Árpád Göncz
Árpád Göncz | |
---|---|
President of Hungary | |
In office 2 May 1990[a] – 4 August 2000 | |
Prime Minister | |
Preceded by | Mátyás Szűrös (interim) |
Succeeded by | Ferenc Mádl |
Speaker of the National Assembly | |
In office 2 May 1990 – 3 August 1990 | |
Preceded by | István Fodor |
Succeeded by | György Szabad |
Member of the National Assembly | |
In office 2 May 1990 – 3 August 1990 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Budapest, Kingdom of Hungary | 10 February 1922
Died | 6 October 2015 Budapest, Hungary | (aged 93)
Political party | |
Spouse |
Zsuzsanna Göntér (m. 1947) |
Children | 4, including Kinga |
Parent |
|
Alma mater | Pázmány Péter University (JD) |
Profession |
|
Signature | |
a. ^ Acting until 3 August 1990 | |
Árpád Göncz (Hungarian:
He was also a founding member of the Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ) and Speaker of the National Assembly of Hungary (de facto head of state) before becoming president. He was Hungary's first freely elected head of state, as well as the first in 42 years who was not a communist or a fellow traveller.
He was a member of the international advisory council of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.[1]
Biography
Early life (1922–1945)
Árpád Göncz was born on 10 February 1922 in
After finishing four-grade elementary school, Göncz began his secondary studies at the Werbőczy Secondary Grammar School in 1932. There he involved himself in the activity of the
Göncz graduated in law from the
Early political career and retreat (1945–1956)
Following the
Beside his secretary position, Göncz also edited weekly party newspaper Nemzedék ("Generation"). He also served as leader of the party's youth organization in Budapest for a time.
By the
1956 Revolution and aftermath (1956–1957)
Göncz played an active role in the work of the newly formed Petőfi Circle (Hungarian: Petőfi Kör), which established by reformist intellectuals under the auspices of the Union of Working Youth (DISZ), mass youth organization wing of the ruling communist Hungarian Working People's Party (MDP), in March 1955. The circle held twelve meetings in the first half of 1956.[18] As an agronomist, Göncz expressed his opinion on the Soviet agricultural model during one of the forums. On 17 October 1956, he participated in an agricultural debate ("Kert-Magyarország?") at the Karl Marx University of Economic Sciences. There he criticized again the Soviet model considered unsuitable for the Hungarian conditions. Göncz also lay emphasis on free peasant education.[19]
In a June 1995 speech, Göncz recalled the 1956 events as a "turning point" in his life which determined his fate until the end of his life,
After the Soviet intervention on 4 November 1956,
Göncz also helped to transfer a manuscript of Imre Nagy ("On Communism in Defense of New Course") abroad, through the assistance of László Regéczy-Nagy, driver to Christopher Lee Cope, head of the British Legation in Budapest. They hoped the manuscript might have helped to rescue Imre Nagy from show trial and execution.[27] Cope forwarded the manuscript to the emigrant Hungarian Revolutionary Council in Strasbourg, and the document was translated into several languages for several countries, including Italy, France and West Germany.[28] Before his arrest, Göncz was campaigning for the Hungarian Aid (Hungarian: Magyar Segély) movement. Göncz organized to donate the emigrant Hungarians' support for families in need of help.[29]
Prison years (1957–1963)
He was arrested on 28 May 1957, along with István Bibó, on the order of Minister of the Interior Béla Biszku.[30] In the forthcoming months, Bibó, Göncz and Regéczy-Nagy were interrogated, isolating from each other by the secret police in connection with their relationships with India and the Western block.[31] Once the prosecutor said to Göncz that "the traitor deserved to hang twice."[32] Göncz and his inmates were charged with "organizing the overthrow of the Hungarian people's democratic state." Göncz was secretly tried, found guilty, and sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of appeal on 2 August 1958, some weeks after the secret trial and execution of Imre Nagy. Later Göncz believed that he could avoid the capital punishment only due to Nehru's intervention.[33] Dae Soon Kim, Göncz's biographer also argued it might be possible that the Indian premier' diplomatic efforts impacted on the severity of penalties regarding the Göncz and Bibó trials.[34]
Göncz began his years in prison at Budapest Penitentiary and Jail (Gyűjtőfogház) in August 1958. He spent his punishment among hundreds of political prisoners, such as Tibor Déry, Zoltán Tildy, István Bibó and Imre Mécs. Göncz was isolated and separated from the outside world, visitors were permitted for only ten minutes in every six months and correspondence was allowed in every three months for the political prisoners.[35] Later Göncz was transferred to the Vác prison.
