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The new Hungarian republic was soon
menaced by Bela Kun (1885-c. 1939), a Bolshevik sent from Russia by
Vladimir I. Lenin (1870-1924), established the Hungarian Communist
Party on December 20, 1918. When Count Michael Karolyi (1875-1955),
Hungary's president, resigned (March 21, 1919) in protest against
the Allies's demands for more Hungarian territorial concessions, a
coalition government of Communists and Social Democrats was formed
under the leadership of Kun, who soon pushed out the latter and
secured a Communist dictatorship... At home, nationalization of
Hungary's landed estates, instead of division among the peasantry,
lost Kun the support of the peasants, and the bourgeoisie withdrew
its backing because of his increasing terror tactics against
opposition... Hungarian counterrevolutionaries attempted to
overthrow Kun and the Communists...
The rise of the Hungarian Communist Party
(HCP) to power was swift. The party was organized in a Moscow hotel
on November 4, 1918, when a group of Hungarian prisoners of war and
communist sympathizers formed a Central Committee and dispatched
members to Hungary to recruit new members, propagate the party's
ideas, and radicalize Karolyi's government. By February 1919, the
party numbered 30,000 to 40,000 members, including many unemployed
ex-soldiers, young intellectuals, and Jews. In the same month, Kun
was imprisoned for incitement to riot, but his popularity
skyrocketed when a journalist reported that he had been beaten by
the police. Kun emerged from jail triumphant when the Social
Democrats handed power to a government of "People's Commissars," who
proclaimed the Hungarian Soviet Republic on March 21,
1919.
The communists wrote a temporary
constitution guaranteeing freedom of speech and assembly; free
education, language and cultural rights to minorities; and other
rights. It also provided for suffrage for people over eighteen years
of age except clergy, "former exploiters," and certain others.
Single-list elections took place in April, but members of the
parliament were selected indirectly by popularly elected committees.
On June 25, Kun's government proclaimed a dictatorship of the
proletariat, nationalized industrial and commercial enterprises, and
socialized housing, transport, banking, medicine, cultural
institutions, and all landholdings of more than 40.5 hectares. Kun
undertook these measures even though the Hungarian communists were
relatively few, and the support they enjoyed was based far more on
their program to restore Hungary's borders than on their
revolutionary agenda. Kun hoped that the Soviet Russian government
would intervene on Hungary's behalf and that a worldwide workers'
revolution was imminent. In an effort to secure its rule in the
interim, the communist government resorted to arbitrary violence.
Revolutionary tribunals ordered about 590 executions, including some
for "crimes against the revolution." The government also used "red
terror" to expropriate grain from peasants. This violence and the
regime's moves against the clergy also shocked many
Hungarians. |