Fraternity-Testvériség, 1962 (40. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

1962-03-01 / 3. szám

6 FRATERNITY Paul Nadanyi: THE REVOLT THAT ROCKED THE KREMLIN “We Hungarian writers are the voice of the conscience of the masses. We must reflect their sense of justice . . Gyula Hay 3. THE WRITERS’ REVOLT Imre Nagy was still working on his memo­randum when, in November 1955, another memo­randum reached the Communist Party leadership. Signed by 59 prominent writers, composers, play­wrights, journalists and actors, many of whom were holders of the regime’s highest awards, the Kossuth and Stalin prizes, the memorandum demanded a complete change of the regime’s cultural policies. “These policies prevent all creative work” — said the memorandum. The memorandum brought the long-evident but still well-controlled ferment among intellec­tuals into sharper focus. The ferment actually started during the New Course of Imre Nagy’s first Government in 1953-54, when non-Communist and even some outspoken anti-Communist literary figures re-emerged from long-enforced obscurity, and such leading Communist writers as Tibor Déry and Tamás Aczél de-emphasized the party line. Other formerly doctrinaire Communists, like poet Lajos Konya and novelist Ferenc Karinthy criticized their own earlier w'ork as “falsely optimistic” and “sham”. Ferenc Kör­mendi in an essay, “Hungary's Rebellious Muse”, published in the May-June issue of “Problems of Communism”, relates the full story of this ferment and the regime’s measures to suppress it. Tamás Aczél and Tibor Méray in their

Next

/
Thumbnails
Contents