastern Europe.
-
-
- George Antony gantony@metz.une.edu.au
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- I find the direction of the recurring debate on the problem of Hungarian
- minorities in Hungary's neighbours disheartening.
-
- There can be no doubt that in some countries Hungarians are oppressed by
- any definition and are in direct physical danger, in some all is well with
- minority rights, and the rest are in between.
-
- What is of little help, however, is to bring into this present-day problem
- the historical baggage of the dismemberment of Hungary/the reassertion of the
- rights of long-oppressed minorities (as Hungarians and their neighbours,
- respectively, see the post-WWI border changes), and the issue of historical
- rights. Past is past, dredging it up offers no solutions to today's
- problems, and what we need now is solutions, not settling accounts.
-
- As most parts of Europe, the Carpathian basin has been populated by numerous
- tribes and peoples. Their settlements widely overlapped, and all of them
- established what could be called "historical rights" to the land. I would
- suggest, however, that this is of very limited relevance today. By the
- laws of most Anglo-Saxon ex-colonies of Britain, migrants after a few years
- can obtain citizenship and, with it, the same rights as people whose ancestors
- came to that land hundreds of years back (I do not wish to dwell on the issue
- of the Aboriginals in these countries, as this would take too far from the
- current topic). I suggest that the question of who settled different bits of
- the Carpathian basin must be approached on the same basis, that is, the
- current settlement pattern.
-
- For sure, the current pattern is the result of much past injustice, but if
- one tried to roll back past injustices, where would it stop ? First give
- Kosice/Kassa back to Hungarians, then give Visegrad (Hungary) back to the
- descendants of the Slavs who first inhabited it ? What about the first
- caveman evicted by his neighbour ? Besides, is it not the Serb efforts to
- undo the "injustice" of Kosovo Pole that led to the current apocalyptic scenes
- on our TV screens ? Anyone who wants to undo the past is following the same
- primitive tribal logic as Milosevic and should be locked up with him, safely
- away from people wanting to live in peace.
-
- I suggest that historical rights on the basis of past settlement only extend
- to the obligation of the current settlers to respect the history of others
- in the same spot. Therefore, the Albanians of Kosovo/Metohija must respect
- the Serbian monasteries and Slovakians must respect such mementos of Hungarian
- presence as the one-time Hungarian parliament building in Bratislava/Pozsony.
-
- Where there are minorities, international norms of civilized treatment must
- constitute the absolute minimum of official and officially enforced behaviour.
- However, to build trust, much more is needed. Some people will no doubt
- find it too repetitive, but I need to refer once again to the example of
- South Tyrol where the Italian government delibarately and explicitly gave
- Austria almost guardian's rights to represent the local German-speaking
- population in international forums. This part of the world is, not
- surprisingly, no longer the problem spot that it was in the 50s and 60s.
- In my view, such agreements ought to be made between Hungary and its
- neighbours, and in both directions: Hungarians in neighbouring countries,
- AND ethnic minorities in Hungary.
-
- It must be seen very clearly that there is a direct correlation between the
- situation of Hungarian minorities in neighbouring countries and the economic/
- political situation in the respective "host" countries. I will not make
- myself popular among some of my fellow Hungarians, but I am adamant that just
- as borders are not the root of the problem, attempts to change them are not
- the solution either. It is exactly those countries where the situation of
- minorities (Hungarian or otherwise) is the worst where the mere mention of
- a border redraw would trigger the most extreme reaction and would rebound on
- the very same Hungarians that some people purport wanting to help. On the
- other hand, where one could discuss, likely in principle but at least
- amicably, border changes, is the least need for them.
-
- Therefore, the only responsible stand that Hungarians can take vis-a-vis
- the problem of Hungarian minorities in countries neighbouring Hungary is to
- support the economic modernization and advancement of those countries and to
- support (without the appearance of intervening in domestic political affairs)
- those political forces that have a civilized attitude towards the issue of
- minority rights. In an affluent and contented Romania, etc., there will be
- no need to use Hungarians as a political football, and it will matter little
- where the then almost imperceptible border lies.
-
- Moreover, my personal definition of a "decent" Hungarian is someone who can
- see the problems in Hungary also and is ready to take a stand. It is not only
- the Gheorghe Funars that pose a danger: it is distinctly unhelpful to demand a
- "Hungarian Lebensraum", etc.; it is a worry if such statements emanate from
- prominent politicians of the senior ruling party; and it is outright alarming
- if there is no firm rejection of such chauvinistic programmes on part of the
- Hungarian Government. The Hungarian Government cannot afford to appear
- anything than sparkling clean in the West: if it loses its credibility in the
- West, it also loses the very few levers that it can move to apply diplomatic
- pressure on behalf of Hungarians across the borders. Playing on nationalistic
- feelings for short-term political gain is utterly irresponsible: if the genie
- of nationalism is allowed to escape from the bottle in the countries of
- Central-Eastern Europe, it is down the Yugoslav drain for everybody.
-
- The only way out of the present bind is to create mutual trust. This involves
- a genuine effort to understand the "other side"; to respect, mutually,
- sensitivities; and to work together rather against each other.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- George Antony (gantony@metz.une.edu.au)
- Department of Agricultural Economics and Business Management
- University of New England, Armidale, N.S.W. 2351, Australia
- Fax: (+61-67) 711531 Phone: (+61-67) 733222 (GMT +10 hrs)
- -------------------------------------------------------------
-