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Miklós Radnóti

Miklós Radnóti (born Miklós Glatter, surname variants: Radnói, Radnóczi; 5 May 1909 – 4 or 9 November 1944) was a Hungarian poet, an outstanding representative of modern Hungarian lyric poetry as well as a certified secondary school teacher of Hungarian and French. He is characterised by his striving for pure genre and his revival of traditional, tried and tested genres.

Miklós Radnóti
Miklós Radnóti
BornMiklós Glatter
(1909-05-05)5 May 1909
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
DiedNovember 1944 (aged 35)
near Abda, Hungary
OccupationPoet
NationalityHungarian

Biography edit

Miklós Glatter descended from a long line of Hungarian Jewish village merchants, peddlers, and pub keepers in Radnót, in what is now Slovakia.[1]

At the time of his birth, Miklós Glatter's father, Jakab Glatter, worked as a travelling salesman for the Brück & Grosz textile company, which was owned by his brother in law.[2] He was born in the 13th district (Újlipótváros quarter) of Budapest, the capital city of the Kingdom of Hungary. At birth, his twin brother was born dead and his mother, Ilona Grosz, died soon after childbirth. His father remarried in 1911 with Ilona Molnár (1885–1944). In 1921 his father died of stroke, his guardian became his aunt's husband, Dezső Grosz, who was one of the owners of the textile company his father worked for until his death.

Radnóti attended primary and secondary school in his place of birth and continued his education at the high school for textile industry in Liberec from 1927–28 on his uncle's advice. Then he worked as commercial correspondent in the familiar textile business company until 1930. Ultimately, Radnóti was able to prevail with desire for another education and began studying philosophy, Hungarian and French at the University of Szeged.

In 1934, he finished his studies with the philosophical doctoral thesis The artistic development of Margit Kaffka. After graduation, he Magyarised his surname to Radnóti, after the native village of his paternal ancestors. In August 1935, he married his long-standing love Fanny Gyarmati (1912–2014), daughter of the owner of the respected Gyarmati printing house. The very happy marriage was unfortunately childless until his deportation. He gained his first professional experiences as secondary school teacher in the 1935-36 academic year at the Zsigmond Kemény Gymnasium in Budapest.

In September 1940, he was conscripted to a labor battalion (a kind of unarmed military service, initially for those unfit for armed service, but increasingly, as the world war progressed, a punishment for citizens considered untrustworthy like leftists, dissidents, Jews) of the Royal Hungarian Army until December of that year, then from July 1942 to April 1943 for the second time. On 2 May 1943, he converted together with his wife from Judaism to the Roman Catholic faith. In May 1944, Radnóti's third military labor service started and his battalion was deployed to the copper mines of Bor in Serbia. After 1943, Hungarian Jewish forced laborers working in Bor's copper mines contributed to 50 percent of the copper used by the German war industry. The overseers of the forced laborers of Bor were particularly notorious for their cruelty.

On 17 September 1944, the battalion was commanded to leave the camp on foot in two groups in a forced march to flee the advancing Allied armies. Radnóti was in the first group (about 3600 forced laborers), around half of the group perished. The overseers of the second group were ambushed by Yugoslav partisans before departure and all forced laborers survived. Radnóti endured inhuman conditions while being forced to walk from Bor to Szentkirályszabadja, where he wrote his last poem on 31 October.

Murder and its aftermath edit

In November 1944, because of their total physical and mental exhaustion, Radnóti and twenty other prisoners were fatally shot and buried in a mass grave near the dam at Abda, by a guard squad of a commander and four soldiers of the Royal Hungarian Army. Different dates of this mass murder have been given. Some publications specify a day in the period from 6 to 10 November. In the detailed and scientific exhibition of 2009 by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 4 November was claimed to be the date of death.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

On 19 June 1946, the mass grave in Abda was exhumed, and personal documents, letters and photographs were found. On 25 June 1946, Radnóti was reburied in the Jewish cemetery of Győr, together with twenty-one other victims.

