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Title: Hungary 1956
Author: Mouvement Communiste
Date: March 2007
Language: en
Topics: council communism, workers’ control, insurrection
Source: https://marx.libcom.org/library/hungary-56-proletariat-storming-heaven-mouvement-communiste

Mouvement Communiste

Hungary 1956

INTRODUCTION

50 years after the insurrection which began on 23 October 1956 in

Budapest and was drowned in blood by Stalinism, a second burial has

taken place in the form of homage. What Stalinism did not succeed in

doing: denying the workers’ character of the insurrection, whether in

the nature of the majority of its participants or in its organisation;

was achieved by the democrats and nationalists, here and in Hungary. Not

once during the commemorations did they speak of the workers, of their

struggle and their organisation. On the contrary, the “Hungarian

Revolution” was a “national”, “moral” and “ethical” revolution, whose

representative was the “brave” Imre Nagy who on this occasion they

forgot had always been a Stalinist.

If they felt obliged to talk about the councils it was to reduce them to

a kind of honest trade unionism and, in any case, to never mention the

fact that after the military crushing of 7 November 1956, they continued

and expanded their action for a month and a half. As for the military

question, during the scandal which affected the Prime Minister GurcsĂĄny

in September 2006 we saw the Hungarian extreme right trying to ape the

moment when the demonstration swung against Stalinism into a general

insurrection, on 23 October 1956, by a pseudo-demo in front of the radio

station. Also they forget the struggle, certainly desperate, of the

miners of SalgĂłtarjĂĄn which continued until January 1957.

So, it is necessary to set the record straight:

the Russian army, the AVO and the hostile sections of the Hungarian

army;

difficult conditions to elaborate a political and theoretical programme

which can be criticised today, but which constituted the high point of

the limits of its time.

Whatever were its limits, its enemies of yesterday, the Stalinist

killers and their accomplices in the Western bourgeoisies, understood

very well what the danger was: the return of proletarian revolution to

the stage of history.

Here it is not a question of criticising what happened in the past from

a pre-established point of view but, above all, of taking account of the

facts, the actions, methods and means by which the Hungarian workers

organised themselves, struggled and tried to understand the

revolutionary moment they were living through.

We have not analysed the importance of nationalism[1], of anti-semitism,

of the return of the fascists, of the hope of support from the Western

countries or of the contradictory support given to Imre Nagy. To varying

degrees these phenomena existed. But they were not determining factors

in the insurrection. We are only going to deal with the actions of the

workers from the military and political sides.

In setting out this presentation the text is comprised of two parts, the

events and the conclusions which we draw from them.

The first part therefore consists of:

which allowed the insurrection to happen,

the insurgents.

The second part consists of:

to crush the insurrection,

THE EVENTS

The material bases

In such a document we can’t retrace the complete history of capitalist

development in the Hungarian region, nor the complete history of

workers’ struggles and organisations, and even less detail the council

revolution of 1919. Nevertheless, the revolution of 1956, principally in

Budapest, was only able to develop itself with its specific

characteristics because capitalist development had taken one trajectory

and not another and as a counter point the working class itself also had

specific traits. Let’s look at the main points.

A unique capitalist development

Contrary to the other European countries, Hungary did not undergo an

economic development based on the textile industry or mining but on

flour milling. Budapest was, by virtue of its geographic position, a

transit point for cereals, which led to the creation of mills, starting

in 1850, and then the mechanised industry necessary for their

functioning [2] and for the processing of cereals, linked with the older

industry of coach-building.

Starting from this mechanical industrial base there developed more

diverse industry, including railway construction (locomotives and

wagons), steel, food processing and then electricity and electrical

engineering. The great industrialists of the epoch were Weiss (the

Hungarian Schneider ruling on the island of Csepel, then a suburb of

Budapest) steel, armaments, machine tools; Ganz, electricity, railways,

shipyards, diesel engines; LĂĄng, foundries, wagon factories, etc. This

development was concentrated almost exclusively in Budapest and its

region[3], the workshop of Hungary, so much so that in 1896 the town had

already acquired 600,000 inhabitants [4], 1,200,000 in 1912 and

1,400,000 in 1920. This was accompanied by the growth of the number of

workers in industry: 65,000 workers in 1896, 165,000 in 1912, 180,000 in

1920.

The end of the Austro-Hungarian Empire was a catastrophe for Hungarian

Capital, cutting it off from a good part of its market, which had become

“foreign”. Nevertheless, after this shock, industrial development

continued in the following years with the appearance of textiles[5],

automobiles[6] and aeronautics as well as the continuation of railways.

From 1920 to 1938, industrial production grew by 28%. The Second World

War, the German occupation and the destructions of 1945 slowed the

industrial development.

But it resumed again after the arrival of the Stalinists in power in

November 1948 in all sectors, even if, five year plans permitting, the

accent was put on heavy industry whose symbol was the creation from

nothing of the steel complex at Dunapentele renamed SztalinvĂĄros

(“Stalingrad”!). The reorganisation of industry (nationalisation of all

firms with more than 100 employees, in March 1949, preceded in March

1946 by the “requisition” of the Weiss, Ganz and Láng factories)

followed that of the banks (nationalisation in 1948), then the

collectivisation of the land, translated itself into regroupments,

fusions of pre-existing firms without necessarily investing in the

renewal of the productive apparatus - the re-division of types of

production within the Eastern bloc suppressing the goad of market

competition.

1956: Workers’ Budapest

In January 1950, the government decided to combine Budapest (14 central

districts) with 23 suburban municipalities, having a population of

550,000 inhabitants. Some of these municipalities were only villages but

others, such as Újpest, Kispest and Csepel were industrial and worker

concentrations. This created a greater Budapest of twenty two districts

composing 1,600,000 inhabitants and 300,000 employees[7] in an industry

which covered all sectors.

Budapest thus possessed two unusual traits for a large western city: the

central districts of Pest were always densely populated and the

industrial infrastructure, present everywhere except on the hills of

Buda, was very close to the town centre and was represented by big

factories: Ganz Electric (Second District), MOM (Twelth District),

Beloiannisz and Gamma (Eleventh) in Buda; MAVAG and Ganz Vagon (Eighth),

Télefongyår (Fourteenth), Dreher and Köbanya breweries (Tenth), Ganz

shipyards (Thirteenth) and Óbuda (Third), Láng factory (Thirteenth).

In addition to the factories of the peripheral districts of EgyesĂŒlt

IzzĂł (Újpest, Fourth), Vörös CsillĂĄg (Kispest, Nineteenth) and Ikarus

(RĂĄkosmihaly, Sixteenth), there are those of Csepel (Twenty First): oil

refinery, vegetable oil factory, Csepeli Papirgyar (paper mill) and the

Weiss complex (renamed “Mátiás Rákosi” in honour of the Hungarian Stalin

since 1948) composed of 18 factories making steel, arms, munitions,

machine tools, trucks, bicycles and motorbikes, etc.

Each one of these factories had a staff of 2-4000; the Csepel complex

itself had 40,000 workers.

This proximity was favourable to organisation and contacts during the

first moments of the insurrection, between workers and demonstrators and

then between workers. Nevertheless, the workers of the Budapest councils

complained, along with their comrades from the provinces, about the

dimensions of the town (15 km from Csepel to Újpest, from south to

north; 10 km from the Eleventh to the Sixteenth districts, from the

west, for example) which in addition to the fighting which blocked the

centre of the city created difficulties of communication. This was

unlike the towns of the provinces, like Miskolc (the DIMAVAG factory) or

Györ (the wagon factory Györi MAVAG and the truck factory RAABA), where

one big factory concentrated them into councils and the workers’ guard

and served as the rallying point for the population.

But apart from this concentration in the city, the working class had

other traits which we have to emphasise in order to understand the

conditions preceding the insurrection.

First of all let’s look at the class composition.

The factories of Budapest had not experienced the rationalisation at

work in the West, that is to say the fantastic growth of unskilled

workers. They were therefore traditional factories and, however advanced

they were in terms of the conception of products, they still used a

great deal of skilled labour.

This technically formed working class benefited more from the social

promotion pushed forwards by the Stalinists who, via evening courses at

the Technical University or by adult continuing education, allowed some

workers an elevation in the technical hierarchy of the firm by becoming

engineers.

It’s important to appreciate that the party needed new engineers to

counter-balance the power of the old engineers which it was not able to

do without. They had technical power in research and design and in the

organisation of production, but also trade union power because, from

before the war, there existed a union of engineers and technicians with

close to 2000 members in Budapest and which was quite combative. Despite

the union’s dissolution in 1948[8], this corporatism which was hostile

to the party apparatus never disappeared in the factories.

The paradox would be that workers who followed the courses at the

University would thus be in contact with the Petöfi circle[9] and

transmit its ideas into the factories, while the workers promoted to

engineers would be the prime movers of the workers’ councils.

Elsewhere the concrete conditions of existence of the workers were

catastrophic: working conditions were deplorable, wages were low (the

level of 1938 was only regained in 1956, while it had fallen by 75%

between 1949 and 1952) and it was necessary to battle ceaselessly

against piece rates and the increase of the norms.

The hopes of change born in 1944-45 had disappeared but the Nagy

interlude (1953-1955) gave new hopes to the workers, who oscillated

between enthusiasm (social promotion) and hostility (absenteeism,

sloppiness, struggles against norms and piece rates). The return of the

“hard Stalinists” to power translated itself into increased pressure in

the factories. The pot began to boil from the summer of 1956.

Now let’s look at the political formation.

After the crushing of the revolution of 1919, the CP experienced a phase

of small group existence accentuated by Stalinisation. At the end of the

Second World War the CP only had a few active militants (mostly in

prison) in Hungary itself. Most of its leaders would return in the

wagons of the Russian army, including Nagy, Gérö, Révai and Råkosi. In

Budapest it was even a minority and small [10] in relation to the two

other parties which came out of that of AladĂĄr Weisshaus and PĂĄl

Demeny[11] in the pre-war years of splits in its ranks. The party of

Demeny was well implanted in the factories of Csepel, Kispest and

RĂĄkospalota[12]. These two leaders were arrested when the Russians

arrived, during a regroupment meeting, but the militants remained and

contributed to influencing the workers to be critical towards the CP.

The social democratic party was ten times more important than the CP in

terms of number of militants in 1945 and was hegemonic in the factories

of Budapest. While the left of the SDP fused with the CP (a consequence

of the subterranean work of MarosĂĄn)[13], many workers joined the CP but

maintained their critical spirit and would contribute to the formation

of other workers, for example SĂĄndor Bali who influenced SĂĄndor RĂĄcz

(the future leader of the Workers’ Council of Greater Budapest), both

workers (and toolmakers) at the Beloiannisz factory.

Without making too much of an artificial division based on the yardstick

of just a few examples it nevertheless appears that the working class in

1956 was divided into three groups based on age:

than the factory and triumphant Stalinist society,

education before Stalinism,

participate in the revolution of the councils of 1919.

But this political consciousness was completely informal, the Stalinist

CP having absorbed everything into its ranks, and there was obviously no

legal opposition or clandestine groups.

