Szittyakürt, 1981 (20. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

1981-01-01 / 1. szám

ENGLISH LANGUAGE EDITION OF «ITTVAKÖfcT Official publication of the Revolutionary Council of the VOL. VI. No. 3-4 NOV.-DEC., 1980 HUNGÁRIA FREEDOM FIGHTER MOVEMENT WHO SHOT J.R.?...orTHE POLES? On November 21, 1980, Friday evenings, more millions of people watched the CBS TV program “Dallas” then voted in the U.S. that barely more then 24 years ago the brave people of Hungary rose in arms in sympathy for the hundreds of Polish miners in Poznan who suf­presidential election. Lawyers re­scheduled court hearings to be able to sit by their television sets. Even the Queen Mother of England re­fuses to miss this special show. The result is that more people now know “who shot J.R.“ an oil magnate (portrayed by Larry Hagman), a character of questionable morals then “WHO IS SHOOTING AT THE POLISH” IN THE ANCIENT LAND OF POLAND! HUNGARIAN A POLISH BROTHERS... Much pressure has been applied on the Polish people by the Soviet puppet regime in Poland since the Polish workers started to demand improvements in their living stand­ards which is at an all time low. The Hungarians within and out­side of Hungary are observing with greater intensity the developments in Poland then any other people in the world and this is completely natural for the Hungarians because Hungarians and Poles have had a brotherly contact for a thousand years as they shared borders, tradi­tions, kings and had similar histori­cal experiences both good and bad. Both Hungarians and Poles fought hard for their national freedoms and aided each other often as good neighbours and brothers would. Hungarian and Polish refugees found help and protection in each other’s countries throughout the centuries until 35 years ago when both countries fell to the Soviet rule and the Bolshevik lie came to be the way of life for them. Since 1945 as they became “Socialist neighbours” and members of the phoney “War­saw Pact” they are not allowed to help each other. The people only secretly feel thorough empathy to­­ard their respective internal oblems. "he political memory of the stern people is short. Today the stern world hardly remembers fered from the torture of their com­munist overlords as they dared to strike demanding more food and safer working conditions. It was on October 23, 1956 when in Budapest the Hungarian students and workers marched to the statue of Polish General Joseph Bern who in 1848/49 led the Hungarian people’s army against the centuries old Austrian occupation. In 1956 the enemy was and still is the Soviet- Slav enslavement but momentarily the Communist leadership in Poland lost total control. Since last August 31, the day of the Gdansk Agreement, over 10 million workers joined with a new list of demands the new workers unions in Poland and that scared the wits out of the Commies and certainly out of the Russians who control the satellite countries through the loyal Com­munists and their unions. East- West relationships are most tested in Eastern Europe and any change of the status quo is cautiously guarded on both sides. The MADE IN USSR type of Communism is about to fall apart (Continued on pg. 3) What is life without Love? What is love without Warmth? What is self without Heart? These are the blessed thoughts Of every human Heart. . . Who seeked to give his heart After that he will be loved. But what’s good to have heart With the glowing love If nobody can receive it. . . We Must Have Faith in God. We Must Have Faith in self. Though we have failed once; No love grows without pain. We cannot lose faith, because once we felt pain. . . It would be a solemn reminder For the broken heart That if you have failed in someone, 1981, THE YEAR OF THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE 1956 HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION By Louis Molnár Twenty five years ago when our last guns were silenced, the working people of the world cried out in anger against the Soviet actions in Hungary. The reaction among free people was massive. Tens of thousands have assembled in major cities around the world to protest the Soviet massacre in Hungary. The sympathy of the people was with us. Belgian students attacked the Soviet embassy. In Luxemburg the demonstrators set fire to the Soviet embassy, while the Russian embassador was hiding in the cellar. In France the people demonstrated against Communist from Normandy to Marseilles and burned the party offices. All of Denmark observed five minutes silence in honor of the Hungarian resistance. In West Berlin at the brandenburg gate one hundred thousand people shouted “Down with the Soviet rapers in Hungary.” In Holland there were protests in every city and banners read: “Let us go as volunteers to Hungary.” In 1956 the people of the world were with us. It was the govern­ment, the great Christian institu­tions and the United Nations that have failed to stand up for the cause of liberty. During those critical days a distinguished Spanish diplomat and scholar, Salvador de Madariage raised the following questions in the New York Times: “Why doesn’t the U.N. send an ultimatum to the Soviet Union demanding evacuation of Hungarian territory within a week and an immediate cease fire? Why doesn’t the U.N. send a police force to Hungary? Is it because the United States and Britain delivered Hungary to the Soviet Union at Yalta? If so, has not the Soviet Union forfeited her claims under that ill-fated agreement? Or is it for fear of a general war and the H-bomb? If so why would the Soviet Union be less afraid than we? The Soviet Government cannot trust its own infantry. Hence, the surfeit of tanks in Hungary. Can the West survive the revelation that the only non-Hungarians to fight for Hun­gary’s freedom have been so far the Russian deserters? Is the faith of the West in freedom so low that they do not see the hope of liberating Eastern Europe and even Russia from Communism if they make a stand now and prevent the murder of Hungary?” After two decades of liberal administrations in the U.S., we have witnessed a continuous ap­peasement of the Soviet regime, detente, East-West Trade, Salt Treaty and a deliberate surrender to the Soviet empire, at the expense of the American taxpayers. Today while the Afghan people are fighting a fierce battle of survival against the Soviet agression in their country, the West carries on as they did in 1956. The Soviets are also ready to move troops into Poland if the Polish Unions will wreak the Com­munist regime with their continuous demands for more freedom. As we are entering into the eighties with a conservative U.S. government we must raise the question: Will the U.S. continue to support.the status quo or are we en­tering into an age of confrontation? If the new administration will follow the foreign policy of the last two decades, the Soviets will make further gaines in Europe and in the Middle East. On the other hand if the Reagan administration will go on the offensive, the Soviet Union will suffer abroad but especially at home, where the 130 million people of non-Slavic nationalities will take such a signal as an encouragement to break down the Soviet empire. Now on the eve of the 25th anni­versary of the 1956 Hungarian re­volution we call upon every freedom loving American to join with us in our celebration of this noble historic event, with a new commitment. Let us demands that our government start to pursue a policy of liberation instead of surrender. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

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