On 12 August 1946, his widow, Fanni Gyarmati went to Győr with Gyula Ortutay, Gábor Tolnai and Dezső Baróti to identify the body of her husband that was exhumed for the second time. In his work titled Ecce homo (Canadian Hungarian Newspaper, 2011), Tamás Szemenyei-Kiss describes how at the time of the second exhumation in Győr, Fanni Gyarmati had not seen her husband and was shown several objects that had never belonged to Radnóti. Therefore, at the time of the third burial, she was no longer sure that the closed coffin really contained her husband's remains. Miklós Radnóti's third funeral service in Budapest was held in public on 14 August 1946. The Tridentine Requiem Mass was offered by Radnóti's former spiritual director, Fr. Sándor Sík. Gyula Ortutay gave a eulogy on behalf of his friends. Radnóti was laid to rest in the Fiume Road Graveyard in Budapest, in plot 41, grave number 41.

The commander of the guards involved in the mass murder, Sgt. András Tálas, immediately joined the Communist Party of Hungary after the end of the Second World War, but he was arrested as part of a Stalinist political purge on 7 August 1945. He was tried and convicted by a post-war People's Court for his cruelty towards the slave labourers at the Bor concentration camp, and executed in 27 February 1947. Neither Radnóti's name nor the mass murder of Jewish prisoners near Abda, however, were mentioned in the voluminous prosecution file or during the trial. The other murderers' names remained unknown to the Hungarian people until 2006. There was a strictly confidential investigation conducted by the Ministry of Internal Affairs III during the communist era between 1967–1977, which identified four Royal Hungarian Army soldiers under of the command of Sgt. Tálas who were involved in the murder: Sándor Bodor, István Reszegi (or Reszegh; who both became long-time members in good standing of the ruling Hungarian Communist Party), as well as Sándor Kunos and János Malakuczi. No one else was ever indicted or prosecuted by the Communist single-party state. Sándor Kunos and János Malakuczi, however, who were not Party members, remained under covert surveillance by the Hungarian secret police (ÁVO).[11]

Bibliography (selection) edit

  • Pogány köszöntő (Pagan Greeting), Kortárs, Budapest 1930.
  • Újmódi pásztorok éneke (Songs of Modern Shepherds), Fiatal Magyarország, Budapest 1931.
  • Lábadozó szél (Convalescent Wind), Fiatalok Művészeti Kollégiumának kiadása, Szeged 1933.
  • Újhold (New Moon), Fiatalok Művészeti Kollégiumának kiadása, Szeged 1935.
  • Járkálj csak, halálraítélt! (Just Walk Around, Condemned!), Nyugat Kiadása, Budapest 1936.
  • Meredek út (Steep Road), Cserépfalvi, Budapest 1938.
  • Naptár (Calendar), Hungária, Budapest 1942.
  • Orpheus nyomában : műfordítások kétezer év költőiből (In the Footsteps of Orpheus: Translations of Poetry of Two Thousand Year Old Poets), Pharos, Budapest 1943.
  • Tajtékos ég (Foamy Sky), Révai, Budapest 1946.
  • Radnóti Miklós művei (Works of Miklós Radnóti), Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest 1978, ISBN 963-15-1182-0, biography by Pál Réz [hu]
  • Miklós Radnóti, The Complete Poetry in Hungarian and English, McFarland & Company, Jefferson 2014, ISBN 978-0-78646953-6[12]

Miklós Radnóti was Hungarian translator of works by Jean de La Fontaine and Guillaume Apollinaire. His works were translated into English by Edward G. Emery and Frederick Turner, into Serbo-Croatian by Danilo Kiš, into German by Franz Fühmann and into French by Jean-Luc Moreau [fr].[13]

Reviews edit

  • Findlay, Bill (1980), review of Forced March, in Cencrastus No. 2, Spring 1980, pp. 45 & 46, ISSN 0264-0856

