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State Protection Authority

The State Protection Authority[a] (Hungarian: Államvédelmi Hatóság, ÁVH) was the secret police of the People's Republic of Hungary from 1945 to 1956. The ÁVH was conceived as an external appendage of the Soviet Union's KGB in Hungary responsible for supporting the ruling Hungarian Working People's Party and persecuting political criminals. The ÁVH gained a reputation for brutality during a series of purges but was gradually reined in under the government of Imre Nagy, a moderate reformer, after he was appointed Prime Minister of Hungary in 1953. The ÁVH was dissolved by Nagy's revolutionary government during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and succeeded by the Ministry of Internal Affairs III.

State Protection Authority
Államvédelmi Hatóság
Agency overview
Formed10 September 1948 (1948-09-10)
Preceding agencies
  • Main Command Political Department (PRO) (2 February 1945 – October 1946)
  • State Protection Department (ÁVO) (October 1946 – September 1948)
Dissolved28 October 1956 (1956-10-28) (declared)
7 November 1956 (1956-11-07) (confirmed)
Superseding agency
TypeSecret police
JurisdictionHungary
HeadquartersAndrássy út 60., Budapest
Employees30,000 (1953)
Agency executives
Parent agencyBudapest Police
Ministry of Interior
AVH building

Archived data related to the ÁVH and the Ministry of Internal Affairs III are made available through the Historical Archives of the Hungarian State Security [hu].[1]

History edit

This is a summary of the organisations acting as political police between 1945 and 1956.

  • 1945: Budapest Department of State Political Police, (Budapesti Főkapitányság Politikai Rendészeti Osztálya, PRO)
  • 1946: Hungarian State Police State Defense Department, (Magyar Államrendőrség Államvédelmi Osztálya, ÁVO)
  • 1950: State Protection Authority, (Államvédelmi Hatóság, ÁVH)
  • 1956: the agency was abolished by the revolutionary government of Imre Nagy.

Between 1945 and 1952, Gábor Péter (Benjamin Eisenberger) was the absolute head of the State Protection Authority (Államvédelmi Hatóság), responsible for much cruelty, brutality and many political purges. László Rajk, the Communist Minister of Interior played a crucial role in organizing the State Protection Authority (ÁVH), but in 1949 he was one of its victims.

1953 Wallenberg show trial preparations edit

ÁVH actions were not subject to judicial review and remained so until the early post-Stalin era. On April 7, 1953, early in the morning, Miksa Domonkos, one of the leaders of the Neologue Jewish community in Budapest was kidnapped by ÁVH officials to extract "confessions".[2] Preparations for a show trial started in Budapest in 1953 to prove that Raoul Wallenberg had not been dragged off in 1945 to the Soviet Union but was the victim of cosmopolitan Zionists. For the purposes of this show trial, two more Jewish leaders – Dr. László Benedek and Lajos Stöckler (a leader of Hungary's Neologue Jews) – as well as two would-be "eyewitnesses" – Pál Szalai and Károly Szabó – were arrested and interrogated by torture.

The last people to meet Wallenberg in Budapest were Ottó Fleischmann, Károly Szabó, and Pál Szalai, who were invited to a supper at the Swedish Embassy building in Gyopár street on January 12, 1945.[3] The next day, January 13, Wallenberg contacted the Russians. By 1953, Ottó Fleischmann had left Hungary, working as a physician in Vienna, Antwerp, Ghent, Milan, Turin & Genoa.

On 8 April 1953, Károly Szabó was captured on the street and arrested without any legal procedure. His family had no news of him throughout the following six months. A secret trial was conducted against him of which no official record is available to date. After six months of interrogation, the defendants were driven to despair and exhaustion.