In Vác, the conditions were freer; Göncz had spent the time learning to read and write English.[36] The political prisoners were able to obtain literary works from the Western world, including the memoires of politicians Winston Churchill and Charles de Gaulle. According to György Litván, the senior party functionaries, who did not speak foreign languages, established a "translation agency" in the Vác prison to learn about the information available to Western public opinion.[37] Göncz, beside political pamphlets, also translated John Galsworthy's The Forsyte Saga, transferring from the prison by Litván, which laid the foundation of his translation career after release.[36] Imre Mécs said, a cohesive community of '56 democratic-minded generation emerged within the walls of the Vác prison, where there were constant political discussions and debates.[36]
In 1960 he participated in the political prisoners' hunger strike of the Vác prison, because, despite the promises of Kádár, most of the oppositional intellectuals and freedom fighters were not pardoned, unlike former communist officials, who had significant role in building of the Stalinist dictatorship before 1956, such as Mihály Farkas and Gábor Péter.[38] The government decided to separate the prisoners, Bibó and Göncz were transferred to Márianosztra, while Litván and journalist Sándor Fekete were sent back to the Gyűjtőfogház.[38] Finally, János Kádár ordered a mass amnesty in March 1963 in exchange for his government's international recognition by the United Nations. Along with more than 4000 other revolutionaries and freedom fighters, Göncz was released from prison under amnesty in July 1963, three months after István Bibó.[39]
Literary career (1963–1988)
In the following decades, he worked as a specialized translator, translating over a hundred literary works, and a writer of English prose. Some of his notable translations include E. L. Doctorow's Ragtime and World's Fair,[40][41] Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Thomas Wolfe's Of Time and the River, William Faulkner's Sartoris, The Sound and the Fury, the latter being referred by Göncz to as his "greatest challenge."[17]
His most famous translation work is J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy.[42] Initially, art critic Ádám Réz began to translate The Fellowship of the Ring, however after the translation of eleven chapters (texts and poems), the main terms and concepts, he stopped the work because of his increasingly severe illness. Réz died in 1978 and his manuscript remained unfinished for the next few years. Göncz later took over the project, working on the prose in Tolkien's novel, while the poems and songs were translated by Dezső Tandori. Finally, the work was published by Gondolat Kiadó in 1981, for the first time in Hungary.[43] In January 2002, Göncz was present at the Hungarian premiere of the movie adaptation of The Fellowship of the Ring.[44]
Göncz continued his career as a translator with many important works, including Faulkner's
His own works include both novels and dramas; Men of God (1974), Sarusok (1974), Magyar Médeia (1976), Rácsok (1979), Találkozások (1980) are among the most notable. He is also the author of Encounters (essays, 1980), Homecoming and Shavings (short stories, 1991), Hungarian Medea (play, 1979), Iron Bars (play, 1979), Balance (play, 1990).[46] Göncz worked incredibly hard for ten hours per day with no pay. For instance, in 1982 he visited the United States on an academic conference with only $5 in his pocket.[17] He won the Attila József Prize in 1983. In 1989 he won the Wheatland Prize, and two years later the Premio Meditteraneo.[47] From 1989 to 1990 he was President and later Honorary President of the Hungarian Writers' Union.[48] The person of Göncz was acceptable for both the liberal and "rural-national" intellectuals because of his past.[49]
Return to politics (1988–1990)
