The Hungarian Minority in Slovakia From History to Present by Vladimir Kacer.

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Presentation transcript:

The Hungarian Minority in Slovakia From History to Present by Vladimir Kacer

Hungarians in Slovakia Source: Hungarian Minorities Abroad (

Statistics

Under the Hapsburg Empire and later under Austria-Hungary, the Magyars, or ethnic Hungarians, dominated the numerous nationalities around them - As from 1867 to the end of the first World War in 1918 they engaged in doctrine of cultural genocide. - As from 1867 to the end of the first World War in 1918 they engaged in doctrine of cultural genocide. -Countless Croats, Rumanians, Serbs, Slovaks, Slovenes and Ukrainians were subjected to Magyarization, or forced assimilation. -Countless Croats, Rumanians, Serbs, Slovaks, Slovenes and Ukrainians were subjected to Magyarization, or forced assimilation. In 1920, as a result of the events of the First World War and the Peace Treaty of Trianon, the territory of present-day Slovakia was officially detached from Hungary and ceded to Czechoslovakia. Following the changes in the state authorities - till approximately 88,000 ethnic Hungarians (administrative and military personnel, landowners, etc.) moved to the new Hungarian state territory. At the same time, approximately 72,000 Czech military personnel, civil servants and investors immigrated to the territory of Slovakia. Mutual Discrimination of the Past Magyarization

Mutual Discrimination of the Past First Republic/ WWII Magyarization The 1920 Czechoslovak Constitution guaranteed equal rights for all nationalities and granted them the right to use their native tongue in public and at religious and cultural events. Minority languages were accepted in the courts and in local and state administrative offices wherever minorities comprised twenty percent of the population. This was actually the lowest limit in interwar Europe. Despite these concessions, Hungarians in Slovakia never accepted the First Czechoslovak Republic's legitimacy. When the opportunity arose, Hungary seized southern Slovakia with the blessings of Nazi Germany in the so-called Vienna Award of November 1938

Mutual Discrimination of the Past Communism/Slovakization/Democratization During the communist regime, Slovak nationalism was largely kept in check by the strongly centralist Prague regime The 1968 switch to a federal arrangement gave greater scope to Slovak nationalism, however. New policies of assimilation included –progressive Localization of education, elimination of Hungarian place-names from signs, Magyars were forbidden to use their mother tongue in administrative dealings and in institutions and workplaces, and were pressured to Slovakize their given names. –Nonetheless, the most significant exclusionary factor in the Hungarian’s social situation under the communist regime was most likely their own refusal to integrate into the Czechoslovak system and to learn the language. Without a fluency in the official language, their economic and political opportunities were and continue to be severely limited. Since the 1989 "velvet revolution," nationalist sentiment has been growing in Slovakia. This has resulted in a series of Slovak laws restricting the use of the Hungarian language and what is perceived by the Hungarians as a campaign advocating racial discrimination against them by many Slovak politicians and the Slovak media. This anti-Hungarian sentiment has been made worse by the elimination of the moderating Czech influence after the 1993 Czechoslovak split and consequent policies of Vladimir Meciar

Current Situation The Party of the Hungarian Coalition (MKP), under former Deputy Prime Minister Bela Bugar, joined the Slovak government in Despite sometimes strong anti-Hungarian sentiment among many Slovaks, the MKP achieved considerable progress for the Hungarian minority in recent years, particularly in the fields of education and administration. The opening of a Hungarian University in the majority Hungarian speaking border town of Komaron/Komarno was one of the greatest achievements by the former coalition government. Despite the progress in recent years many of the rights of other minorities of a similar size enjoy in other parts of Europe remain unfulfilled in Slovakia. Both the HZDS and the SNS (currently in Fico’s government) ran their 2006 election campaigns with strong anti-Hungarian and anti-Roma slogan. In addition, last week the ethnic-Hungarian SMK party announced that it is preparing to take legal action against SNS chairman Jan Slota for racist, anti-Hungarian comments.

Current Situation Bilingual signage is limited to municipalities with more than 25% Hungarian speakers which is substantially higher than the 8-10% that is considered best practice in Europe today. The use of Hungarian in the Slovak parliament remains disallowed. The political regions of Slovakia have been created in a way to divide the Hungarian minority vote. Any process towards autonomy for majority Hungarian-speaking areas, based on the South Tyrolean, Basque or Catalan model, remains unfulfilled. Bratislava the capital of Slovakia, and until 1918 a majority Hungarian speaking and at the time with a large German speaking community, continues to reject the erection of any bi- or trilingual signs in the city Another major complaint is over discriminatory compensation laws for the losses suffered by ethnic Hungarians resulting from the Benes decrees of 1945 (a series of orders issued by the Czechoslovak president Eduard Benes that branded ethnic Hungarians and Germans with collective guilt). While only a small portion of ethnic Hungarian leaders advocate secession from Slovakia many ethnic Hungarians desire a greater degree of autonomy and self-determination within the Hungarian areas in southern Slovakia, especially with respect to language, education, and cultural issues