The idea that the "murderers of Wallenberg" were Budapest Zionists was primarily supported by Hungarian Communist leader and democratic reformer Ernő Gerő (a non-Jewish Jew born as Ernő Singer), which is shown by a note sent by him to First Secretary Mátyás Rákosi (another non-Jewish Jew born as Mátyás Rosenfeld).[4] The show trial was then initiated in Moscow, following Stalin's anti-Zionist campaign. After the death of Stalin and somewhat later execution of the former NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria, the preparations for the trial were eventually stopped and the arrested persons were released in fall 1953 under condition that they are not to divulge any part of the arrest. Lajos Stöckler became severely impaired psychologically from torture. Miksa Domonkos spent a week in hospital and died shortly afterwards at home, mainly due to the torture he had been subjected to.[2][5]

In Hungarian Revolution of 1956 edit

During the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, elements of the insurgents tracked down and killed both known and suspected ÁVH officers and informants. When the Revolution began, a crowd of some thousand people attacked the police headquarters in Budapest, shouting slogans such as "tear down the star!" and "free the prisoners!", referring to the enormous red star that stood on the building's roof, a symbol of communism and to the many prisoners kept inside. Fearing for the lives of both himself and his officers, the chief of the police let the crowd into the building, allowing them to take any political prisoners they wanted.

During and after the siege of the Hungarian Working People's Party headquarters (in Republic Square, Köztársaság tér), some members of the ÁVH were lynched, a fact later extensively used in party propaganda to back up the claim that the revolution was of a "fascistic, anti-Semitic and reactionary" nature.

Persecution by József Dudás' militia edit

Attacks on the ÁVH became a significant activity only as informal truces developed between the student-controlled combat organisations and the Soviet troops in Budapest. Freed from the necessity of immediate combat, the József Dudás militia planned a series of reprisals against ÁVH officers, informants, and on a few occasions against ordinary Communist-party members caught up in the revolution.

On October 29, in the second week of the revolution, the Dudás militia attacked the headquarters of the secret police in Budapest, massacring the ÁVH inside. This event was well documented by both western and eastern journalists and photographers, and constituted the primary evidence against Imre Nagy and other members of his cabinet in the White Books.

 
Protesters kicking the body of a slain ÁVH soldier

A Western eyewitness said:

The secret police lie twisted in the gutter [...] the Hungarians will not touch the corpse of an ÁVH man, not even to close the eyes or straighten the neck.

After Dudás' militia assaulted the building, the surrounding crowd lynched a number of ÁVH officers. Highly visible in photographs of this attack are the party's paybooks displayed on to the corpses, demonstrating that ÁVH soldiers received at least 10 times the wages of a manual worker.

Reaction of revolutionary forces to Dudás edit

When the students' and workers' councils discovered what the Dudás group was doing, they instituted armed patrols to arrest and detain ÁVH members for their own safety, and for future planned trials. As a result of Dudás' massacres, and the students' policy of arrest, many ÁVH voluntarily turned themselves in to students' or workers' councils to seek protective custody. This was a reflection of the shared student-worker policy of keeping the revolution pure and bloodless. Dudás was sought for arrest by the students' and workers' councils.

Retaliation edit

Unsurprisingly, when the Warsaw Pact intervened in the revolution to support the government, ÁVH officers carried out brutal reprisals against those who had killed their comrades. The ÁVH generally targeted all revolutionaries, and received significant assistance from the Soviet Union's security apparatus, who arrested the Nagy government, General Pál Maléter, and deported one student and workers to the Soviet Union.

House of Terror edit

Shortly after the Arrow Cross Party left it, the building under the address 60 Andrássy Avenue became the ÁVH Headquarters. The building is now a museum called The House of Terror, commemorating the victims of both political systems.

End of ÁVH edit

The subsequent government of János Kádár did not wish to resurrect the ÁVH under this name after 1956 (Kádár was tortured by the ÁVH in the 1950s), yet it flourished in the system of the Ministry of Interior (Hungarian BM). This should be considered in the light of the use of the Soviet security apparatus directly in Hungary after the 1956 revolution, and in preparation for the trial of Nagy and "his accomplices". Between 1956 and 1963 Kádár, a natural opportunist, fought an inner party battle against hardline Stalinists, although he accepted the services of many cruel former AVH torturers.