One of the major paradoxes of the working class in Hungary is that the

CP was hegemonic and therefore the future leaders and organisers of the

councils came out of its ranks, making it implode, but some of them

maintained attachments to and illusions in Stalinism.

Chronology

The tremors

1953

5 March: death of Stalin

13-16 June: the leadership of the Hungarian CP convenes in Moscow.

MĂĄtiĂĄs RĂĄkosi gives way to Imre Nagy as head of the government but

remains First Secretary of the Party.

17-18 June: workers’ insurrection in East Berlin.

4 July: discussion about the enthronement of Nagy: The “new course” of

Nagy rests on relaxing the pressure on the peasants, the right for them

to leave the collective farms, giving priority to investment in

consumption goods (rather than heavy industry), partial amnesty for

prisoners, the closing of internment camps and labour camps, the right

to return to the towns for those “exiled” to the countryside, religious

tolerance.

1954

5 July: riot in Budapest following the defeat of the Hungarian football

team in the final of the World Cup in Berne. Local strikes during the

summer.

1955

25 March: foundation of the PĂ©tƑfi circle in Budapest.

14 April: Imre Nagy is sacked from the post of head of government and

replaced by AndrĂĄs HegedĂŒs, RĂĄkosi’s man.

1956

14-25 February: Twentieth Congress of the CPSU and the Khrushchev

report.

April 1956: the pot boils: strikes in the factories of Csepel. The

PĂ©tƑfi circle becomes the centre of opposition.

18 June: during a meeting of the PĂ©tƑfi circle, JĂșlia Rajk calls for the

rehabilitation of her husband LĂĄszlĂł Rajk, an old leader of the CP, shot

in 1949.

27 June: another meeting of the PĂ©tƑfi circle where 5000 people demand

political change. The debate, starting at 19.00, lasts until 4.00 in the

morning and continues in the street after the end of the meeting.

28 June: worker uprising in the Zispo factories of PoznaƄ (Poland)

repressed by the Polish security forces. The impact is enormous in

Hungary.

18 July: RĂĄkosi is sacked by MikoĂŻan/Souslov, leaves for the USSR and is

replaced by ErnƑ GerƑ. Renewal of the Political Bureau of the CP (Kádár

and MarosĂĄn, for example, rejoin it).

July: strikes in Csepel.

6 October: the national funeral of Rajk in the Farkasrét cemetery in

Budapest, which GerƑ and Nagy attend, turns into a demonstration of

100,000 people hostile to the regime.

16 October: in the University of Szeged, the students found an

association which is independent of the Party and travel all over the

country to informer the other universities.

19 October: Khrushchev comes to Warsaw and anoints GomuƂka General

Secretary of the Polish CP.

20-21 October: rallies and public meetings organised by the students are

joined by workers in many towns in the provinces.

22 October: rallies in the universities of Budapest provoked by the

arrival of students from Szeged who have created an organisation

independent of the Party and have come to explain their action and

demands. “The wind blows in from Poland”, notably in the technical

university (situated in Buda). At the beginning the demands are specific

to the University but quickly go beyond this framework to arrive after

21 hours at the famous points, which include the departure of the

Russian troops.

of Russian troops,

Multi-party elections,

independent producers,

condemned at the MihĂĄly Farkas trials[15],

1848-49 against the Habsburgs,

This deed followed a growing agitation in the universities of Budapest,

Szeged and Debrecen for a week. There were 4000 participants in the

rally at the Technical University. The decision was taken at the

assembly to organise a demonstration for the next day.

At Miskolc, following the student agitation which lasted several days,

the workers of the factory of DIMAVAG[16] decided to create a factory

council which put forward a programme of demands in 21 points (which

included the ten points mentioned above) and took over the running of

the factory.

Tuesday 23 October 1956

“From here to tomorrow we will overturn the world!”

Banned at 13.00, then authorised by the government at 14.30, several

demonstrations set off: one to Pest in front of the statue of PĂ©tƑfi,

which the students from the Eötvös Lorant University of Law participated

in, another, to Buda, leaving from the Technical University towards the

statue of General Bem. The first joined the second then passed the West

Station where it left at 17.00 with workers joining it. At 19.00, the

demonstration, which comprised 100-150,000 people, decided to gather in

Pest, in Parliament Square where ErnƑ GerƑ arrived around 22.00 to make

an arrogant speech on the radio at the same time.

Then Nagy, returning from holiday, as a matter of urgency made a speech

in Parliament at 21.00, not promising very much. Part of the

demonstrators went to Hösök tere (Place of the Heroes) to tear down the

statue of Stalin, another part to the radio station on Brody SĂĄndor

utca[17], to protest against GerƑ’s speech. At 22.00 the troops of the

AVO[18] (500 to 600 members) who were guarding the building opened fire.

This was the beginning of the insurrection. The radio station was only

taken the next day towards 11.00 by the insurgents. The balance sheet

would be 40 deaths on the side of the occupants and around 200 on the

side of the insurgents.

Units of the Hungarian army sent to reinforce the defence of the radio

station allowed themselves to be disarmed by the demonstrators or passed

over to their side. Some workers returned to the factories where the

night shift stopped work and seized some arms depots of the workers’

militia and some stock from armaments factories. To some extent all over

Budapest battles began against the political police.

In the provinces, as the news from Budapest became known, the

insurrection started up in Györ and Miskolc, industrial towns in the

west and north-east of Hungary.

The first Russian intervention (24/10 – 29/10)

24 October:

Russian units stationed in the provinces (from Székesféhervår 70 km to

the south-west and from CĂ©gled 80 km to the south-east) arrived in

Budapest in the early hours of the morning: several hundred T-34 tanks

and from 6000 to 7000 soldiers. They had been on a state of alert since

22 October. They were then joined by troops coming from the Ukraine who

gathered on 21 October at ZĂĄhony, a frontier post between Hungary and

the Ukraine[19]. Spontaneous resistance groups organised themselves

against the AVO and the Russian troops while trying to fraternise with

the latter. The main places of battle were: Széna tér and Móricz

Zsigmond körtér in Buda; Corvin köz, TƱzoltó utca, the station at

FerencvĂĄros, the West Station in Pest; the industrial complex of Csepel.

The radio announced the nomination of Nagy as the head of the

government, the promulgation of martial law and the appeal made by Nagy

to the Russian Army (in fact, it was GerƑ who appealed to them) who had

intervened at dawn against the insurgents.

The spontaneous general strike was total. In Budapest, in addition to

the big factories, all the municipal and transport services were on

strike.

Revolutionary district committees appeared, for example, in Újpest, but

also in the provinces (Györ, Miskolc). The first workers’ council in

Budapest was created in the factory of EgyesĂŒlt IzzĂł in Újpest, then in

the metallurgical complex of Csepel. They spread across the whole

country starting from 25 October.

SĂĄndor Kopacsi[20], colonel prefect of police of Budapest since 1952,

went over to the side of the insurgents and distributed arms to

students, organising units linked to the police headquarters.

In the provinces, everywhere revolutionary committees composed of

delegates from the councils of workers, soldiers and peasants took power

and disarmed the political police. Radio Miskolc and Radio Györ were in

the hands of the revolutionary forces. The first delegations were sent

to the Nagy government which made new promises and tried to make the

insurgents lay down their arms.

25 October:

GerƑ, secretary of the Party, is removed from his post by Souslov and

MikoĂŻan who arrived the day before in Budapest and is replaced by JĂĄnos

KĂĄdĂĄr. Nagy and KĂĄdĂĄr promise reforms, but demand that the insurgents

lay down their arms.

In front of Parliament, where there is a peaceful demonstration

fraternising with the Russian tank drivers[21], there is a fusillade of

bullets fired into the crowd and at the Russian tanks (certainly by the

AVO) from the Ministry of Defence. Then the Russian troops fire in all

directions. The result: one hundred or so dead.

Colonel Pål Maléter, who previously wanted to retake the Kiliån barracks

from the insurgents of the Corvin passage, passes the next day on to the

side of the insurrection and provides it with some armoured cars.

26 October:

The fighting continues. In MosonmagyarĂłvĂĄr (a town close to the Austrian

frontier), the National Guard fires on a demonstration, causing 52

deaths.

The spontaneous opening of the prisons by the insurgents: 5500 prisoners

freed. In total, up until 4 November, 17,000 prisoners will be freed of

which 75% will be common law prisoners and 25% political.

27 October:

Formation of a national government: Nagy makes an appeal to the old

parties (peasant, small owners, social-democrats). The first pause in

the fighting and fraternisation in some places with the Russian troops.

28 October:

The radio announces a cease-fire. Nagy presents the programme of the new

government and demands the withdrawal of the Russian troops.

GerƑ, HegedĂŒs (ex-Prime Minister), Bata (ex-Minister of Defence), Piros

(ex-Minister of the Police) leave Hungary for the USSR.

New leadership of the CP: JĂĄnos KĂĄdĂĄr, general secretary, three more

Stalinists maintained (Antal Apró, Andrås HegedƱs and Ferenc MƱnnich)

and Imre Nagy and György Szåntó, reformers.

Constitution of revolutionary councils in some units of the army.

29 October:

Street confrontations and negotiations continue. The Nagy government

tries to take control of the insurgents by creating a new National

Guard. The beginning of numerous meetings in parliament between Nagy and

delegations of combatants. During one of these, Nagy addresses himself

to Csongovai, leader of the fighters of TƱzoltĂł utca, saying: “Don’t you

believe that I am as Hungarian as you?”, to which Csongovai replied

“Maybe, but what counts now is not who is the biggest Hungarian, but who

is the biggest revolutionary!”

30 October:

The Russian troops leave Budapest. Confrontations on Köztårsasåg tér

(Republic Square) at the headquarters of the CP in Budapest, where the

AVO have taken refuge. Imre MezƑ, secretary of the Party for Budapest,

is killed and various AVO are lynched. Nagy denies having proclaimed

martial law and called on the Russians. Despite their reservations, all

of the revolutionary councils affirm their support for the Nagy

government. Delegations continue to flow into Budapest. Cardinal

Mindszenty is freed. The old parties are reconstituted. 25 new daily

papers are published.

The new cabinet is limited and is constituted, after having received the

approbation of the territorial councils. It is composed of Nagy, KĂĄdĂĄr

and Losonczy for the ex-CP; ZoltĂĄn Tildy and BĂ©la Kovacs, for the small

owners’ party and Ferenc Erdei for the peasant party, and a seat for the

Social Democrat Party.

The terrible twins MikoĂŻan and Souslov return to Budapest: they promise

to respect multi-partyism if the “fundamentals of socialism” are not

threatened, and they affirm their support for Nagy. In fact, their

choice has already been made and confirmed: the green light for the

second Russian intervention has been given.

31 October:

Radio Moscow announces that the Russian government is ready to negotiate

the withdrawal of its troops. The councils in the provinces signal the

arrival of new Russian units in Hungary. The CP is dissolved and

replaced by the Workers’ Socialist Party.