By the beginning of the 1980s, the Kádár regime had increasingly indebted and was in ideological and legitimation crisis. Opposition movements established one after another; a group of intellectuals founded the Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) in Lakitelek in September 1987. In early 1988, Göncz was a co-founding member of the Historical Justice Committee (TIB) civil organization,[50] which intended to revise the official communist stigmatization of the 1956 revolution. The organization was led by Erzsébet Nagy, daughter of Imre Nagy. The TIB demanded the worthy reburial of Nagy and the other executed persons.[51]
When the security forces violently disbanded a peaceful demonstration in Budapest on 16 June 1988, the 30th anniversary of Nagy's execution, Árpád Göncz, as Vice Chairman of the Historical Justice Committee, wrote a letter to General Secretary and Prime Minister Károly Grósz, Kádár's successor to protest against the police action and called on the regime to face its past.[52] In a response letter, Grósz rejected the implementation of demanded political reforms.[53] Finally (due to the appointment of the reformist Miklós Németh as Prime Minister in November 1988) the reburial took place in the next year on 16 June, Göncz took part in organizing, as he proposed, there was a fifth empty coffin beside the four martyrs' for the anonymous heroes and freedom fighters of the revolution. Göncz was the one who officially opened the ceremony.[54]
On 1 May 1988, Göncz also participated in the foundation of the Network of Free Initiatives (Hungarian: Szabad Kezdeményezések Hálózata; SZKH), the predecessor organization of the Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ).[55] Initially, SZKH was a loose alliance of various independent civil groups, which intended to become an umbrella organization like the Solidarity in Poland. However, because of the widespread pluralism, the SZKH's operation proved to be slow and time consuming in the midst of accelerated events, thus on 13 November 1988, the majority of the organization decided to found the SZDSZ, Göncz was also a co-founding member and helped the formulation of the founding declaration. Ferenc Miszlivetz said, Göncz was an observer rather than an active proponent in the following rallies.[56] In addition to MDF and SZDSZ, the third major anti-communist block was the liberal Alliance of Young Democrats, later known mostly by its acronym Fidesz. Göncz's former party, the Independent Smallholders' Party (FKGP) was re-established in those days, he visited the party's inaugural session at the Pilvax Café but, for him, it was not attractive anymore, as most of the former members of the FKGP were already dead or stayed in emigration.[57] Göncz considered the old debates between the "rural-national" and "urbanist" trends are outdated and detrimental after decades of communist rule, his liberal ideology became more dominant by 1988.[58]
The reburial of Imre Nagy proved to be a catalyst event; the hard-line Grósz was outranked by a four-member collective presidency of the reformist wing within the MSZMP on 26 June 1989. The ruling communist party began discussions with the opposition groups within the framework of the so-called
The Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) won the first democratically free parliamentary election in March 1990, while SZDSZ came to the second place with 92 MPs, including Göncz, who gained mandate from the party's Budapest regional list.[62] József Antall became Prime Minister and entered coalition with FKGP and the Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP). As there were several two-thirds laws according to the Hungarian Constitution, Antall concluded pact with SZDSZ, under which the liberal opposition party could nominee a candidate for the position of President of Hungary, in exchange for contribution to the constitutional amendments.[63] According to some opinions, the pact concluded specifically for the person of Árpád Göncz.[64]