Image Gallery edit

Articles edit

References edit

  1. ^ Zsuzsanna Ozsváth (2000), In the Footsteps of Orpheus: The Life and Times of Miklós Radnóti, University of Indiana Press. Page 2.
  2. ^ Zsuzsanna Ozsváth (2000), In the Footsteps of Orpheus: The Life and Times of Miklós Radnóti, University of Indiana Press. Page 1.
  3. ^ Online catalogue of the Exhibition, Hungarian Academy of Sciences; retrieved 17 January 2018.
  4. ^ Zsuzsanna Ozsváth 21 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine, In the footsteps of Orpheus: the life and times of Miklós RadnótiIndiana University Press, Bloomington 2000; ISBN 0-253-33801-8.
  5. ^ Biographical Dictionary of Central and Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century, Taylor & Francis, New York 2015; ISBN 978-0-7656-1027-0, Miklos Radnóti on Google Books, retrieved on 2018-01-17.
  6. ^ Death Blows Overhead: The Last Transports from Hungary, November 1944, European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI); retrieved 17 January 2018.
  7. ^ Article on Miklos Radnóti on the Website by the Poetry Foundation; retrieved 17 January 2018.
  8. ^ Final Poem,Translation 1 on the Website The HyperTexts,Translation 2 on the Website by Hungarian Academy of Sciences; retrieved 17 January 2018.
  9. ^ Grave 1 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine of the spouses; retrieved 17 January 2018.
  10. ^ The fate of the Radnóti statue in Abda, report on the Website Hungarian Spectrum, retrieved on 2018-01-19.
  11. ^ Tamás Csapody: Abdai gyilkosok (The Abda Killers) in: Aetas 25:1 (2010)
  12. ^ Online edition on Google Books.
  13. ^ WorldCat by OCLC, retrieved on 2018-01-18.

External links edit

  • One of his poems recited by Judi Dench (I cannot know)