A discussion is held at the KiliĂĄn barracks about the constitution of a

national council of defence between Pål Maléter and Béla Kiråly,

representative of the National Guard, in relation to the attempt by

Maléter to arrest József Dudås, the leader of a group of insurgents from

the centre of Budapest who occupied the Foreign Ministry. This was

something KirĂĄly opposed. In fact two lines confront each other in the

government: Maléter wants to maintain the primacy of the army and is

suspicious of uncontrolled groups of fighters, while KirĂĄly, himself an

organiser of the army in 1944-45, is for the amalgamation of the civil

and military insurgents within the National Guard and is therefore in

competition with the army. But the objective is the same, to

re-establish order by disarming the “uncontrollable” groups of

insurgents so as to establish the legitimacy of the Nagy government and

the state.

Meeting between the delegates from the factories of Ganz, MĂĄvag, LĂĄng,

Beloiannisz and EgyesƱlt Izzó which defines the role of the factory

councils and adopts a programme of nine points of which the first

specifies “The factory belongs to the workers”[22] and the others added

“the supreme element of authority is the workers’ council elected

democratically by the workers”, “The directors and the management must

be elected by the workers” and “in all important acts — salary scales,

hiring, redundancy, division of benefits — it is the workers’ council

which makes the decision”

Meeting between the delegates of a dozen factories of Kelenföld

(Eleventh district) including Beloiannisz, Gamma, the tram depot etc.

1 November:

Russian troops encircle the airports of Budapest. Protest from Nagy, a

complaint to the UN and a declaration of the neutrality of Hungary and

its withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact. At Györ, the revolutionary council

disperses a rally organised by the bourgeois parties. KĂĄdĂĄr, after

having saluted “the glorious uprising”, disappears. During a meeting

with the delegation of the workers’ councils of Csepel, Nagy pleads for

a return to work.

2 November:

The workers’ councils of the big factories of Budapest decide to return

to work on 5 November. The revolutionary council of Borsod–Miskolc calls

for the constitution of a national revolutionary council made up of

revolutionary councils and workers’ councils to replace the old

parliament.

3 November:

Reshuffle of the Nagy government. Maléter is to represent the insurgent

forces and the Ministry of Defence. A speech on the radio (Radio

Budapest controlled by the government) by Cardinal Mindszenty. Radio

Free Europe puts forward the slogan “Mindszenty to power ” MalĂ©ter and

the Hungarian military officials who are invited to come and negotiate

the details of the Russian departure are arrested at Tököl airport[23].

The second Russian intervention, Sunday 4/11 – Monday 12/11

4 November:

The Russians attack Budapest in the early hours with fresh troops (6000

tanks and 200,000 men). In fact troop movements had begun on 1 November,

the first units arriving from the Ukraine bypassed Miskolc and arrived

at Budapest from the south-east. At Szolnok, they were rejoined by units

coming from Romania. KĂĄdĂĄr, who had been out of sight for several days

(in Moscow since 2 November), announced that he had taken the leadership

of a government of workers and peasants supported by the Russians.

Fighting in the streets starts up again across the country. Nagy flees

to the Yugoslav embassy. The general strike is total.

The Russians benefit from the support of the “fraternal countries” and

the Western neutrality caused by the Anglo-French intervention in the

Suez Canal starting on 29 October. We know today that American

neutrality was acquired on 22 October!

5–12 November:

Fighting continues across the country. The last resistance takes place

in PĂ©cs, where the miners retreat into the bunkers of mount Mecksen and

continue to harass the Russian convoys, and in the workers’

neighbourhoods of Csepel in Budapest as well as in the SalgĂłtarjĂĄn

region.

On 12 November, the revolutionary committee of Újpest launches an appeal

for the formation of a Central Workers’ Council.

The Central Workers’ Council of Greater Budapest (Nagy-Budapesti

Központi MunkåsTanåcs)

13 November:

A delegation of several workers’ councils from Budapest is received by

Kádár who only wants to give economic power to the workers’ councils. A

meeting around MiklĂłs Gimes, SĂĄndor Fekete and BalĂĄzs Nagy[24] creates

the FSS (FĂŒggetlen Szocialista SzövetsĂ©g / Independent Socialist

League).

14 November:

Formation of the Central Workers’ Council of Greater Budapest during a

meeting at the EgyesĂŒlt IzzĂł factory. The CWC calls for the suspension

of the strike. 500 representatives (from all the big factories of

Budapest and delegates from the district councils, as well as delegates

from the councils of the provinces such as Borsod) designate an

executive of 22 members. Partial strike.

The elaboration of a political programme around some demands (presented

to KĂĄdĂĄr): withdrawal of the Soviet troops, elections based on a secret

ballot on the basis of a multi-party system, formation of a democratic

government, truly socialist and in no way capitalist ownership of the

factories, maintenance of the workers’ councils, reestablishment of

independent trade unions, abolition of the so-called transmission belt

unions, respect for the right to strike, freedom of the press, of

association, of religion.

Kádár’s reply: “You have the right to not recognise my government. That

doesn’t matter. I am supported by the Soviet Army and you are free to do

what you want. If you don’t work, that’s your business. Here in

Parliament, we will always have food and lighting”.

15 November:

The CWC transfers itself into the local offices of the BKV[25] on AkĂĄcfa

utca, in the Seventh District.

ArpĂĄd BalĂĄzs, president of the council of greater Budapest is removed

from his post for having interpreted the slogan of a return to work as

meaning a recognition of the KĂĄdĂĄr government and appealing, on the

Radio, for work to resume. The Council had to go and explain itself in

front of the discontented assemblies in the factories. Dévényi, from

Csepel, is named president. The Russians organise arrests and

deportations to the USSR. Often the people arrested are just passers-by

taken at random so as to create a climate of terror. In the provinces,

there is a dual power between the revolutionary councils on one side and

the political police and officials of the party supported by the Russian

army on the other.

16 November:

The last centre of resistance in Budapest, the hospital of PĂ©terfy utca,

is attacked and falls.

17 November:

Second meeting between the CWC and KĂĄdĂĄr. No progress. Faced with the

proposal from the CWC “of a return to work on Monday 19 November, on

condition that its government enters into negotiation with the Soviets,

within a given time, on their withdrawal and that it guarantees the

reintegration of Imre Nagy into the governmen ”, Kádár plays for time.

18 November:

Meeting between the CWC and the Russian commander Grebennik.

19 November:

Convocation of all the delegates of the revolutionary councils from the

provinces in Budapest to constitute a National Workers’ Council. The

return to work in Budapest, decided after many discussions within the

CWC and in the factory assemblies, is applied. In the provinces, the

strike was always total; the miners of TatabĂĄnya had even flooded the

mines.

21 November:

Even though Major General Grebennik had agreed to participate in the

meeting of the CWC, he was accompanied by 400 tanks. The Russian army

thus prevented the meeting of the delegates of the workers’ councils in

the Sports Palace of Budapest, but part of them managed to meet,

bringing together delegates from the provinces and those from Budapest.

The first lot (particularly the miners from SalgĂłtarjĂĄn, TatabĂĄnya and

PĂ©cs) reproached the second for having gone back to work: “If you want

to work, do it, but we will not provide either coal or electricity. We

will flood all the mines! ”.

The Central Workers’ Council of Greater Budapest ratified the slogan of

a 48-hour strike decided by the workers before the intervention of the

Russians against the delegates. A permanent liaison is put in place

between the Council of Greater Budapest and the councils of the

provinces. The president Dévényi, seen as too half-hearted, was removed

and replaced by RĂĄcz, a 23-year old worker from the Beloiannisz factory.

Bali (also from the Beloiannisz factory) and Kalocsai (from the

vegetable oil factory of Csepel) were named as vice-presidents.

The CWC decided to publish a daily news sheet to counter balance the

false information put out by the KĂĄdĂĄr government on the Radio and in

the Press.

22 November:

Imre Nagy is arrested at the Yugoslav embassy where he has taken refuge.

23 November:

To commemorate the anniversary of the start of the revolution, the

central council decides that, for one hour, no one will go out on to the

streets of Budapest. This is observed. Russian troops are deployed.

25 November:

Meeting between the CWC and the government.

From 23 to 30 November: several meetings between the CWC and the

Russians.

2 December:

The arrest by the Russians of RĂĄcz and Bali in the Beloiannisz factory.

They are freed following an immediate strike of the whole factory.

4 December:

The factory assemblies propose to organise a demonstration in Budapest

to mark the first month since the second Russian intervention. The

Central Council proposes that only women participate in it.

An attempt to arrest Sebestyén at the M.O.M factory. Faced with a total

strike of the workers, the armoured cars perform a U-turn.

5 December:

Miklos Gimes is arrested. The police try to arrest RĂĄcz and Bali who

succeed in hiding out in their factory. Faced with the resolution of the

workers, the police force dare not intervene. The arrest of a large

number of members of the workers’ councils.

7 December:

Demonstrations in Budapest by women with flowers in their hands who go

to the monument of Heroes’ Square. These demonstrations have been called

by the CWC to mark the first month of the Russian occupation.

8 December:

In SalgĂłtarjĂĄn, the Russians fire on the miners and cause several

deaths.

9 December:

A 48-hour strike is decided to protest against repression. The

government decides on the dissolution of the Council of Greater Budapest

“whose members prefer to occupy themselves exclusively with political

questions so as to construct a new power opposed to the executive organs

of the state”

Almost all the arrested members of the CWC are freed.

11 December:

General strike. Called by Kádár “for discussion”, Rácz and Bali leave

their factory and are arrested in parliament. The Revolutionary

Committee of Intellectuals is dissolved.

12 December:

Riots in Eger, freeing of members of the local workers’ council

previously arrested.

13 December:

The Beloiannisz factory goes on strike to protest against the arrest of

RĂĄcz and Bali. Bali is freed (he will be re-arrested in 1957) but RĂĄcz

stays in prison. Across the country the KĂĄdĂĄr government, supported by

the Russians, regains police control of the population. Numerous arrests

of workers’ council delegates.

The End

15 December: the KĂĄdĂĄr government decrees the death penalty for going on

strike.

17 December: first death penalties handed down.

26 December: declaration of Marosán on the necessity of “killing 10,000

workers to break the councils”

8 January: the central council of the industrial complex of Csepel is

dissolved.

11 and 12 January: The workers of the industrial complex of Csepel go on

strike. The police intervene; one death. Workers’ barricades swept away

by the security forces.

September: Dissolution of the last workers’ councils.

NĂ©pszabadszag, the newspaper of the Party, denounces the workers’

councils as being a “creation of the counter-revolution”

The creation of the councils

A generalised eruption

Very rapidly, on 24 October in the morning, the general strike spread

like wild fire in Budapest and in the provinces. It was massive, and in

Budapest many workers participated in the first battles. Even though the

factories were often protected by armed workers, the workers’ presence

was not complete (Töke[26] says that on 25 October, the council of his

factory was only chosen by 800 out of 3000 workers, for example).

Nevertheless, in all the factories the workers (but also the salaried

staff, the engineers) created their organs, the workers’ councils, and

took their first decisions.