József Antall and Árpád Göncz knew each other through the re-establishment of the FKGP. Their relationship was characterized by mutual trust according to contemporary reports. In addition, Antall's father, József Antall, Sr. was a prominent FKGP-member and friend of Béla Kovács in the 1940s. Political scientist László Lengyel argued that Göncz was a relatively unknown figure for the MDF leadership, who considered him "far more moderate" than other SZDSZ politicians, contrary to other candidate aspirants, like Miklós Vásárhelyi or György Konrád.[64] Göncz's well-known anti-communism was also an advantage for him.[65] There is also a third possible explanation that Antall did not want to choose a head of state from his own party (especially Sándor Csoóri), fearing from a build of a second power base within MDF.[66] Thus in the newly formed parliament's inaugural meeting on 2 May 1990, Göncz was elected Speaker of the National Assembly. As Speaker, he served as Acting President until the August indirect presidential election according to the Constitution.[62]
Presidency (1990–2000)
Göncz's political activities and role during his presidency (1990–2000)[67][68] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Presidential activities | 1990–1994 (Antall–Boross) | 1994–1998 (Horn) | 1998–2000 (Orbán I) |
Parliamentary speeches | 22 | 4 | 2 |
Foreign trips (days) | 49 (215) | 79 (273) | 35 (119) |
Signing international treaties | 1 | – | – |
Initiating referendums | – | – | – |
Self-proposed laws | 5 | – | – |
Initiating extraordinary parliamentary sessions | – | – | – |
Participating in parliamentary sessions | 71 | 15 | 12 |
Constitutional vetoes | 7 | – | 1 |
Political vetoes | – | 2 | – |
Political role | 1990–1994 (Antall–Boross) | 1994–1998 (Horn) | 1998–2000 (Orbán I) |
Pro-President parties | SZDSZ (MDF) |
MSZP SZDSZ |
MSZP SZDSZ |
Parliamentary majority | Right-wing (MDF–FKGP–KDNP) |
Left-wing (MSZP–SZDSZ) |
Right-wing (Fidesz–FKGP–MDF) |
Perception of presidential role | Counterbalance | Supportive/Symbolic | Symbolic |
Conflicts with government | Frequent | Minimal | Rare |
Activity in daily politics | Significant | Diminished | Diminished |
Political weight | Medium/Strong | Weak | Weak |
First term (1990–1995)
On 4 August, he was elected for a full term as president by the National Assembly by 295 votes to 13,[69][70] thus becoming Hungary's first democratically elected head of state. He was also Hungary's first non-Communist president since the forced resignation of Zoltán Tildy 42 years earlier.[71] After taking the oath before the new legislative speaker György Szabad (MDF), Göncz stated in his inaugural speech that "I am not, I can not be a servant of parties, party interests. In my whole life, within and outside party, I served and I will serve for national independence, freedom of thought, freedom of faith in the idea of free homeland, and social justice with human rights without discrimination and exclusion." He also added, "I would like to serve the unprotected, the defenceless people, those, who lacked the means to protect themselves both in the "feudal crane feather world" [referring to Miklós Horthy's Hungary] and in the "world of more equals among equals" [i.e. the communist regime between 1945 and 1989]."[72]
Göncz was an avid supporter of Hungarian integration with the West, especially with the United Kingdom.
His relationship with Prime Minister József Antall and his cabinet became tense in the coming years. Göncz filled a counterbalancing role to the conservative cabinet, according to the critics, he proved to be acting in the vested interests of his party, the SZDSZ. Critics also said Göncz failed to act for the unity of the nation as a non-partisan head of state with these anti-government steps.