Kádár's victory was signalled in 1963 by a general amnesty for the 1956 revolutionaries, an indication of the absence of a political police. Hungary would go on to be the only Warsaw Pact country without a formal intelligence service, since all intelligence and espionage functions were vested in the AVH, and later the Hungarian Ministry of Interior.

Duties edit

While the security apparatus was operating, it supported the Hungarian Working People's Party (MDP) directly, with little reference made to Government norms. This support was primarily through the secret gathering of intelligence, largely through a vast network of informants, like the system used by the Ministry for State Security (Stasi) in the German Democratic Republic.

The investigation network was supplemented with a mechanism of secret arrests, followed by extensive periods of torture (lasting between 3 and 18 months). When the apparatus had extracted confessions of varying quality from a prisoner, the State's system of public procurators and courts would be called in to make a ruling on the sentence. This was the norm of operation for the ÁVH, and was diverged from in matters of only utmost state security; for example, the illegal arrest and indefinite solitary detention of the Communist Party of Great Britain operative Edith Bone. Despite the forced nature of confessions, retractions at trial were not considered a danger to the process, due to the obvious threat of continued torture during a recess of the trial.

International activities edit

The ÁVH also assisted the Soviet sphere security apparatus by staging show trials. In two cases, the ÁVH was given the privilege of leading an attack on undesired elements throughout Hungary. In 1948 the Roman Catholic Cardinal József Mindszenty was tried and imprisoned. In 1949, the ÁVH arrested Hungarian Communist Party member László Rajk, who was then tried and executed for nationalism and Titoism in a show trial that signified to the international communist movement that Yugoslavia was now a threat. (László Rajk was the man who had organised the ÁVH.)

Concentration camps edit

Following sentence, political prisoners were imprisoned. To serve this purpose, more penal institutions (the prison in Vác, the transit prison, the state security prison in Mosonyi Street) and internment camps (in Kistarcsa, Recsk, Tiszalök, Kazincbarcika and according to the latest research, in Bernátkút and Sajóbábony) were placed under the supervision of the State Protection Authority. [6] The most notorious of these camps were in Recsk, Kistarcsa, Tiszalök and Kazincbarcika. [7]

These camps were mixed and varied. Early camps tended to be cruder and more cruel. In particular, the status of ex-party members varied. In camps prior to 1953 they were more harshly treated than other prisoners. After 1953, ex-party members were a virtual aristocracy within prisons.[citation needed] Additionally, prior to 1953 certain camps had as their goal the eventual death of inmates due to overwork and maltreatment.[citation needed] In a number of cases, torture was an essential part of camp life and discipline.[citation needed]

Imre Nagy's first government from 1953 to 1955 vastly improved conditions in the camps and halted the efforts to exterminate political prisoners.[citation needed]

See also: Kistarcsa Central Internment Camp [hu]

Successor edit

The Hungarian Ministry of Interior created the Ministry of Internal Affairs III for domestic and foreign intelligence purposes until the end of the Cold War. It operated with considerably more restraint than the ÁVH.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also translated as State Security Authority and State Defense Authority

References edit

  1. ^ . Hungarian Archives Portal. Archived from the original on 2019-09-14. Retrieved 2021-10-23.
  2. ^ a b Interview with István Domonkos 2007-10-23 at the Wayback Machine, son of Miksa Domonkos who died after the show trial preparations (in Hungarian)
  3. ^ József Szekeres: Saving the Ghettos of Budapest in January 1945, Pál Szalai "the Hungarian Schindler" ISBN 963-7323-14-7, Budapest 1997, Publisher: Budapest Archives, p. 74
  4. ^ Kenedi János: Egy kiállítás hiányzó képei 2007-03-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Hungarian)
  5. ^ Hungarian Quarterly 2007-02-27 at the Wayback Machine (in Hungarian)
  6. ^ From secret interrogations to the “Vatican” of transit prison
  7. ^ Internment