In Budapest, within a few days, the councils were present in all the

large factories[27], the enterprises connected with the municipality

(water, gas, electricity, sewage), transport (BKV and MAV[28]), services

(IBUSZ, the travel agency and its hotels), the ministries and even the

national bank, which explained that wages would be paid until 4

November. To these we can add the district councils (the 16

administrative districts where the population was mostly workers).

In the provinces, the town of Miskolc saw the first council, that of the

DIMAVAG factory which was created on 22 October. Then, in all the towns

of the provinces, factory councils and even more town councils like at

Györ, Debrecen, Szeged, Pécs, Veszprém, Szolnok, Sopron, Dunapentele,

and the mining towns of Dorog, TatĂĄbanya and SalgĂłtarjĂĄn flourished.

There were even some peasant councils.

After 4 November and the second Russian intervention, the councils

centralised themselves in Budapest, first by district, then at the level

of the city by the creation of the Central Workers’ Council of Greater

Budapest on 14 November, which also had some participation from

delegates of councils in the provinces.

Before coming back to the CWC, let’s look at some examples of the birth,

life and death of the workers’ councils.

Újpest district council

This was created on 24 October after the events during the night in

which workers had seized arms. A very informal meeting took place in the

local offices of the district town hall which gathered several hundred

people and which chose PĂĄl KĂłsa, a 35-year old carpenter[29], as the

president. The discussions were open to everyone but the decisions were

under the control of the participants. The rotation of chosen

representatives happened quickly enough according to the proposals made.

The workers coming from the factories of the district were armed, which

gave a certain weight to the commitments made by the committee (35

members) to the assembly.

According to a participant, MiklĂłs PĂ©terfi[30], the atmosphere resembled

“that of the Winter Palace in 1917 ”. Thus, “outsiders” like the

intellectual MiklĂłs KrassĂł, member of the PĂ©tƑfi circle, could speak on

26 October, be applauded and co-opted on the spot on to the committee of

the council[31]. But the council was not only a centre of discussion. It

established a workers’ guard responsible for defence and maintaining

order, a group for surveillance of prisoners (officers of the AVO,

leaders of the Stalinist Party, factory managers) of around thirty

people, a group in charge of provisions, a propaganda group responsible

for papers and leaflets and a group for liaison with the factory

committees of the district as well as other combat groups and even the

committee of the maritime police on the Danube.

The various political positions taken by the Council and which

distinguished it from the others were the demand for withdrawal from the

Warsaw Pact, the opposition to the return to work on 5 November (a

position taken before the return of the Russians) and a defiance of the

Nagy government.

When the Russians came back, on 4 November, the committee negotiated an

agreement with them whereby they wouldn’t enter the district.

Nevertheless, the Russians launched the assault of 8 November with troop

reinforcements and crushed the combatants in one day. On 12 November,

during another meeting with the Russians, the members of the committee

were arrested. They were not brought to trial until May 1959, but KĂłsa

and six other members were condemned to death and executed on 5 August

1959, while 24 others were sentenced to 20 years in prison.

The Ǘjpest factory of EgyesĂŒlt IzzĂł

This factory[32] which was created in 1901 to make lamps and electronic

valves, had always been a stronghold of workers’ organisations in

Újpest. In 1956 the factory employed 4000 workers. The factory committee

was founded on 24 October, the first day of the spontaneous general

strike. On 27 October it made its first actions public and declared that

it had taken control of the factory. Its first measures were the sacking

of the management of the enterprise, closing down the personnel

department[33] and burning its archives[34], abolishing piece rates and

raising wages. A committee of 71 members was put in place which was

responsible for organising the strike. As one of the members of the

council, Lajos Garai, said, “The time when the bosses decided our fait

is over”[35]

On 14 November the factory accommodated 500 delegates who participated

in the creation of the Central Workers’ Workers’ Council Greater

Budapest.

Csepel

The town of Csepel, situated on the northern point of the island of

Csepel, had been part of Budapest since 1950. Starting in 1892, when the

munitions factory was founded by Manfréd Weiss, it became the location

of the biggest industrial complex in Budapest which extended along the

Danube from the port and was 2.5 km long and 1 km wide, composed of

factories employing 40,000 workers.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, then during the councils

revolution of 1919, the strikes of September 1943 against the Horthy

regime, those of 1945-48, the workers of Csepel were at the cutting edge

of workers’ struggles. The town gained the name “Vörös Csepel ”, Red

Csepel.

If in 1956, 27 % of the workers had less than five years of seniority

and 50% were not there in 1949, the new generation was no less

rebellious towards the despotism of the firm and the old militants of

the left social democrats and the oppositional CP were always active.

The councils appeared in Csepel on 25 October, as much in the industrial

complex (in fact in each of the 18 factories) as in the other factories

(oil refinery, vegetable oil plant, paper factory).

At the machine-tool factory, it was a turner, Elek Nagy[36], who was

elected as a delegate from the factory then a delegate from the

industrial complex then one of the organisers of the Central Workers’

Council of the district on 31 October. Another worker delegate of the

complex, JĂłzsef BĂĄcsi[37], explained that the creation of the councils

was entirely spontaneous, outside the Party, in a ripe situation, even

though 40% of the members of the Central Workers’ Council of the

district were old members of the CP. From the beginning the council of

Csepel expressed reservations about the policies of the Nagy government

without pronouncing its definitive defiance. On the general level the

council proposed the creation of a National Workers’ Council, “a

parliament of the producers ”[38] The programme of the council was as

follows:

to the state calculated on the base of production and a part of the

profits.

democratically elected by the workers.

to 9 members, which acts as the executive corps of the Workers’ Council,

applying decisions and tasks fixed by it.

managers must be elected by the Workers’ Council. This election will

have place after a general public meeting convened by the executive

committee.

concerning the factory.

and ratify all projects relating to the enterprise;Decide the level of

basic salaries and the methods by which they must be evaluated;Decide on

everything concerned with foreign contracts;Decide on the conduct of all

operations involving loans.

with the hiring and firing of all workers employed in the workplace.

on how to make use of the profits.

workplace.

But the question for the first week, after the departure of the Russian

troops, was that of whether to stop the strike. On this crucial point,

at that moment (and also after the second Russian intervention), the

Csepel council had “centrist” attitude, preferring an organised return

to work to the indefinite strike proposed by the other councils of

Budapest. This caused verbal confrontations within the CWC. Another

position was that of a return to work but on condition that the last

Russian soldier had left Hungary. Even within the council of the

industrial complex, opinions were far from being unanimous, as JĂłzsef

BĂĄcsi explained. Thus at the motorbike factory (PannĂłnia brand) and at

the steelworks, the workers were the most hostile to a return to work,

which is explained by the fact, according to BĂĄcsi, that in these two

factories the repressive apparatus and the management were, before

October, the hardest and that there was a really tight regime there. In

addition, like in other factories in Budapest, one of the first measures

of the factory councils of Csepel was closing the Personnel Department

and burning its archives.

After 4 November the strike started up again and continued even as the

Russian tanks entered the streets of the industrial complex. During the

creation of the CWC, on 14 November, József Dévényi of Csepel was

elected president. Quickly he was sacked for being considered too

conciliatory towards KĂĄdĂĄr. But in fact, according to Elek Nagy and

József Bácsi, he had not been mandated by the council of Csepel – this

increased misunderstandings between the CWC and the Council of Csepel.

On 21 November, while the Russians stopped the meeting of the CWC at the

Sports Palace, it proclaimed a 48-hour strike. Despite Csepel following

this, Elek Nagy and the Central Council of Csepel put forward a negative

judgement on this strike as “a heavy weapon which must be used with more

prudence” and appealed to re-elect the delegates to the CWC so as to

take account of these divergences.

The same oppositions occurred during the appeal for the general strike

from 11 to 12 December launched by the CWC and also opposed by the

council de Csepel. But the strike took place at Csepel and was well

maintained because, in the meantime, the police had fired on a

demonstration of miners at SalgĂłtarjĂĄn.

After the arrest of the members of the CWC on the 14 December, the

council of Csepel demanded their release, in vain. But KĂĄdĂĄr still

waited to give the coup de grace to the councils of Csepel, blowing hot

and cold. Realising the defeat, that is to say the impossibility of

continuing an autonomous existence while continuing to discuss with

KĂĄdĂĄr, the council of the industrial complex of Csepel and the councils

of the 18 factories constituting it dissolved themselves on 8 January

1957.

During a meeting in the factory on 11 January a young worker was killed

by a guard. Immediately, the strike was total and barricades went up in

the factory. The security forces called by the management arrived and

swept away the barricades with machine guns. “It was a desperate

battle”, recalls József Bácsi.

TelefongyĂĄr

For this factory of 3000 workers which made telephone equipment, in the

Fourteenth District, we make use of the testimony of Ferenc Töke[39],

timekeeper, factory delegate then vice-president of the CWC. The council

was created on 25 October by an assembly of 800 workers. The Workers’

Council thus elected comprised around 25 members. The Workers’ Council

was set up in such a way that, apart from its president and its

secretary, it did not have any permanent member. Each department of the

factory elected two or three of them. In total, 19 of the members of the

council were manual workers. Around 50% of the members of the Workers’

Council were young, from 23 to 28 years. “They had participated in

various revolutionary actions, in demonstrations, in tearing down the

statue of Stalin, in fighting in front of the Radio, etc. By their

stature and their revolutionary spirit, they had succeeded in carrying

forward the labourers in the factory.” What’s more, 90% of the members

of the council belonged to the Party and many among them had been active

militants. “But the workers had confidence in them, because they knew

that they had always defended their interests. They were irreproachable

in everything that was asked of them ”

The workers’ council of the Borsod district administration

This was constituted on 25 October 1956 at Miskolc in the office of the

district administration (“comitat”) under the leadership of Miklós Papp

and Attila Nagy, while Rudolf Földvåri[40] and the delegation from the

factory of DimĂĄvag were in talks with Imre Nagy in Budapest. The

founding meeting in the neighbourhood of the town university immediately

supported the strike. It decided to establish a workers’ guard of 150

men to reinforce public security, and encouraged the establishment of

workers’ councils in the factories. In consequence, the workers’

councils assured the functioning of the factories and many

municipalities in the district administration of Borsod-AbaĂșj-ZemplĂ©n

during the following days.

After seizing the headquarters of the police on 26 October, the Workers’

Council of the district administration set itself up in the local

offices of the council of the district administration, an action

symbolising the taking of power by the revolutionary forces. Although

the Workers’ Council had immediately begun to organise its security

forces, it was not able to prevent a violent demonstration on 27 October

against the AVO which was organised spontaneously by the population.

The Workers’ Council controlled the administration of the comitat and

adopted the 21 points of the workers as its programme. On 5 November,

the Workers’ Council took part in sterile negotiations with the

commanders of the Soviet forces occupying the town. All its members were

arrested and deported to sub-Carpathian Ukraine, behind the Soviet

frontier. The rule of the Stalinist Party was re-established under the

iron rod of KĂĄroly GrĂłsz[41] However, the continuing strike made the

Stalinist Party retreat: arrested members of the Workers’ Council were

freed in mid-November some even integrated into the functioning of the

town and the factory council, but finally, on 9 December, the council

was dissolved.