miklós, radnóti, native, form, this, personal, name, radnóti, miklós, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, born, miklós, glatter, surname, variants, radnói, radnóczi, 1909, november, 1944, hungarian, poet, outstanding, repr. The native form of this personal name is Radnoti Miklos This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Miklos Radnoti born Miklos Glatter surname variants Radnoi Radnoczi 5 May 1909 4 or 9 November 1944 was a Hungarian poet an outstanding representative of modern Hungarian lyric poetry as well as a certified secondary school teacher of Hungarian and French He is characterised by his striving for pure genre and his revival of traditional tried and tested genres Miklos RadnotiMiklos RadnotiBornMiklos Glatter 1909 05 05 5 May 1909Budapest Austria HungaryDiedNovember 1944 aged 35 near Abda HungaryOccupationPoetNationalityHungarian Contents 1 Biography 2 Murder and its aftermath 3 Bibliography selection 4 Reviews 5 Image Gallery 6 Articles 7 References 8 External linksBiography editMiklos Glatter descended from a long line of Hungarian Jewish village merchants peddlers and pub keepers in Radnot in what is now Slovakia 1 At the time of his birth Miklos Glatter s father Jakab Glatter worked as a travelling salesman for the Bruck amp Grosz textile company which was owned by his brother in law 2 He was born in the 13th district Ujlipotvaros quarter of Budapest the capital city of the Kingdom of Hungary At birth his twin brother was born dead and his mother Ilona Grosz died soon after childbirth His father remarried in 1911 with Ilona Molnar 1885 1944 In 1921 his father died of stroke his guardian became his aunt s husband Dezso Grosz who was one of the owners of the textile company his father worked for until his death Radnoti attended primary and secondary school in his place of birth and continued his education at the high school for textile industry in Liberec from 1927 28 on his uncle s advice Then he worked as commercial correspondent in the familiar textile business company until 1930 Ultimately Radnoti was able to prevail with desire for another education and began studying philosophy Hungarian and French at the University of Szeged In 1934 he finished his studies with the philosophical doctoral thesis The artistic development of Margit Kaffka After graduation he Magyarised his surname to Radnoti after the native village of his paternal ancestors In August 1935 he married his long standing love Fanny Gyarmati 1912 2014 daughter of the owner of the respected Gyarmati printing house The very happy marriage was unfortunately childless until his deportation He gained his first professional experiences as secondary school teacher in the 1935 36 academic year at the Zsigmond Kemeny Gymnasium in Budapest In September 1940 he was conscripted to a labor battalion a kind of unarmed military service initially for those unfit for armed service but increasingly as the world war progressed a punishment for citizens considered untrustworthy like leftists dissidents Jews of the Royal Hungarian Army until December of that year then from July 1942 to April 1943 for the second time On 2 May 1943 he converted together with his wife from Judaism to the Roman Catholic faith In May 1944 Radnoti s third military labor service started and his battalion was deployed to the copper mines of Bor in Serbia After 1943 Hungarian Jewish forced laborers working in Bor s copper mines contributed to 50 percent of the copper used by the German war industry The overseers of the forced laborers of Bor were particularly notorious for their cruelty On 17 September 1944 the battalion was commanded to leave the camp on foot in two groups in a forced march to flee the advancing Allied armies Radnoti was in the first group about 3600 forced laborers around half of the group perished The overseers of the second group were ambushed by Yugoslav partisans before departure and all forced laborers survived Radnoti endured inhuman conditions while being forced to walk from Bor to Szentkiralyszabadja where he wrote his last poem on 31 October Murder and its aftermath editIn November 1944 because of their total physical and mental exhaustion Radnoti and twenty other prisoners were fatally shot and buried in a mass grave near the dam at Abda by a guard squad of a commander and four soldiers of the Royal Hungarian Army Different dates of this mass murder have been given Some publications specify a day in the period from 6 to 10 November In the detailed and scientific exhibition of 2009 by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 4 November was claimed to be the date of death 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 On 19 June 1946 the mass grave in Abda was exhumed and personal documents letters and photographs were found On 25 June 1946 Radnoti was reburied in the Jewish cemetery of Gyor together with twenty one other victims On 12 August 1946 his widow Fanni Gyarmati went to Gyor with Gyula Ortutay Gabor Tolnai and Dezso Baroti to identify the body of her husband that was exhumed for the second time In his work titled Ecce homo Canadian Hungarian Newspaper 2011 Tamas Szemenyei Kiss describes how at the time of the second exhumation in Gyor Fanni