Hungarian President Áder Marks Memorial Day Of 1849 Arad Martyrs

  • 7 Oct 2020 11:39 AM
  • Hungary Matters
Hungarian President Áder Marks Memorial Day Of 1849 Arad Martyrs
Marking the anniversary of the execution of 13 revolutionary leaders in Arad on October 6, 1849, President János Áder said that “the heroic deaths of the Hungarian freedom fighters has become a source of strength”.

Áder said that what took place in 1849 in Arad was a symbol of how the uprising may have been overpowered but “the desire of Hungarians for freedom cannot ever be broken”.

Speaking to public broadcaster Kossuth Rádió, Áder said the 13 leaders were of diverse backgrounds, age, religion, temperament and style. Besides Hungarians, some of them were of German, Serbian and Croatian ethnicity, Áder noted.

Some were members of the nobility while others came from humble families, and their political views also differed widely, Áder said. “They were friends, mentors, brothers in arms and they constantly debated; they were tough opponents, diverse characters who were united in death,” Áder said.

The generals executed in Arad in what is today Oradea, in Romania, ended their lives that day “aware of their own innocence but in dark anxiety for their loved ones, knowing … they would be tarred with unjust accusations,” Áder said, noting that October 6 was the “darkest day of a period of brutal retaliations”.

The measures taken by the Habsburg Empire to trample the remaining nests of revolution ran afoul of the laws of the time, Áder said. The sentences were “mostly ready” before the trials, which were only held to keep up appearances, he said. “Europe looked on, shocked, at the bloody retaliations,” Áder said.

However, the heroic deaths of the 12 generals and Count Lajos Batthyány, the prime minister of Hungary’s first independent government, “has become a source of strength for Hungarians”, Áder said.

The political achievements of the freedom fight survived the defeat, and were realised at the Austro-Hungarian compromise of 1867, he said. “If we know what happened to them, bear witness to their lives and remember their deaths, this day becomes more than just a day of mourning, of final, great silence.

Besides martyrdom, it also proclaims a life worth living; loyalty and love of country; the value of honour; faith borne with dignity; an example to be followed; and justice,” Áder said.


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