The military question

General overview

The first battles began during the night of 23-24 October after the

first fusillade in front of the Radio Station. Quickly the insurgents

armed themselves and engaged in combat with the AVO and then with the

Russian army on its arrival on 24 October. Where did the arms come from?

There were three places:

Csepel,

Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, Nineth, Fourteenth and Twentieth Districts and in

some factories (such as Gamma, in the Eleventh District).

The Russian troops stationed in Hungary attacked Budapest from various

directions with the objective of keeping open the bridges on the Danube

and the roads leading to them, because at that time the bridges of

Budapest were almost the only ones on the Danube linking the West and

the East of Hungary.

This explains the localities of the principle combat zones:

centre,

south-west (Corvin Cinema and the Killiån barracks, TƱzoltó utca)

the south,

These same zones were the theatre of desperate confrontations during the

second Russian attack on 4 November.

The battles were entirely spontaneous and the same goes for the

organisation of the combatants. There was in effect no coordination,

even after several days of fighting, either between the groups or on the

level of the city. The insurgents organised defence around points of

regroupment, such as the Corvin cinema and the Killiån barracks or Széna

tér, in Buda, (here it was really closely around the Ganz Electric

factory that the fighters gathered. The workers were able to rest in the

factory before setting out to fight again).

Budapest

The Széna tér group:

In fact the combat zones, around the core of Moszkva tér/Széna tér (the

two squares are contiguous) extended from Margit hĂ­d (to the north-east

of Széna tér) to the South station (to the south of Moscow square) which

is more than 2 km. The points of support for the combatants were the

Ganz electric factory (the factory employed 4000 workers) and a barracks

of the AVH occupied by the insurgents, Maros utca.

As one 19-year old worker combatant recalled[43]: “No one asked why you

came or went. They gave out arms to whoever wanted to fight. When the

person was tired she left here combat position and went home keeping her

weapon or not. Everything rested on commitment and confidence. There was

no organisation”

According to eye-witness accounts there were up to 2000 combatants. The

fighting started on 24 October and lasted until 29 October, then from 4

to 7 November. It was insurgents against Russian tanks. If in the first

phase, the insurgents played on a level field with the Russians (there

were no definite lines of combat but an incessant movement of advances

and retreats), during the second, on the other hand, the insurgents were

faced with a disproportionate amount of force and were rapidly reduced

to sporadic engagements. In the first week the insurgents were also

opposed to attempts by the Hungarian army to make them hand over their

arms.

According to another combatant[44], the typical ideology of the

combatants was a “Yugoslav-style socialism[45] plus the workers’

councils”. Nevertheless, the figure who emerged as the leader of the

street fighters was JĂĄnos SzabĂł, a state delivery driver born in 1897,

combatant of the red army during the revolution of 1919, sergeant in the

Hungarian army later on, militant of the CP between 1945 and 1948, who

spent several months in prison afterwards and who professed an

anti-Stalinist internationalism: “The Russian soldiers that we kill are

as much heroes as we are. It is the crime of the leaders which makes us

fight against each other ”

Arrested, he was sentenced to death on 19 January 1957 and executed.

The Móricz Zsigmond körtér group:

An important junction controlling the routes to the south of Buda, this

roundabout was the site of other battles which regrouped Hungarian

civilians and soldiers against the Russian troops. Here as well the

combatants had no permanent organisation and numbered 300. The fighting

was at the lowest intensity between 25 and 29 October (often the

combatants just watched without firing and leaflets were distributed to

the Russian soldiers) but, on the other hand, it was very violent on 4

and 5 November, when 140 Russian soldiers were killed or wounded.

Nevertheless, from 6 November, the Russians had control of the

roundabout.

The TƱzoltó utca group:

This street parallel to ÜllƑi Ășt, behind the KiliĂĄn barracks, in the

workers’ neighbourhood of Ferencváros, was the site of activity of a

group of fighters who were able to operate behind the lines of the

Russian troops attacking the KiliĂĄn barracks and the Corvin passage,

thanks to a network of cellars. Like many street fighting groups, it was

formed spontaneously but it is worth drawing attention to the

personalities of its “leaders”[46]: István Angyal and Per Olaf Csongovai

who gave it a clear anti-Stalinist orientation which was shared by the

fighters, quite simply because none of them wanted a return to the

factories as private property, to the situation before 1948.

Angyal, born in 1928 and a survivor of Auschwitz, was a technician

non-militant of the CP but, having participated in the Petöfi circle, he

hoisted the red flag on 7 November to salute the anniversary of the

October Revolution. As for Csongovai, born in 1930, a CP militant, a

cinema vision engineer, he was a partisan of the workers’ councils in

the line of the factory committees of Petrograd in 1917 or Spain in

1936.

This group also comprised one Russian and twenty or so conscripts of the

AVH who had joined the insurrection. One of their political limits is

that they thought they could obtain an honest cease-fire with the

Russians. Angyal was arrested on 16 November at the hospital on PĂ©terfy

Street, tried in April 1958, condemned to death and executed on 1

December 1958. Csongovai managed to flee to the West.

The Corvin cinema:

Situated in a passage parallel to ÜllƑi Ășt, perpendicular to JĂłzsef

körĂșt on the other side of KiliĂĄn barracks, this cinema constituted an

ideal place for street fighting, sheltered by surrounding buildings and

surrounded by alleyways, and bordered at the back by a school in PrĂĄter

utca which became its fallback position. On 25 October there was a small

spontaneous group of 50 fighters, led[47] by LĂĄszlĂł IvĂĄn KovĂĄcs, who

occupied the place when the fighting started. On 28 October, the group

grew to 800 combatants and on 29 October, to between 1000 and 1200[48].

The Stalinists tried to sully the name of these fighters by accusing

them of being “lumpen criminals”. In fact, according to analyses[49],

the group was composed of 90% workers of whom 30% had a qualification.

30% had been in trouble with the law, half for reasons of simple

criminal law. So what? Their desire for revenge cannot be denied, but

nor can their willingness to participate in combat without restraint.

Numerous Roma, freed after 25 October, participated actively in the

fighting, an example was SĂĄndor CsĂĄnyi who was arrested at the end of

1956, condemned and executed in 1959[50].

In general the fighters were young. The other leader, Gergely PongrĂĄtz,

was 24, and KovĂĄcs was 26, but most were 20 and even less. Whatever they

were, the fighters showed an enormous courage during the fighting

against the Russian tanks and made very effective use of Molotov

cocktails. Although this group was one of the most celebrated it was

also one of the least politicised, but this didn’t prevent some

passionate discussions[51].

Divergences of views also ended up with the eviction of KovĂĄcs on 1

November because he was considered “too left-wing” and his replacement

by PongrĂĄtz. But in fact the disagreement rested on whether or not to

support the accord with Maléter, Pongråtz being one of its firm

opponents. If the fighters were aggressive towards the AVH, they were

more indulgent towards the Russian soldier prisoners who, if they did

not wish to remain neutral, were escorted to the Russian embassy.

As in other places in Budapest, the fighters had had a fair chance

against the Russians during the first week but things changed after the

4 November when the ÜllƑi Ășt/JĂłzsef körĂșt junction became of prime

strategic importance and had to be crushed. In two days the fighters

were overwhelmed by sheer numbers[52].

The KiliĂĄn barracks:

Situated at the junction of ÜllƑi Ășt and Ferenc körĂșt (therefore

opposite the Corvin cinema), the KiliĂĄn barracks was the headquarters of

the army corps of auxiliary engineers (1000 soldiers) and commanded by

colonel Pål Maléter. On the night of 23 October, some insurgents came to

demand arms and 300 soldiers followed them into battle in front of the

Radio station which was not far away. Following this other insurgents

occupied the barracks.

On 25 October, MalĂ©ter, with five T34 tanks, decided to take back “his”

barracks. When this reoccupation turned into confrontation on 28

October, Maléter got out of his tank and was acclaimed by the insurgents

“The army is with us!” So he passed officially on to the side of the

insurrection with his five tanks. The newspapers of the time, foreign as

well as Hungarian, made out that the Kiliån barracks and Pål Maléter

were the nerve centre of the insurrection, although they were no more

this than anyone else.

The promotion of Pål Maléter in the government had the objective of

using his prestige to make the insurgents hand over their arms. During

the meeting on 31 October[52], at the KiliĂĄn barracks, the proposals of

Maléter for the integration of the insurgents into the army, received a

cold reception from the people present, PongrĂĄtz being one of his

firmest opponents.

His capture during the 3 November negotiations with the Russians and his

execution in June 1958, contributes to his legend. As for the insurgents

of the KiliĂĄn barracks, they were subjected to a deluge of fire on 4

November and had to escape from a barracks in ruins.

Csepel:

If the workers had given out arms to the street fighters of the Radio

Station on the night of 23 October, the fighting at Csepel itself began

on the 24th in the morning when a group of demonstrators attacked an

army recruiting centre, occupied the police station, destroyed the

office of the Party (in front of the industrial complex) and seized the

arms that were there.

Starting on 26 October, the fighting was between insurgents and units of

the Hungarian army reinforced by 40 AVO who retook the police station on

the 28th. The neighbourhood became calm after 31 October but erupted

again during the second Russian intervention. The centre of the area was

bombarded from the Gellért hill by the Russians. This time the

confrontation was between workers reinforced by groups of soldiers, on

one side, and the Russian troops on the other. Better equipped, the

insurgents destroyed two Russian planes on 6 November. On 9 November the

Russians launched the final assault with reinforced troops and

equipment. Despite the determination of the insurgents, that evening

order reigned on the streets of Csepel.

A preliminary balance sheet

How many combatants were engaged in fighting, whether against the AVO,

units of the Hungarian army or against the Russians, during the two

weeks of confrontations?

Around 30,000 in Budapest and 10,000 in the provinces, which doesn’t

mean that there were 40,000 permanent fighters.

The number of dead in the first week amongst the insurgents (but

including also civilians killed without being involved in the fighting)

reached 2700[53]. In total, there were around 20,000 deaths and more

than 2500 Russian soldiers killed in combat.

The consequences of the repression were:

500 death sentences, of which 350 were carried out. Among those

executed, 229 were condemned for participation in fighting and the rest,

121, for “crimes”; three quarters of those condemned were young, workers

in their 20s.

35,000 people were arrested of which 26,000 were tried and 22,000

condemned to various punishments, of which 11,000 received more than 5

years in prison. In 1963 the majority of the prisoners were freed in an

amnesty.

This repression was very selective. It was the leaders of the fighting

groups, then the fighters themselves who were the first to be condemned

to death, even more so if they had been at some point militants of the

CP. On the other hand, the leaders of the factory councils “enjoyed”

prison sentences from 10 to 20 years.

To this we should add the emigration of 170,000 people who went to

Austria and of 20,000 to Yugoslavia.

ANALYSIS

Programme and practice of the CWCGB

Before analysing and criticising the programme and the practice of the

CWC, it is necessary to set out the social framework in which the CWC

existed: that of the Eastern bloc countries in the days of triumphant

Stalinism, because no social movement social begins for an absolute

ideal but always from really existing social conditions.