In October 1990, the so-called "taxi-blockade" broke out when the Antall government decided to raise the prices of petrol with 65 percent because of the
On 24 April 1991, the National Assembly passed the Law on Compensation which intended to provide a symbolic financial aid to victims of the communist regime.[90] The law was far from public expectations and generated debates in politics. On 14 May, Göncz sent the law to the Constitutional Court, asking for a judicial review. The Court ruled the law was unconstitutional in several aspects (arbitrary conditions etc.).[91] Accordingly, by spring 1992, the law was revised several times and has been accepted again, however Göncz refused to sign the law again in April 1993.[92] In a later interview, Göncz told that he missed the equality of rights in the law and the social consensus on the subject.[93] Göncz also did not sign the "Zétényi–Takács Law", named after two MDF politicians, which determined the communist political crimes are not subject to the statute of limitations. In November 1991 the law was submitted to the Constitutional Court by Göncz, which body (presided by László Sólyom) found the law as unconstitutional in March 1992 and later, after amendments, in June 1993.[94] There were clashes between moral justice and the new republic's commitment to the principle of the rule of law. Göncz's stance was influenced by three factors: avoid social division and polarisation, liberal political beliefs and the significance of social consensus.[95] Göncz refused the method of retroactive legislation and he feared that the law will be a tool for political revenge.[96] By contrast, journalist Szilvia Varró said "Göncz actively hindered the question of settling accounts with the communist past".[97] In a November 1991 report, Göncz stated "reckoning is necessary, but it should be made strictly within the framework of a state built on the rule of law." He added, after 1956 he was sentenced to life imprisonment during a secret trial without the possibility of appeal. " I strongly feel that no procedure should be repeated that could be found illegal in retrospect."[98]
Göncz was to deliver his annual memorial speech at
The most stormy incident was the "Antall–Göncz media war" during the years of his first term. In July 1990, as consensus between the six parliamentary parties, the National Assembly appointed sociologists Elemér Hankiss and Csaba Gombár as presidents of the Magyar Televízió and Magyar Rádió, respectively.[103] In the summer of 1991, the Antall cabinet submitted new deputies of the state medias to counterbalance Hankiss and Gombár, however Göncz refused to countersign the appointments. Antall accused the President of overstepping his powers[70] and turned to the Constitutional Court, which ruled in September in that year that the President does not have a right of veto with regard to appointments, "unless those appointments endangered the democratic functioning of state institutions involved."[104] Göncz did not change his position and began to play for time, thus the Prime Minister again turned to the Constitutional Court, which on 28 January 1992 ruled that the President should sign the appointments "within a reasonable time."[104]
In May 1992, a liberal and constitutionalist, Göncz faced a parliamentary censure when he condemned the government for interfering with Hungary's state radio service and attempting to fire its director, Gombár.[70] In June 1992, the Antall cabinet wanted to replace Hankiss too, however Göncz refused to accept it, reasoning that he would wait until the adoption of the new media law, however by the end of 1992, the issue of media control was not resolved due to the abstention of the SZDSZ during the vote, which needed two-third majority.[105] In January 1993, Hankiss and Gombár resigned from the positions, referring to the media workers' livelihoods.[105] Göncz was rebuked by the Antall cabinet and the government parties for trying to block the new media law and re-organization of the structure of the media.[70] László Sólyom, President of the Constitutional Court also argued that Göncz exceeded his powers in the media issue.[106] The contrast between the MDF and the SZDSZ was again due to the ambiguity of the new Constitution (nominal or actual right of appointment).[107] Another key factor to the stalemate was the ambiguous ruling issued by the Constitutional Court (also under the influences of political parties, which delegated members) and its subsequent interpretations by Göncz and Antall. Göncz was able to play an active role in appointments due to the unclear term of "endangerment of democracy".[108] In those years, the Constitutional Court was usually under critics that it took on the legislative role of the parliament.[108]
In November 1993, Göncz gave an interview to the Italian daily newspaper La Stampa, which wrote "the Hungarian media had been placed in a serious situation because of the right-wing government's censorship" and also added "the President [Göncz] asks for international help!".[109] Imre Kónya, the leader of the MDF parliamentary group rejected the accusations and called for an explanation from Göncz, who responded that the disputed phrases were only the "journalist's individual interpretation." Nonetheless, the MIÉP said Göncz had denigrated Hungary's image by representing foreign interests and also attempted to set up an inquiry commission.[109] Göncz explained, although did not agree with the article's given title, it reflected the actual situation of the Hungarian media.[110]