External links edit

  • The history of ÁVH (in Hungarian), from the website of the Public Historical Files of the Hungarian Secret Services [1]
  • An informative review in East Central Europe (in English)

state, protection, authority, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, hungari. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Hungarian May 2013 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Hungarian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 595 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Hungarian Wikipedia article at hu Allamvedelmi Hatosag see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated hu Allamvedelmi Hatosag to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources State Protection Authority news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The State Protection Authority a Hungarian Allamvedelmi Hatosag AVH was the secret police of the People s Republic of Hungary from 1945 to 1956 The AVH was conceived as an external appendage of the Soviet Union s KGB in Hungary responsible for supporting the ruling Hungarian Working People s Party and persecuting political criminals The AVH gained a reputation for brutality during a series of purges but was gradually reined in under the government of Imre Nagy a moderate reformer after he was appointed Prime Minister of Hungary in 1953 The AVH was dissolved by Nagy s revolutionary government during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and succeeded by the Ministry of Internal Affairs III State Protection AuthorityAllamvedelmi HatosagAgency overviewFormed10 September 1948 1948 09 10 Preceding agenciesMain Command Political Department PRO 2 February 1945 October 1946 State Protection Department AVO October 1946 September 1948 Dissolved28 October 1956 1956 10 28 declared 7 November 1956 1956 11 07 confirmed Superseding agencyMinistry of Internal Affairs IIITypeSecret policeJurisdictionHungaryHeadquartersAndrassy ut 60 BudapestEmployees30 000 1953 Agency executivesGabor Peter 1945 1953 Laszlo Piros 1953 1956 Parent agencyBudapest PoliceMinistry of Interior AVH building Archived data related to the AVH and the Ministry of Internal Affairs III are made available through the Historical Archives of the Hungarian State Security hu 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 1953 Wallenberg show trial preparations 1 2 In Hungarian Revolution of 1956 1 3 Persecution by Jozsef Dudas militia 1 3 1 Reaction of revolutionary forces to Dudas 1 4 Retaliation 1 5 House of Terror 1 6 End of AVH 2 Duties 2 1 International activities 2 2 Concentration camps 3 Successor 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThis is a summary of the organisations acting as political police between 1945 and 1956 1945 Budapest Department of State Political Police Budapesti Fokapitanysag Politikai Rendeszeti Osztalya PRO 1946 Hungarian State Police State Defense Department Magyar Allamrendorseg Allamvedelmi Osztalya AVO 1950 State Protection Authority Allamvedelmi Hatosag AVH 1956 the agency was abolished by the revolutionary government of Imre Nagy Between 1945 and 1952 Gabor Peter Benjamin Eisenberger was the absolute head of the State Protection Authority Allamvedelmi Hatosag responsible for much cruelty brutality and many political purges Laszlo Rajk the Communist Minister of Interior played a crucial role in organizing the State Protection Authority AVH but in 1949 he was one of its victims 1953 Wallenberg show trial preparations edit AVH actions were not subject to judicial review and remained so until the early post Stalin era On April 7 1953 early in the morning Miksa Domonkos one of the leaders of the Neologue Jewish community in Budapest was kidnapped by AVH officials to extract confessions 2 Preparations for a show trial started in Budapest in 1953 to prove that Raoul Wallenberg had not been dragged off in 1945 to the Soviet Union but was the victim of cosmopolitan Zionists For the purposes of this show trial two more Jewish leaders Dr Laszlo Benedek and Lajos Stockler a leader of Hungary s Neologue Jews as well as two would be eyewitnesses Pal Szalai and Karoly Szabo were arrested and interrogated by torture The last people to meet Wallenberg in Budapest were Otto Fleischmann Karoly Szabo and Pal Szalai who were invited to a supper at the Swedish Embassy building in Gyopar street on January 12 1945 3 The next day January 13 Wallenberg contacted the Russians By 1953 Otto Fleischmann had left Hungary working as a physician in Vienna Antwerp Ghent Milan Turin amp Genoa On 8 April 1953 Karoly Szabo was captured on the street and arrested without any legal procedure His family had no news of him throughout the following six months A secret trial was conducted against him of which no official record is available to date After six months of interrogation the defendants were driven