If Capital is one thing, the forms of organisation and domination of

capitalist societies are different. The weight of feudalism persisted,

for example, in Germany in the nineteenth century and in Japan feudal

organisation continued after 1868 in the organisation of large

businesses.

In the era of Russian influence after the Second World War the ideology

of Stalinism proclaimed that the workers were the masters of society and

that socialism was in the course of being realised. The workers of

Hungary, in 1956, attempted to sweep away the bureaucracy and wanted to

practically realise the fact that “they were the masters”. But this

being the case, they remained (even if we take account of the weak

periods when they managed to put into practice what they wanted from 23

October to 14 December 1956) on the terrain of bureaucracy, that of the

management of production.

The positive aspect was this: they refused to be managed by the

bureaucracy and organised themselves to collectively manage life within

the framework of society. But the negative aspect can be found in the

same place and at the same moment: to refuse to be led by the

bureaucracy, is on one side not to criticise the relation between

leaders and led and, on the other, is to reduce class relations, the

analysis of capitalism, to just the relation of leaders and led.

The paradox of the Hungarian revolution of 1956 is that it was at the

same time at the end of a proletarian cycle, that of 1917-21 marked by

the theoretical weight of revolution as workers’ management and also at

the beginning of the following cycle, that of 1968-76, shaking the

Stalinist bloc in the process.

The capitalist organisation in the Eastern bloc countries was a weak

organisation, because it did not know how to feed itself on conflicts

like the societies of the West did. It therefore used force, by the

methods which had proved themselves in Stalin’s purges, to assure the

renewal of fractions of the dominant classes, to decide the choices of

development (within the limits of the capitalist relation) or to assure

social advancement.

Because it incarnated the refusal of any evolution, offering no

alternative to itself, because it dominated countries which hadn’t known

much bourgeois democracy (with the exception of East Germany or

Czechoslovakia between the wars), the bureaucracy naturally led those

who criticised it to demand rights, guarantees and control over the

management of society. In this way it “maintained” the proletariat

within the limits reached during the preceding revolutionary wave.

But in 1956, the workers of Hungary had already gone further. Starting

out by revealing practically the class nature of the societies of the

Eastern bloc, that is to say capitalist societies where the bureaucracy

was the exploiting class and the proletariat the exploited class, they

were at the origin of the groundswell which would end up 35 years later

in the fall of the wall and the collapse of the USSR. Then, the workers

of Hungary, in the extremely difficult conditions which they were in,

posed another problem: how to centralise, to organise human activities?

The time was lacking for them to go further. The military intervention

and the question of survival “congealed” their thought.

Certainly, if the survival of the councils had been possible for a

longer time, a decantation would have occurred within the councils.

Probably, the majority would have leaned towards an organisation

something like Solidarnoƛć 25 years later, while a minority would become

radicalised.

Let’s go back to the programme of the CWC.

The project for the organisation of society is divided into three

levels:

the rights and interests of workers and to enjoy the right to strike,

factory”, they organise themselves in workers’ councils federated

locally and then nationally, where they decide on the orientation and

choices of production,

workers’ parties) sit, whose representatives are elected by universal

suffrage.

According to the testimony of Töke:

“We thought that, on a general level, the role of the workers’ councils

would be to manage production, to take possession of the factories for

the workers and to create conditions in which the Workers’ Council would

be able to function independently of any other organisation, whether it

was the government, a party or a union.

We hoped that the regime, once consolidated, would be able to institute

a political system based on two Chambers; the first, the legislative,

would take on the political leadership of the country; the second would

be concerned with the economy and the interests of the working class.

The members of the second Chamber would be elected from amongst the

producers, that is to say from workers’ councils, on the basis of

democratic elections. Our intention was not to claim a political role

for the workers’ councils. We thought generally that in the same way

that there had to be specialists in the running of the economy, the

political leadership also had to be taken on by experts. On the other

hand, we wanted to control ourselves everything which concerned us”

The same person on the relations envisaged between unions and councils:

“The unions would have the task of defending the workers on the national

level, against the government if need be, and against the workers’

councils themselves if, by chance, they should be in contradiction with

the workers’ interests. Despite everything, unions and workers’ councils

had to collaborate as far as possible, even when their immediate

interests on the level of production are not always in agreements ”

Finally, on the separation of roles:

“No one suggested that the workers’ councils themselves could be the

political representation of the workers. Those who perfectly took

account of the enterprise, and thus of the employer, could not represent

their political interests. Wasn’t the most absurd trait of the system

which was to be overthrown precisely that the employer was at the same

time the representative of the workers? Certainly, as I want to say, the

Workers’ Council had to fulfil certain political functions, because it

was opposed to a regime and the workers had no other representation, but

in the spirit of the workers this was a provisional title ”[54]

According to SĂĄndor Bali, as well:

“It is the Hungarian working class which set up the workers’ councils,

which were, for the moment, the economic and political organisations

which had the working class behind them... We know very well that the

workers’ councils could not have been political organisations. You

should understand that we clearly realised the necessity of having a

political party and a union. But, given that for the moment we did not

have the practical possibility of setting up these organisations, we

were forced to concentrate all our forces in one place while waiting for

the outcome of events. We must not and we cannot speak of unions before

the Hungarian workers have formed unions from the base up and they have

been given the right to strike.... We knew that the workers’ councils

had to become managerial organs of the economy of the country, and that

is exactly what we wanted them to be”[55]

And finally, for Miklós Sebestyén:

“But we understood at the same time that we would have to give in on

some of our initial absolute demands in some way because, after 4

November, it was no longer possible to defend the objectives of the

revolution in their entirety. We had to look for a compromise: to snatch

concessions from the government and fulfil the trust of the workers.

[...] That is why our most important day to day tasks consisted in

looking into the fate of the abandoned population. [...] But at the same

time we could not forget that our most important duty was of a political

nature and that, if we are not to abandon the population, it would be a

serious act of negligence on our part to lose the view of the political

demands of the workers that we represent and in general those of the

revolution; we sort to make them succeed as far as possible. Our main

concern was knowing which demands we had to address to the government,

in the hope that they would accept them in whole or at least in part.

However, given that the population and the working class in its

entirety, resolutely demanded the immediate or at least quick as

possible withdrawal of Soviet troops, free elections with the

participation of several parties, the return of Imre Nagy to the

presidency of the government, it was very difficult to present demands

of this sort so that they could be reconciled with the political

facts”[56]

Why Hungary and not Poland?

Why did the Stalinist bureaucracy choose to crush Hungary and not

Poland? There are various reasons that we will see and which enable us

to clarify the strength of the workers’ insurrection in Hungary.

In Poland, the reformist fraction led by GomuƂka had swept away the

Stalinists of Bierut (what’s more, this was decided in July 1956 and the

successor, Ochab, was at least timid). This fraction was present

throughout the apparatus of the CP down to the base via all the

intermediate layers and enjoyed the support of the population and the

temporary indulgence of sectors of the workers who had begun to struggle

in the summer of 1956.

In Hungary in October 1956, the CP was always led by the “hard-liners”,

the fraction around Gerö. But this was on the way down because it had

not made any clear choices which could allow it to compensate for the

lack of a social base. It oscillated between immobility and

laissez-faire; a laissez-faire attitude which intensified. In effect, it

was a very weak Stalinist dictatorship which allowed meetings of the

PĂ©tƑfi circle of several thousand people in the middle of Budapest. This

regime organised national funerals for Rajk and others shot (by the

regime) in 1949, funerals which degenerated into demonstrations of

hostility towards it, of 100,000 people! These oscillations continued up

until the fateful 23 October when demonstrations were banned and then

authorised. The only one who resembled GomuƂka, Nagy, who had been

side-lined since February 1955, retired from active political life and

contented himself with being visited by oppositionists at his villa in

Buda.

But for the Russian leaders the warning lights were flashing. The

agitation which was intensifying since the funeral of Rajk made them

worried that it might also produce agitation in Poland. Therefore the

decision was taken on 20 October to activate the troops in Ukraine close

to the Hungarian border, along with those in Hungary itself, the next

day. The Russian bureaucracy was ready for any eventuality, even if its

principal problem was still Poland.

When the demonstrations of 23 October got going the Russian tanks were

ready. If the Stalinist leaders of Hungary were overwhelmed, it was not

the case with the Russians. After the events at the radio station and

the arming of the population, the Kremlin gave orders for the tanks to

intervene in Budapest.

Events rushed forwards and the Russians were overwhelmed by the

resistance of the fighters in the first few exchanges and by the scale

of the general strike. On the night of 23 to 24 October, the workers and

the students were armed (with arms given or taken from the police, arms

distributed by the workers at the Csepel Arsenal, etc.) and even though

the armed struggle was not centralised the insurgents knew how to stand

up to the Russian tanks and soldiers and destroy the AVO, the sinister

political police.

What’s more, from the 24 October the CP, which still had 600,000 members

the day before, literally imploded and no longer existed. The Stalinist

leaders went into exile in Russia, under the instructions of Souslov and

MikoĂŻan, their Russian plenipotentiaries; the others went into hiding.

There was no alternative leadership that would have any influence in the

population. The “neo-reformers” (Kádár, Marosán) represented no one but

themselves. What’s more, an important part of the army (MalĂ©ter, KirĂĄly)

and the police of Budapest (Kopacsi) had gone over to the insurrection.

An aggravating circumstance was that from 25 October not only did some

Russian soldiers remain neutral during some of the confrontations but

there were others who deserted or passed wholeheartedly onto the side of

the insurrection. Troops stationed in Hungary for at least three years

knew the conditions of life of the population and did not believe that

the insurrection was a “fascist plot ”, as the Stalinist

characterisation would have it.

Without ever being massive, the simple desertions or active passages to

the side of the insurrection were worrying. It should be noted it was

principally “non-Russians” soldiers who were doing this. Even today,

Russian sources give figures of between 67 and 220 soldiers

identified[57] as having joined the insurrection and up to 2200 shot in

the courtyard of the Russian embassy for refusing to fight[58].

Finally, the simple balance of forces (Poland has three times more

people than Hungary) was against the Hungarian insurgents while the

international context (the Suez affair and the tacit agreement with the

Americans) was hardly favourable to them, even if the Western powers had

truly wanted to support the insurrection. In fact, they would have been

able to support the moderate attempt by Imre Nagy to progressively leave

the Warsaw Pact, but not a workers’ insurrection.

Having understood the danger represented by the movement, and believing

in its subversive potential more than the insurgents themselves did, the

Russian bureaucracy sent Souslov and MikoĂŻan to Budapest on the evening

of 24 October to take stock of the situation with help of Andropov, the

ambassador from July 1954 to March 1957[59]. They sacked Gerö, confirmed

some Stalinists, notably KĂĄdĂĄr, as leaders of the rest of the Party,

understood that Nagy, even if was no revolutionary, could not be their

agent, and decided to lay for time so as to prepare the second wave of

repression from 4 to 7 November.

