In Hungary at War, Cecil Eby has compiled a historical chronicle
of Hungary's wartime experiences based on interviews with nearly
one hundred people who lived through those years. Here are officers
and common soldiers, Jewish survivors of Auschwitz and
Bergen-Belsen concentration camps, pilots of the Royal Hungarian
Air Force, Hungarian prisoners of war in Russian labor camps, and a
host of others. We meet the apologists for the Horthy regime
installed by Hitler and the activists who sought to overthrow it,
and we relive the Red Army's siege of Budapest during the harsh
winter of 1944-45 through the memories of ordinary citizens trapped
there.
Most of the accounts shared here have never been told to anyone
outside the subjects' families. We learn of a woman, Ilona Joo, who
survived in a cellar while German and Russian armies used her house
and garden as a battleground, and of the remarkable Merenyi
sisters, who trekked home to Budapest after being freed from
Bergen-Belsen. Eby has also included a rare interview with a former
member of the Arrow Cross, Hungary's fascist party, that sheds new
light on its leadership. From these personal accounts, Eby draws
readers into the larger themes of the tragedy of war and the
consequences of individual actions in moments of crisis.
Skillfully integrating oral testimony with historical
exposition, Hungary at War reveals the knot of ideological,
economic, and ethnic attachments that entangled the lives of so
many Hungarians. The result is an absorbing narrative that is a
fitting testament to a nation buffeted by external forces beyond
its capacity to control.
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