Second term (1995–2000)
During the May 1994 parliamentary election, the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP), legal successor of the ruling MSZMP in the one-party system before 1989, under the leadership of Gyula Horn, achieved a remarkable revival, winning an overall majority of 209 seats out of 386, up from 33 in 1990. Horn, despite winning an overall majority, decided to form a coalition with the formerly strong anti-communist Alliance of Free Democrats, giving him a two-thirds majority, to assuage public concerns inside and outside Hungary.[111] After 1994, Göncz was largely passive and insignificant, in contrary to his proactive role and style during the Antall and Boross governments (Péter Boross became Prime Minister after Antall died of cancer in December 1993).[112] Some of the critics suggested the one of the main reasons for this change was Göncz's political affiliation: as Szilvia Varró said she does not remember that "there was any issue on which he stood against Horn".[113] However, as mentioned above, Göncz remained passive too during Viktor Orbán's first cabinet (1998–2002),[80] which installed a more power-concentrated governing structure through the newly established Prime Minister's Office (MEH), led by István Stumpf.[114]
Dae Soon Kim writes, there are three factors responsible for Göncz's passivity; Firstly, his physical and mental condition has deteriorated in the second half of the 1990s. In December 1997, Göncz was hospitalized for two weeks for the treatment of
On 12 March 1995, the Horn government announced a series of fiscal austerity and economic stabilization measures, commonly known as the Bokros package.[118] On 13 June 1995, Göncz approved and signed the package, despite requests made by the opposition parties, especially MDF and Fidesz. After that the opposition turned to the Constitutional Court, which found numerous elements of the package as unconstitutional.[119] According to the fragmented opposition, Göncz followed his own party's interests when signed the laws. In addition, Fidesz MP Lajos Kósa connected Göncz's steps with the upcoming indirect presidential election about a week later.[119] Göncz was re-elected on 19 June 1995 for another five-year term[70] by the MSZP and SZDSZ coalition government (259 votes), defeating the candidate of the right-wing opposition, Ferenc Mádl (76 votes).[120] Dae Soon Krim argues that Göncz, among others, considered the Bokros package as a painful but necessary step, which was the only method to avoid economic collapse.[121]
Árpád Göncz refused to sign the Law of Incompatibility in January 1997, which was to provide the separation of the political and economical sphere by preventing MPs to maintain economic interests after their election. Following debates between the two governing parties, the Horn cabinet made a compromise solution: the MPs could keep their economical positions, if their post in business was acquired before they were elected to the National Assembly.[122] Göncz sent the law back to the parliament because of the "lack of equal rights and guarantee of free competition" and protection of privacy, however the Socialists adopted the law again in unchanged form.[122] Opposition politicians criticized Göncz, because he used only the presidential tool of "political veto", instead of "constitutional veto".[123] The President also questioned the revised version of the Law on Privatisation, which passed by the Horn government on 19 December 1996. Accordingly, the State Privatisation and Property Management Co. (ÁPV Co.) was authorised to transfer state properties to local governments and cooperatives without restriction, the coalition partner SZDSZ and the right-wing opposition parties (Fidesz, MDF, FKGP) opposed the law, citing reasons of corruption.[124] In January 1997, Göncz vetoed the law, returned it to the parliament for reconsideration.[124]
Shortly after the inauguration of the first Orbán cabinet, disagreement evolved around the
Later life (2000–2015)
Göncz completed his five years of second term on 4 August 2000. He was replaced by Ferenc Mádl, who was elected President by the National Assembly's right-wing majority on 6 June 2000. In a ceremony at the Kossuth Square, he emphasized that he passes the position to Mádl with "respect and friendship". He also asked God's blessing on the successful work of Ferenc Mádl. Göncz added, during his 10-year term, he tried to keep in mind that the "democratic state can only be people-oriented organization".[130]
