Hungarian Heritage Review, 1991 (20. évfolyam, 1-11. szám)

1991-09-01 / 9. szám

VULTURES OF CULTURE Since merging into the United States' "melting pot" nearly 40 years ago, I had often heard that Cleveland, Ohio, is the second largest Hungarian city in the world after Budapest, just as Chicago is the second largest Polish city after Warsaw. So I could hardly wait to visit Cleveland. But it was about seven years before I made my first trip to Cleveland, and when I did, I didn't meet a single Hungarian. I went to work there part-time as a consultant for a management consulting company. No Hun­garians ever showed up at our meetings. After my third or fourth trip, after becoming more familiar with the people I dealt with, I mentioned my Hungarian inter­ests to one of the young men on the office staff who knew Cleveland better than his own palm. He started to show me around. By Louis Szathmary I will never forget our first lunch on Buckeye Road at the "Elegant Pig Saloon," or our dinner, with Gypsy music, at a place in the West Side Hungarian colony. There also were memorable meals at the tiny Balaton, named after the largest European lake, lo­cated just about in the middle of Hungary. Then I began going to various churches, attending sausage dinners inbasements, con­certs, bingos, Christmas sales and "Wine Harvest Day" dances. I admired the larger-than-life statue of Louis Kossuth in University Park. I pho­tographed the bronze plaques marking his­torical buildings where this Hungarian pa­triot, who stood up against Hapsburg op­pression, gave speeches or slept. I was taken to the "Hungarian Cul­tural Garden" in a huge park in the center of Cleveland. It was breathtaking. To me, it was like visiting a beautiful garden any­where in Hungary. This visit was in the mid or late '60s. I already had made many Hun­garian friends in Cleveland, and located sev­eral close and distant relatives and former schoolmates. I was feeling at home in the Hungarian community. I gave talks and cooking demonstra­tions, I appeared on television (a couple of times on the Oprah Winfrey show), I autographed copies of my cookbooks at Higb/s department store, and at a now defunct Hungarian bookstore. A couple of weeks ago I was in Cleve­land again to attend the introduction of a book of Hungarian poetry by Tibor Tollas, a Hungarian poet who spent some nine years in prison prior to the uprising against Soviet oppression. He left Hungary after the Free­dom Fight was lost and the dark age of the Janos Kadar regime took over. He now lives in Munich, Germany, where he is publisher­­editor of a Hungarian monthly. In his book, "In Whirlwind," the po­ems are translated into English by American and English poets. The New York-based Imre & Hona E. Landanyi Foundation pub­lished the bilingual poems in a handsome little book. Because I was involved in this pub­lishing venture, I was very eager to make sure that it would be effectively introduced to the second largest Hungarian commu­nity, and went to Cleveland a day ahead. The committee that arranged for the affair did an excellent job. —continued next page 18 HUNGARIAN HERITAGE REVIEW SEPTEMBER 1991

Next

/
Thumbnails
Contents