to despair and exhaustion The idea that the murderers of Wallenberg were Budapest Zionists was primarily supported by Hungarian Communist leader and democratic reformer Erno Gero a non Jewish Jew born as Erno Singer which is shown by a note sent by him to First Secretary Matyas Rakosi another non Jewish Jew born as Matyas Rosenfeld 4 The show trial was then initiated in Moscow following Stalin s anti Zionist campaign After the death of Stalin and somewhat later execution of the former NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria the preparations for the trial were eventually stopped and the arrested persons were released in fall 1953 under condition that they are not to divulge any part of the arrest Lajos Stockler became severely impaired psychologically from torture Miksa Domonkos spent a week in hospital and died shortly afterwards at home mainly due to the torture he had been subjected to 2 5 In Hungarian Revolution of 1956 edit During the 1956 Hungarian Revolution elements of the insurgents tracked down and killed both known and suspected AVH officers and informants When the Revolution began a crowd of some thousand people attacked the police headquarters in Budapest shouting slogans such as tear down the star and free the prisoners referring to the enormous red star that stood on the building s roof a symbol of communism and to the many prisoners kept inside Fearing for the lives of both himself and his officers the chief of the police let the crowd into the building allowing them to take any political prisoners they wanted During and after the siege of the Hungarian Working People s Party headquarters in Republic Square Koztarsasag ter some members of the AVH were lynched a fact later extensively used in party propaganda to back up the claim that the revolution was of a fascistic anti Semitic and reactionary nature Persecution by Jozsef Dudas militia edit Attacks on the AVH became a significant activity only as informal truces developed between the student controlled combat organisations and the Soviet troops in Budapest Freed from the necessity of immediate combat the Jozsef Dudas militia planned a series of reprisals against AVH officers informants and on a few occasions against ordinary Communist party members caught up in the revolution On October 29 in the second week of the revolution the Dudas militia attacked the headquarters of the secret police in Budapest massacring the AVH inside This event was well documented by both western and eastern journalists and photographers and constituted the primary evidence against Imre Nagy and other members of his cabinet in the White Books nbsp Protesters kicking the body of a slain AVH soldier A Western eyewitness said The secret police lie twisted in the gutter the Hungarians will not touch the corpse of an AVH man not even to close the eyes or straighten the neck After Dudas militia assaulted the building the surrounding crowd lynched a number of AVH officers Highly visible in photographs of this attack are the party s paybooks displayed on to the corpses demonstrating that AVH soldiers received at least 10 times the wages of a manual worker Reaction of revolutionary forces to Dudas edit When the students and workers councils discovered what the Dudas group was doing they instituted armed patrols to arrest and detain AVH members for their own safety and for future planned trials As a result of Dudas massacres and the students policy of arrest many AVH voluntarily turned themselves in to students or workers councils to seek protective custody This was a reflection of the shared student worker policy of keeping the revolution pure and bloodless Dudas was sought for arrest by the students and workers councils Retaliation edit Unsurprisingly when the Warsaw Pact intervened in the revolution to support the government AVH officers carried out brutal reprisals against those who had killed their comrades The AVH generally targeted all revolutionaries and received significant assistance from the Soviet Union s security apparatus who arrested the Nagy government General Pal Maleter and deported one student and workers to the Soviet Union House of Terror edit Shortly after the Arrow Cross Party left it the building under the address 60 Andrassy Avenue became the AVH Headquarters The building is now a museum called The House of Terror commemorating the victims of both political systems End of AVH edit The subsequent government of Janos Kadar did not wish to resurrect the AVH under this name after 1956 Kadar was tortured by the AVH in the 1950s yet it flourished in the system of the Ministry of Interior Hungarian BM This should be considered in the light of the use of the Soviet security apparatus directly in Hungary after the 1956 revolution and in preparation for the trial of Nagy and his accomplices Between 1956 and 1963 Kadar a natural