Fraternity-Testvériség, 1957 (35. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

1957-05-01 / 5. szám

FRATERNITY 7 — so long that they missed it. Now all three finally have sponsors for emigration. But not all are so lucky. The camp director tells of a 16-year-old boy whose parents are somewhere in Hungary. Nobody has been able to get in touch with them to find out what they want done with him. The boy says, reasonably: “Look, I want to go to school, or get a job. I don’t want to live in camps all my life. Here in Austria, I can’t get a job. I’ve been in four different camps in three months. You won’t let me go to another country without my parents’ permission. I don’t want to go back to Hungary. Nobody seems to care about refugees any more, and there’s almost no country in the world that will let us in. What am I going to do?” The camp director asks unhappily: “What am I going to tell him?” (Worldwide Press Service) Gripping Account of the Shattering Revolt in Hungary NO MORE COMRADES. By Andor Heller. (Henry Regnery & Co.; $3.50.) ★ ★ ★ This simply written, well illustrated book of the Hungarian freedom revolution is a gripping account of how a nation rose against its Soviet and Communist masters — and why. Andor Heller, an ace Budapest news photographer, was on the streets of the Hungarian capital from the revolt’s beginning as a peaceful student demonstration. Shortly before the Red Army began its bloody suppression of the uprising, the Free Revolutionary Government of Hungary assigned Heller to take out to the free world the story and his pictorial account of Hungary’s desperate bid for freedom. Ninety pictures illustrate the book. Heller, who now lives in Washington, dedicates his book “to all those heroes, of every age and walk of life, who died in Hungary for the cause of human freedom, and to the unconquerable spirit of the Hun­garian Nation that in the end will be victorious over the Russian Com­munists who now, by armed force and terror, occupy my country.” (Mary Painter)

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