Even after crushing the insurrection, the Russians military,

Grebennik[60], and political, Andropov, representatives noticed the lack

of substance of KĂĄdĂĄr and MarosĂĄn and continued to discuss and play for

time with the representatives of the Central Workers’ Council. But time

was against them and the workers and the CWC could not maintain an

independent existence after 14 December (the date of the dissolution of

the CWC and the arrest of its principal members).

Finally we have to add the factor of the isolation that the insurgents

suffered in the decisive period of 4 to 7 November, which favoured the

Russian decision. We are not talking here about the abandonment of

Hungary by the western countries – they would have feared a workers’

victory against the Russian bureaucracy – but the isolation in regard to

the workers of the other Easter bloc countries.

The military question

What are the assessments and lessons that we can draw from the Hungarian

insurrection?

The first thing to note is the complete separation between the military

struggle and the workers’ struggle, even though the majority of

participants were workers and the level of violence in the conflicts was

sporadic. In fact, apart from on the first three days, the majority of

workers, while remaining armed, “re-entered” the factories.

On the side of the street fighters, the total spontaneity of engagement

and organisation encouraged a localism of the neighbourhood and the

street. If this helped them to hang on during the first wave of fighting

it reinforced the impossibility of resisting during the second. But, as

the few examples we’ve shown indicate, the fighters continued to reflect

on and think about their actions all the more easily because they were

removed from a certain formalism of discussion which reigned in the

workers’ councils. From the councils more “radical” political positions

emerged, such as Trotskyism, represented by the FĂŒggetlen Szocialista

Szövetség (Independent Socialist League), far removed from the

democratic formalism which constituted the typical ideology of the

councils.

To return to the military question and its centralisation, we need to

recall, in defence of the workers of Hungary, that this question has

been just as little or badly resolved in other places and times.

Secondly, even if the workers constituted the majority of civilian

fighters (but without a particular programme on the question), the

totality of forces ranged against the Russians was more heterogeneous.

And it is difficult to see how a centralisation could be put in place,

other than under the control of the two military tendencies (those of

Maléter and Kiråly) who wanted to control the insurgents. The reaction

of the insurgents to these attempts, whatever their political

preferences were, as can be seen by the debates taking place on 31

October in the Kiliån barracks between Pongråtz and Maléter, was to

viscerally oppose them. But, of course, the consequences of the second

Russian intervention made this question disappear as the order of the

day.

On one side, the intensifying creation of councils from the factory, to

the district, the city and the country (the CWC of Budapest connected

with the towns of the provinces and was de facto a national Workers’

Council) translated itself into a re-enforcement of general workers’

organisation and a corresponding disinterest in the military question.

One plausible explanation is that the worker combatants were most often

young and unskilled, while the organisers of the councils were often

older but above all more qualified, and therefore more inclined to

reflect on and to want to limit the damage which had already been done

during the first days when the second Russian intervention happened.

On the other hand, the disproportion of forces, and above all supplies,

in favour of the Russians prevented any reason for combat other than

desperation. The destruction unleashed by the Russians for three days on

the buildings of Budapest bears witness to this. This was as important

as during the weeks of fighting between Russian and German troops in

1944-45.

The awareness of a necessary retreat

What distinguishes the Hungarian events from other similar events is the

conservation of a reformist workers’ organisation, created in less than

20 days, using revolutionary means to struggle against the capitalist

class and which did not betray the workers after the military defeat

that we can see took place at the end of the second wave of fighting

against the Russian army, that is to say on 7 November. The CWC was a

reformist organisation, in the sense of effectively reforming society so

as to improve the workers’ conditions.

Contrary to what vulgar extremists say, the revolutionary proletariat

has used the tool of reforms, during a phase which is now past, during

its long trajectory towards its liberation. But their adoption, their

handling and their finality have nothing in common with those people

today who present themselves as inheritors of that glorious tradition:

social-democracy, Stalinism naturally, but also Third Worldist statism.

The Hungarian example is at the very end of that past phase of the

proletarian political cycle. This does not prevent workers’ reformism

being able to re-emerge and it has already re-emerged in Poland with

Solidarnoƛć, as well as in South Africa with NUM-Cosatu, South Korea

with the KCTU or in Brazil with the CUB. But in these cases, if workers’

reformism expresses itself, it has only had the choice of integration

into the state in the trade union form.

While in other historical examples of a strong workers’ movement which

attains this level of violence, we see the almost total collapse of any

important autonomous proletarian organisation after the military defeat

(of greater or lesser intensity) - cf. the Paris Commune, Germany in the

1920s, the IWW the US after 1919, or Italy after 1977, or even to some

extent Czechoslovakia after 1969 –, the CWC pursued its activity up

until mid-December 56. In Hungary, the organisation consolidated itself

and centralised itself after the military defeat.

The workers “negotiated” the retreat well. First of all, the military

defeat was not, in itself, a crushing defeat (the reported number of

dead out of the number of combatants is very small in comparison with

the other historical examples, in particular with the Paris Commune, an

event which it resembles in terms of the geographic spread of the combat

zones). Secondly, it shows that the strength of the workers’ movement

exceeds that of just armed struggle, particularly in unfavourable

conditions. The struggles changed terrain, lowering the intensity but

remaining quite centralised (perhaps more than during the fighting).

They gained time, allowing workers to continue their collective

theoretical elaboration and preparing their retreat. Looking at the

military situation, it was already extraordinary. What’s more we’ve got

to stress the objective conditions. Isolated from the proletarians of

other countries, defeated militarily, surrounded by 200,000 soldiers and

6000 tanks, what else could they have done?

Seen in context, the negotiations entered into after 14 November were

not just a game for dupes. Above all there was the fashion in which they

were conducted. Each encounter between the representatives of the CWC

and Kádár started with the preamble “we do not recognise your government

” and a list of demands for the freeing of prisoners and the withdrawal

of the Russians. On his side, Kádár declared that he “refused the

reality of the councils” and that he was “supported by Russian tanks” In

conclusion, there was no point in negotiations.

Secondly (and in parallel) the councils decided to negotiate with the

Russians. Here also, apart from the demands for the freeing of

imprisoned workers, or strikes to free them (in the case of RĂĄcz and

Bali arrested in the Beloiannisz factory on 2 December), there were no

negotiations. The activity of the councils after 14 November cannot be

reduced to the systematic search for meetings with KĂĄdĂĄr.

It was just as much KĂĄdĂĄr, isolated behind the Russian troops and who

had to restart a paralysed economy, who was putting forward demands. We

must not forget that once all military action is impossible, the

councils are obliged to negotiate or try to negotiate with their boss,

the state, whose representative is KĂĄdĂĄr.

On the other hand, the time which KĂĄdĂĄr spent pretending to discuss

could be used to weigh up the balance of forces within the CWC, to

spread false rumours[61], to divide, to put pressure on the hesitant

elements and prepare the final repression. Thus the complex of Csepel

with its 18 factories and its 40,000 workers was only attacked on 11

January 1957. But the Central Council of Csepel had already clearly

dissolved itself on 8 January 1957.

The aim of the councils was to guard the cohesion of the movement

despite the disagreements which can be explained by the varied

situations (miners as opposed to labourers from Budapest, for example).

The necessity of not letting go on any point, of not “betraying” and of

dissolving when it could be seen that there was no longer anything to

defend was what guided its policy. The CWC is a rare example of a

workers’ organisation which understood the defeat, tried everything to

maintain itself and then dissolved when there was nothing more to be

done.

“I have a clear conscience, because I was the unfortunate interpreter of

the will of the workers and of those who were fighting for the ideal of

a free Hungary, independent and neutral, and for a socialist state...

All that was refused us. The government knew it did not have the country

with it, and taking account of the fact that today the only organised

force which can really make the revolution is the working class, it

wanted to dismantle the workers’ front”

- Declaration of SĂĄndor RĂĄcz, 8 December 1956.

Apogee and decline of workers’ reformism

We can outline various complementary critiques of the political nature

of the Hungarian revolution.

The common point (of all the forms of workers’ expression of the time,

from the street fighting groups to the councils and their various

tendencies) of the revolution in Hungary was a true reformist programme

put forward and starting out in rough form from the workers’ councils.

Behind expressions such as “The time when management decide in our place

is over”, “a Yugoslav-style socialism plus the workers’ councils”, “no

return to private property of the factories ”, etc. there is expressed

the desire to realise practically what had been the official ideology

since 1948, to correct the excesses of Stalinism (identified with

socialism because of state property in the means of production) by

bringing about the control of the factories and society by the workers.

Unfortunately, every aspect of factory management, of workers’ control

furiously evokes the well known tune of Trotsky’s “Transitional

Programme”. Furthermore, Trotskyists (such as P. BrouĂ©) have not had

anything bad to say about it, other than that the political leadership

which was lacking for a successful insurrection in 1956 was theirs. They

correspond perfectly to the political limits expressed by the CWC, at

least during a certain time.

For sure we obviously don’t think that there was a miracle solution,

quite the opposite.

To this we should add the incomprehension, on the part of the councils,

that the communist revolution is not a matter of managing existing

society but of going beyond it. You can find no trace in the programme

of the councils of a radical critique of the process of labour, of

technology and of science as they are fashioned by capitalism. In this

framework, the role of experts is not called into question. It is enough

just that they should be controlled by the factory councils. This is for

sure the limit of the experience of 1956, but it is also the limit of

the whole workers’ movement of that epoch and it is still practically

the limit today.

Finally, let’s note that if there was no political workers’ organisation

prior to the insurrection, there was none after it, neither in Hungary,

nor in the migrant community. Various factors can explain this. The

principal one is, in the early days, repression (death sentences, prison

sentences from 5 years to life — for Rácz, for example — which concerned

more than 11,000 people, mostly the workers and those who had been

leaders of the councils) and immigration for the luckier ones, which cut

off the generation of 1956 from the rest of the class.

In 1963, KĂĄdĂĄr amnestied almost all those condemned in 1956. He had

established the power of the bureaucracy and with the help of reforms

(“Goulash socialism”) and above all the industrial development of some

sectors capable of exporting on the world market outside Comecon (food

processing, pharmaceuticals, railways, defence electronics), he could

offer a relative social peace. If the workers wanted to become consumers

outside it, inside the factory they became new prisoners of norms, of

piece rates and the authority of the Party relaying its orders through

the unions.

The organisation which existed in Hungary before 1956 and in a very

diffuse fashion amalgamated the various workers’ generations since that

of 1919, has disappeared[62] after affirming itself on its glorious day

from 23 October to mid-December. Everything has to start again
.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

In French

Works used

Andy Anderson Hongrie 1956 Spartacus, Paris 1976.

Catherine Horel Budapest Fayard, Paris 1996.

Melvin J.Lasky & François Bondy La révolution hongroise Paris. Plon,

1957.

François Manuel La révolution hongroise des conseils ouvriers Supplément

à La Vérité n°445. SPEL, Paris 1957. Repris dans Pierre Broué La

révolution hongroise des conseils ouvriers (1956) disponible sur le site

www.marxists.org/francais/broue/works/1956/00/broue_hongrie_01.htm

Tibor Meray Budapest. 23 October 1956 Ce jour-lĂ . Robert Laffont, Paris

1966.