opportunist fought an inner party battle against hardline Stalinists although he accepted the services of many cruel former AVH torturers Kadar s victory was signalled in 1963 by a general amnesty for the 1956 revolutionaries an indication of the absence of a political police Hungary would go on to be the only Warsaw Pact country without a formal intelligence service since all intelligence and espionage functions were vested in the AVH and later the Hungarian Ministry of Interior Duties editWhile the security apparatus was operating it supported the Hungarian Working People s Party MDP directly with little reference made to Government norms This support was primarily through the secret gathering of intelligence largely through a vast network of informants like the system used by the Ministry for State Security Stasi in the German Democratic Republic The investigation network was supplemented with a mechanism of secret arrests followed by extensive periods of torture lasting between 3 and 18 months When the apparatus had extracted confessions of varying quality from a prisoner the State s system of public procurators and courts would be called in to make a ruling on the sentence This was the norm of operation for the AVH and was diverged from in matters of only utmost state security for example the illegal arrest and indefinite solitary detention of the Communist Party of Great Britain operative Edith Bone Despite the forced nature of confessions retractions at trial were not considered a danger to the process due to the obvious threat of continued torture during a recess of the trial International activities edit The AVH also assisted the Soviet sphere security apparatus by staging show trials In two cases the AVH was given the privilege of leading an attack on undesired elements throughout Hungary In 1948 the Roman Catholic Cardinal Jozsef Mindszenty was tried and imprisoned In 1949 the AVH arrested Hungarian Communist Party member Laszlo Rajk who was then tried and executed for nationalism and Titoism in a show trial that signified to the international communist movement that Yugoslavia was now a threat Laszlo Rajk was the man who had organised the AVH Concentration camps edit Following sentence political prisoners were imprisoned To serve this purpose more penal institutions the prison in Vac the transit prison the state security prison in Mosonyi Street and internment camps in Kistarcsa Recsk Tiszalok Kazincbarcika and according to the latest research in Bernatkut and Sajobabony were placed under the supervision of the State Protection Authority 6 The most notorious of these camps were in Recsk Kistarcsa Tiszalok and Kazincbarcika 7 These camps were mixed and varied Early camps tended to be cruder and more cruel In particular the status of ex party members varied In camps prior to 1953 they were more harshly treated than other prisoners After 1953 ex party members were a virtual aristocracy within prisons citation needed Additionally prior to 1953 certain camps had as their goal the eventual death of inmates due to overwork and maltreatment citation needed In a number of cases torture was an essential part of camp life and discipline citation needed Imre Nagy s first government from 1953 to 1955 vastly improved conditions in the camps and halted the efforts to exterminate political prisoners citation needed See also Kistarcsa Central Internment Camp hu Successor editThe Hungarian Ministry of Interior created the Ministry of Internal Affairs III for domestic and foreign intelligence purposes until the end of the Cold War It operated with considerably more restraint than the AVH Notes edit Also translated as State Security Authority and State Defense AuthorityReferences edit Historical Archives of the Hungarian State Security Hungarian Archives Portal Archived from the original on 2019 09 14 Retrieved 2021 10 23 a b Interview with Istvan Domonkos Archived 2007 10 23 at the Wayback Machine son of Miksa Domonkos who died after the show trial preparations in Hungarian Jozsef Szekeres Saving the Ghettos of Budapest in January 1945 Pal Szalai the Hungarian Schindler ISBN 963 7323 14 7 Budapest 1997 Publisher Budapest Archives p 74 Kenedi Janos Egy kiallitas hianyzo kepei Archived 2007 03 02 at the Wayback Machine in Hungarian Hungarian Quarterly Archived 2007 02 27 at the Wayback Machine in Hungarian From secret interrogations to the Vatican of transit prison InternmentExternal links editThe history of AVH in Hungarian from the website of the Public Historical Files of the Hungarian Secret Services 1 Homepage Raoul Wallenberg Asso fr An informative review in East Central Europe in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title State Protection Authority amp oldid 1218927450 history of the AVH, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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