J nos K d rJános Kádár, né János Csermanek (May 26, 1912 - July 6, 1989), was the General Secretary of the Communist Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party from 1956 to 1988, and twice served as prime minister of Hungary, from 1956 to 1958 and from 1961 to 1965. Born in Fiume, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Kádár joined the illegal Hungarian Communist Party in 1931, and was subsequently arrested several times for unlawful political activities. During the Second World War, Kádár fought with the Czechoslovakian resistance. In 1946 he was elected deputy secretary-general of the Hungarian Communist Party, and then in 1949 became minister of the interior and head of the Budapest secret police. Kádár became known as a fanatical supporter of the government and of Josef Stalin, arresting László Rajk, who had criticised the Soviet Union's attempts to impose a Stalinist style government on Hungary. In 1951 he was charged with being a supporter of Tito and therefore a traitor by the Hungarian premier Mátyás Rákosi, but was released in 1953. Appointed as a party leader in a heavily industrialised district of Budapest, Kádár rose to prominence quickly, building up a large following amongst workers who demanded increased freedom for trade unions, and became the deputy premier in the newly created government headed by Imre Nagy. Role in the Hungarian RevolutionNagy began a process of liberalisation, removing state controls over the press, releasing many political prisoners, and expressing wishes to withdraw Hungary from the Warsaw Pact. Kádár was strongly opposed to these policies and began to bitterly dislike Nagy. Kádár was a central figure in the important events after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution which saw Nagy's downfall. Following the Soviet invasion of Hungary and Nagy's ouster, János Kádár became leader of the country. Nagy, along with Georg Lukács, Géza Losonczy and László Rajk's widow, Julia, fled to the Yugoslavian embassy. Kádár promised them safe passage out of the country, but failed to keep this promise and had them kidnapped after they left the embassy on November 23, 1956. On June 17, 1958, the Kádár's government announced that several of the Nagy's reformers had been convicted of treason and attempting to overthrow the "democratic state order", and that Imre Nagy, Pál Maléter and Miklós Gimes had been executed for these crimes. Geza Losonczy and Attila Szigethy both died in suspicious circumstances soon afterwards. Fifteen Point ProgrammeOn November 8, at 5:05 in the morning, Kádár announced via Red Army's radio system the formation of the Revolutionary Worker-Peasant Government. He also announced the "Fifteen Point Programme" of this new government:
Kádár also added that "anyone not against us is with us", and that "ordinary people could go about their business without fear of molestation or even much surveillance and could speak, read, and even write with reasonable freedom". Generally speaking, all but the 14th point was in line with the wishes of the Hungarian people. There had been almost universal support for the uprising, and the 14th point proved what the people of Hungary feared about Kádár: that he was merely a mouthpiece for the Soviet Union. The 15th point was withdrawn after pressure from the Warsaw Pact that a large Soviet detachment be garrisoned in Hungary. Effects on HungaryThough a virtual puppet of the Soviet Union, Kádár often enacted policy contrary to that of the Soviet Union, for example, allowing considerably large private plots for farmers of collective farms. As a result of the relatively high standard of living, and more relaxed travel restrictions that that of other Eastern Bloc countries, Hungary was one of the best places ("the happiest barrack") to live in Eastern Europe during the Cold War. During Kádár's rule, tourism increased dramatically, with many tourists from Canada, the USA, and Western Europe bringing much needed money into Hungary. János Kádár held power in Hungary until 1988 when Communism began to collapse and his own ill-health intervened. He was generally known as one of the more moderate East European communist leaders, although he nevertheless supported the Warsaw Pact suppression of the Prague Spring in 1968, and the Hungarian secret police nonetheless kept many Hungarians living in a state of fear, and arrested more than 10,000 people. A barbed wire fence at the Austrian border built in 1968 also restricted emigration. As of 1993, the hammer and sickle and the five armed red star, along with the swastika, SS rune and arrow cross, were banned in Hungary.
de:János Kádár eo:KĂDĂR_JĂĄnos Categories: Hungarian politicians | Hungarian people | Cold War people | 1912 births | 1989 deaths |
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