Gyarmati had not seen her husband and was shown several objects that had never belonged to Radnoti Therefore at the time of the third burial she was no longer sure that the closed coffin really contained her husband s remains Miklos Radnoti s third funeral service in Budapest was held in public on 14 August 1946 The Tridentine Requiem Mass was offered by Radnoti s former spiritual director Fr Sandor Sik Gyula Ortutay gave a eulogy on behalf of his friends Radnoti was laid to rest in the Fiume Road Graveyard in Budapest in plot 41 grave number 41 The commander of the guards involved in the mass murder Sgt Andras Talas immediately joined the Communist Party of Hungary after the end of the Second World War but he was arrested as part of a Stalinist political purge on 7 August 1945 He was tried and convicted by a post war People s Court for his cruelty towards the slave labourers at the Bor concentration camp and executed in 27 February 1947 Neither Radnoti s name nor the mass murder of Jewish prisoners near Abda however were mentioned in the voluminous prosecution file or during the trial The other murderers names remained unknown to the Hungarian people until 2006 There was a strictly confidential investigation conducted by the Ministry of Internal Affairs III during the communist era between 1967 1977 which identified four Royal Hungarian Army soldiers under of the command of Sgt Talas who were involved in the murder Sandor Bodor Istvan Reszegi or Reszegh who both became long time members in good standing of the ruling Hungarian Communist Party as well as Sandor Kunos and Janos Malakuczi No one else was ever indicted or prosecuted by the Communist single party state Sandor Kunos and Janos Malakuczi however who were not Party members remained under covert surveillance by the Hungarian secret police AVO 11 Bibliography selection editPogany koszonto Pagan Greeting Kortars Budapest 1930 Ujmodi pasztorok eneke Songs of Modern Shepherds Fiatal Magyarorszag Budapest 1931 Labadozo szel Convalescent Wind Fiatalok Muveszeti Kollegiumanak kiadasa Szeged 1933 Ujhold New Moon Fiatalok Muveszeti Kollegiumanak kiadasa Szeged 1935 Jarkalj csak halalraitelt Just Walk Around Condemned Nyugat Kiadasa Budapest 1936 Meredek ut Steep Road Cserepfalvi Budapest 1938 Naptar Calendar Hungaria Budapest 1942 Orpheus nyomaban muforditasok ketezer ev koltoibol In the Footsteps of Orpheus Translations of Poetry of Two Thousand Year Old Poets Pharos Budapest 1943 Tajtekos eg Foamy Sky Revai Budapest 1946 Radnoti Miklos muvei Works of Miklos Radnoti Szepirodalmi Konyvkiado Budapest 1978 ISBN 963 15 1182 0 biography by Pal Rez hu Miklos Radnoti The Complete Poetry in Hungarian and English McFarland amp Company Jefferson 2014 ISBN 978 0 78646953 6 12 Miklos Radnoti was Hungarian translator of works by Jean de La Fontaine and Guillaume Apollinaire His works were translated into English by Edward G Emery and Frederick Turner into Serbo Croatian by Danilo Kis into German by Franz Fuhmann and into French by Jean Luc Moreau fr 13 Reviews editFindlay Bill 1980 review of Forced March in Cencrastus No 2 Spring 1980 pp 45 amp 46 ISSN 0264 0856Image Gallery edit nbsp Statue in Budapest by Imre Varga nbsp Statue in Mohacs by Imre Varga nbsp Bust in Mosonmagyarovar nbsp Bust on Margaret Island nbsp Miklos Radnoti ELTE School in Budapest Zuglo nbsp Stolperstein in Budapest nbsp Memorial plaqueArticles editHistory of the Jews in Hungary Hungary during World War II The HolocaustReferences edit Zsuzsanna Ozsvath 2000 In the Footsteps of Orpheus The Life and Times of Miklos Radnoti University of Indiana Press Page 2 Zsuzsanna Ozsvath 2000 In the Footsteps of Orpheus The Life and Times of Miklos Radnoti University of Indiana Press Page 1 Online catalogue of the Exhibition Hungarian Academy of Sciences retrieved 17 January 2018 Zsuzsanna Ozsvath Archived 21 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine In the footsteps of Orpheus the life and times of Miklos RadnotiIndiana University Press Bloomington 2000 ISBN 0 253 33801 8 Biographical Dictionary of Central and Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century Taylor amp Francis New York 2015 ISBN 978 0 7656 1027 0 Miklos Radnoti on Google Books retrieved on 2018 01 17 Death Blows Overhead The Last Transports from Hungary November 1944 European Holocaust Research Infrastructure EHRI retrieved 17 January 2018 Article on Miklos Radnoti on the Website by the Poetry Foundation retrieved 17 January 2018 Final Poem Translation 1 on the Website The HyperTexts Translation 2 on the Website by Hungarian Academy of Sciences retrieved 17 January 2018 Grave Archived 1 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine of the spouses retrieved 17 January 2018 The fate of the Radnoti statue in Abda report on the Website Hungarian Spectrum retrieved on 2018 01 19 Tamas Csapody Abdai gyilkosok The Abda Killers in Aetas 25 1 2010 Online edition on Google Books WorldCat by OCLC retrieved on 2018 01 18 External links editOne of his poems recited by Judi Dench I cannot know Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miklos Radnoti amp oldid 1184836452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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