After his presidency, Göncz completely retired from politics and resided in a state residence at Béla király Street along with his wife until his death in October 2015.[131] In September 2000, he was appointed President of the Hungary in Europe Foundation which awarded literary prizes annually.[132] He gave a speech on 23 October 2000, where he told "the proliferating phrases during annual commemorations had overshadowed the actual events of the 1956 revolution."[133] In November 2000, Göncz became an honorary citizen of Budapest, awarded by the city's Mayor and fellow SZDSZ member Gábor Demszky.[134] In December 2000, a prize was founded by the United States, named after Göncz. U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright awarded the Göncz Prize to Erika Csovcsics, headmistress of the Gandhi School for the first time.[135]
In April 2003, Göncz participated in the signing ceremony of Hungary's join to the European Union in Athens, Greece.[136] In July 2003, Göncz was among the speakers at the so-called Szárszó meetings, a political forum of mostly left-wing intellectuals and politicians, organized by Tivadar Farkasházy.[137] In an open letter, along with Havel and Wałęsa, he demanded the release of political prisoners in Cuba from Fidel Castro in September 2003.[138]
On 10 February 2012, hundreds welcomed Göncz with serenades and speeches on the occasion of his 90th birthday, at the initiative of composer and songwriter
Personal life
On 11 January 1947, Göncz married Mária Zsuzsanna Göntér (16 November 1923 – 3 June 2020)[141][142] and had four children; two sons (Benedek, Dániel) and two daughters (Kinga and Annamária).[143] Kinga Göncz, who held various ministerial positions in the cabinets of Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány and also a former Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2006 to 2009, is his daughter and eldest child. She was Member of the European Parliament between 2009 and 2014. In November 2012, Göncz's four children founded the Göncz Árpád Foundation to promote the presentation and research of their father's life and career, as well as cultivating the memory of the Hungarian democratic and liberal traditions. István Bibó, Jr., András Gulyás and János M. Rainer became advisory board members.[144]
Death and funeral
Árpád Göncz died on 6 October 2015 in Budapest, aged 93.
Foreign media also remembered on Göncz's death; The New York Times wrote Göncz was "widely beloved" among the Hungarians, who called him just as their "Uncle Árpi".[151] According to The Daily Telegraph, Göncz "worked with skill over a decade to realign his country with the West and heal the wounds of the past."[70] Jean-Claude Juncker, the President of the European Commission said Göncz was a "democrat" and a "true European".[152] During her state visit to Hungary on 7 October, Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović expressed condolences for the death of Göncz to President János Áder and the Hungarian people.[153] Socialist MEP István Ujhelyi also commemorated Göncz in the European Parliament. Ujhelyi said "Hungary is mourning one of Europe's wise men and one of the greatest figures of the Hungarian democracy."[154]
In accordance with his
Awards and honours
- 1991: Italy – Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
- 1991: United Kingdom – Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
- 1994: Poland – Order of the White Eagle
- 1994: Spain – Collar of the Order of Civil Merit[157]
- 1995: Malta – Honorary Companion of Honour with Collar of the National Order of Merit (9 February 1995)[158]
- 1995: Finland – Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of the White Rose of Finland[159]
- 1998: Peru – Grand Cross with Diamonds of the Order of the Sun of Peru (2 September 1998)[160]
- 1999: Estonia – Collar of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana
- 1999: Lithuania – Grand Cross of the Order of Vytautas the Great (19 May 1999)[161]
- 1999: Norway – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav
- 1999: United Kingdom – Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
- 1999: Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement[162][163]
- 2000: Romania – Grand Cross with Chain of the Order of the Star of Romania (2000)
- 2000: Germany – Special Class of the Grand Cross of the Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- 2000: Slovakia – Grand Cross (or 1st Class) of the Order of the White Double Cross (2000)[164]
- 2003: Czech Republic – Order of the White Lion (7 March 2003)[165]
- 2003: Award of the Budapest Corvinus Europe Institute
- 2009: International Adalbert Prize for Peace, Freedom and Cooperation in Europe of Adalbert Foundation Krefeld
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- ^ a b Kim 2012, p. 25.
- ^ Kim 2012, p. 26.
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- ^ Kim 2012, p. 34.
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Bibliography
- Kim, Dae Soon (2012). Göncz Árpád – Politikai életrajz (in Hungarian). Scolar Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-244-348-5.
- Kim, Dae Soon (2013). The Transition to Democracy in Hungary: Árpád Göncz and the post-Communist Hungarian presidency. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-63664-3.
- The Daily Telegraph, Wednesday, 7 October 2015
- Sodrásban = In mid-stream : talks and speeches by Árpád Göncz. Budapest, Corvina Books, 1999. ISBN 963-13-4801-6
External links
- Official website
- His biography Archived 4 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine on the Office of the President of the Republic of Hungary site