MiklĂłs MolnĂĄr De BĂ©la Kun Ă  JĂĄnos KĂĄdĂĄr PFNSP, Paris 1987.

MiklĂłs MolnĂĄr Histoire de la Hongrie Hatier, Paris 1996.

BalĂĄzs Nagy La formation du conseil central ouvrier de Budapest en 1956

Supplément à Correspondances socialistes N°8, 1960.

BalĂĄzs Nagy & J.J Marie Pologne-Hongrie 1956 EDI, Paris, 1966.

Socialisme ou Barbarie numéros 20 et 21. Paris, 1956-1957.

Works consulted

François Fejtö La tragédie hongroise Pierre Horay, Paris 1956.

François Fejtö Hongrois et juifs. Histoire millĂ©naire d’un couple

singulier (1000-1997) Balland, Paris 1997.

Tibor Meray Imre Nagy l’homme trahi Julliard. Paris, 1960.

Julien Papp La Hungary libérée Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2006.

ExposĂ© du cercle LĂ©on Trotsky Xe Anniversaire de l’Insurrection

hongroise Paris, 1966.

In English

Works used

Bob Dent Locations of a drama. Budapest 1956 Európa Könyvkiadó, Budapest

2006.

Works consulted

1956 – The Hungarian Revolution A council communist pamphlet, available

on the site http://af-north.org

In Hungarian

First of all we recommend the site of The institute for the history of

the 1956 hungarian revolution (www.rev.hu) which, even if only a quarter

of the texts are translated into English, constitutes a mine of

information on the fighting groups and the actions of the workers’

councils with interviews (in Hungarian for the most part) with several

hundred people and biographical details.

Eörsi Låszló Corviniståk 1956/ 1956 Institute, Budapest, 2001.

For all correspondence, write (without adding anything else to the

address) to:

B.P. 1666 Centre Monnaie 1000 Bruxelles 1 Belgium

Website: www.mouvement-communiste.com

]52] KovĂĄcs (1930-1957) hid after November but began an illegal activity

in February 1957, distributing leaflets to found a political group whose

objective was to help Maléter escape and start up the armed struggle

again. He was arrested on 12 March, tried on 22 August and shot on 30

December 1957. PongrĂĄtz (1932-2005) succeeded in fleeing to the US.

[1] Or rather of “national sentiment” in an occupied country which had

had part of its resources pillaged by its “liberator”.

[2] In 1913, for the whole of Hungary, there were 5000 factories

employing 474,000 workers.

[3] Except for a few provincial towns like Miskolc and Györ, the coal

field of SalgĂłtarjĂĄn, industry was only composed of food production and

processing.

[4] And opened the first metro on the European continent.

[5] Concentrated also in Budapest.

[6] Above all buses and light lorries.

[7] Out of a total of million employed, which represented 28.2 % of the

active population of Hungary.

[8] Led by the social democrat architect JĂłzsef Fischer (1901-1995).

[9] From the name of the poet nationalist hero of the revolution of

1848-49, this circle was founded on 25 March 1955, on the initiative of

militants of the CP and Young Communists close to Imre Nagy. The Petöfi

circle was a place for discussions by reformers within the party which

would transform itself, starting in summer 1956, into a centre of

anti-Stalinist agitation. Thus, it organised a meeting on 27 June 1956

of 5000 people.

[10] Barely a thousand members for the CP.

[11] See MiklĂłs MolnĂĄr De BĂ©la Kun Ă  JĂĄnos KĂĄdĂĄr pp. 177 and following

pages. PĂĄl Demeny (1901-1991) engaged in the revolution and the CP from

1918, was excluded in 1927, many times arrested under the HĂłrthy regime,

was arrested in February 1945 by the Stalinists, was condemned to 11

years in prison and freed on 13 October 1956. AladĂĄr Weisshaus

(1887-1963) was an organiser of the railway workers of Budapest before

and during the revolution of 1919, then a militant of the CP, expelled

in 1926, arrested in February 1945, condemned to 11 years in prison and

freed in February 1956.

[12] According to J.Papp La Hungary libérée pp. 92, the Demeny group had

700 militants and 1300 sympathisers in 1940 in Budapest. At the

Liberation, the CP had only 3000 militants in the whole of Hungary.

[13] György Marosån (1908-1992) leader of the food workers union in

1939, member of the social democratic party in 1941, an official of the

party in Budapest in 1945, organiser of its “left” tendency but in fact

a spy for the Stalinists, was the architect of the fusion. The resulting

single party then had a million members, that is one in ten of the

inhabitants. The purges of 1950-52 excluded 483,000 of those members.

MarosĂĄn himself would be condemned to death in 1950 and awaited his

execution up until the spring of 1956 when he was freed and reintegrated

into the politburo of the CP.

[14] And no longer by functionaries of the Party.

[15] The old sinister Minister of Defence responsible for the political

trials of 1949-1952.

[16] Situated in the neighbourhood of Diósgyör, in the middle of a

valley, 4 km from the centre of town, this factory employed thousands of

workers and made military material, wagons and machine tools. It was the

main factory of the town.

[17] Placename terminology: utca = road, utja = avenue, Ășt = road, körĂșt

= boulevard, tér = place, körtér = roundabout, köz = passage, híd =

bridge, rakpart = quay.

[18] The ÁVO (Magyar ÁllamrendƑrsĂ©g ÁllamvĂ©delmi OsztĂĄlya), the

Department of Protection of the State of the Hungarian Police, was the

political police in Hungary from 1946 to 1950. The ÁVH (Államvédelmi

HatĂłsĂĄg), the Authority of the Protection of the State, succeeded it

from 1950 to 1956. But for the Hungarian population the two represented

the same thing, arbitrary policing, and they associated them in the same

hatred. Therefore we use these two names interchangably. The AVH had, in

1956, a staff of 35,000 and the average salary of its agents was three

times that of the workers, in addition to benefits in kind.

[19] See T.MĂ©ray Budapest Collection Ce jour-lĂ . Robert Laffont, 1966,

pp. 222 and following.

[20] Born in 1922, son of a social democrat leader from Miskolc, he was

himself a militant of this party for 15 years.

[21] The slogans were “Down with GerƑ!”, “Long Live Nagy!”, “We are not

fascists!”

[22] Bob Dent, Budapest 1956 Locations of a drama, p. 341.

[23] Tököl is situated on the island of Csepel, 5 km to the south of

Budapest.

[24] Oppositional militants of the CP, organisers of the PĂ©tƑfi Circle,

they became Trotskyists. Gimes (1917-1958), a journalist, was arrested

and would be condemned at the Imre Nagy trial and shot in 1958. BalĂĄzs

Nagy succeeded in crossing to the West.

[25] Budapesti közlekedesi vallalat (Budapest transport company)

[26] See Ferenc Töke “Ce que furent les conseils ouvriers hongrois”

(“What the Hungarian workers’ councils did”), appearing in Etudes

(Brussels), n°3, 1960, published in Jean-Jacques Marie and Balazs Nagy,

Pologne-Hongrie 1956, EDI, Paris, 1966.

[27] The first was created at the EgyesĂŒlt IzzĂł factory, on 24 October,

followed by the factories of Gamma Optikai MƱvek, Danuvia

SzerszĂĄmgĂ©pgyĂĄr (the machine-tools factory of Danuvia), Óbudai HajĂłgyĂĄr

(Óbuda shipyards), Orion, Ikarus then the next day at Beloiannisz,

Téléfongyår, the factories of Csepel, etc.

[28] Magyar ÁllamVasutak, the Hungarian state railway.

[29] PĂĄl KĂłsa, a militant of the CP since 1945, had led a group of

combatants during the night of 23-24 October.

[30] Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 335.

[31] This is the same KrassĂł who was the first to propose the creation

of the Central Council during the meeting on 14 November at the EgyesƱlt

IzzĂł factory.

[32] Its complete name was “EgyesĂŒlt IzzĂł LampĂĄgyĂĄr ” (unified factory

for incandescent lamps).

[33] Or, in modern corporate English, the “Human Resources Department”.

[34] The burning took place in front of the factory assembly and was

received with great joy. Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 339.

[35] Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 339.

[36] Elek Nagy (1926-1994), arrested January 1957, sentenced in February

1958 to 12 years, freed in 1963.

[37] JĂłzsef BĂĄcsi, born en 1926, arrested January 1957, sentenced in

February 1958 to 10 years, freed in 1963.

[38] Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 351.

[39] Testimony already cited. Töke, born in 1930, was a social democrat

militant in 1946 then in the CP in 1949.

[40] Földvari was the secretary of the Party for the town of Miskolc. He

was a reformer within the Stalinist Party.

[41] Who became Prime Minister in 1987-8 and the last General Secretary

of the Stalinist Party in 1989-90.

[42] MOHOSZ: “Magyar OrszĂĄgos HorgĂĄsz SzövetsĂ©g hivatalos honlapja”

Hungarain Association of Volunteers for national Defence. An

organisation for training youth in the handling of weapons which

included depots and firing ranges. In general, there was one for each

district of Budapest.

[43] Erzsébet Marton. Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 76.

[44] JenƑ Fónay. Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 76.

[45] At the time the Stalinist regime in Yugoslavia, led by Tito, put

forward a self-management of the factories by the workers. Of course, it

was a farce.

[46] Csongovai, in Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 230, explains that they were

not leaders elected by the group of combatants but people selected, day

to day, fir their ability.

[47] That is to say organised by a leader selected and not elected.

[48] What rapidly imposed itself on the insurgents was the need to

specialise and organise themselves seriously. Thus the PrĂĄter utca

school became a “factory” for making molotov cocktails which functioned

continuously.

[49] That of LĂĄszlĂł Eörsi “CorvinistĂĄk” Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 200.

[50] CsĂĄny (1929-1959) Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 330.

[51] Andy Anderson, in Hungary 1956, on p. 83, recounts the anecdote

about how the combatants were so taken up in their discussion that they

didin’y notice two Russian tanks arriving 20 metres away!

[52] Present were SĂĄndor Kopacsi, JĂĄnos SzabĂł and representatives of

various combat groups and factory councils.

[53] Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 84.

[54] Ferenc Töke, Ce que furent les councils ouvriers Hungarian in

Pologne Hungary 56 op. cit., p. 249.

[55] SĂĄndor Bali in Pologne Hongrie 56, op. cit., p. 286-287.

[56] Miklós Sebestyén, Mes expériences dans le conseil central ouvrier

du grand Budapest in Pologne Hongrie 56 op. cit., pp. 298-299.

[57] Because their families had been arrested in reprisals in the URSS.

[58] Bob Dent, op. cit., p. 287.

[59] Also with the advice of Ivan Serov, representative of the KGB, and

the Commander in Chief of the Russian troops in Hungary, Mikhail

Malinin.

[60] Grebennik was however considered too conciliatory towards the CWC

and was recalled to Moscow at the beginning of December and replaced by

the chief of the secret police, General Ivan Serov.

[61] Several times the KĂĄdĂĄr government published fake versions of the

CWC paper, MunkĂĄsĂșjsĂĄg.

[62] Attempts at political regroupment did not succceed even if, once

freed, many of the workers who acted in 1956, once back at work, began

to meet again.