Diplomatist Magazine Diplomatist Oct-Nov 2018 | Page 21

INSIDE EUROPE It began with fi rst riots in the Eastern part of Germany about less improvements in working and living conditions. Russian tanks destroyed the opposition of construction workers especially at Berlin´s construction sites in June 1953. Two years later same dissatisfaction on political suppression and economic stagnation and less perspective catching up the economic dynamic of the West, escalated in a violant uprise of mining workers in the Polish province and industrial region of Poznan. Strikes and demonstrations swept away the government dominated by party chief Edward Ochab and contributed to the introduction of a new government under the leadership of Władysław Gomułka a former locksmith. He successfully negotiated the necessity The new political leading fi gure was Imre Nagy. He took over important demands of the protest movement as for example an end of supression. The former government had more than 25.000 inhabitants of the capital Budapest forced to migrate to forced labour camps. Moreover the rapidly growing movement attempted to force government to an end of economic decline by econmic reforms and for a shift back to more sovereignity as for example an end of membership in the Warsaw Pact. This would have established a gap in the Iron Curtain dividing Europe from the Balkans up to the Finish boarder. The movement became rapidly popular stretching out to the country side and in many regions of Hungary. As in Berlin of reforms with Russia in October 1956. His government slowed down collectivization of agriculture and initiated economic reforms in the industrial sector that indeed led to impressively high rates of economic growth in the 1960s. In this context we have to see the incidents that happened in Hungary. Also in Hungary signs of relaxation after Stalin´s death and following internal struggle about the strategy of the Empire for the next decade between Lawrenty Beria and Nikita Chruschtschow were interpreted as an opportunity gaining back sovereignity. In some respect the internal confrontations repeated the cases of the Soviet Union and of Poland as there the follower of Stalin, János Kádár, lost its party offi ces, shortly after fi rst mass protests by students appeared in the streets, as a direct consequence of the Polish uprise in direct neighborhood of Hungary. three years before and 12 years later in Prague Russian tanks rolled down the upheaval, but it needed several weeks for this bloody work. More than three thousand Hungarian people but also Russian soldiers died in heavy street fi ghts. Thousands were captured and imprisoned. No less than 210.000 escaped to the West via Austria to West-Germany for example. Up to 1957 all opposition was suppressed, Nagy was sent to prison and executed in 1958. The peoples movement had been defeated but the memory continued and became part of the national identity. In the 1980s Hungary became an important tribune for anti Leninist counter culture and the beginning of Westernization of the East. It was in Hungary were the fi rst piece of barbed wire was cut out of the Iron Curtain in summer of 1989 - 23 years after the uprise. * Ralf Roth (Goethe- University Frankfurt, Germany) Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 6 • Issue 10 • Oct-Nov 2018, Noida • 21