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The JC Letters Page, 30th November 2018

Monica Porter, Thomas Komoly, Jonathan Gestetner, Mrs T(zipora) Sufrin, Stephen Miller, Stephen R. Harvey, Paul Spector and Angela Wayne share their views with JC readers

December 6, 2018 11:19
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5 min read

Hungary then and now


I was surprised by Alexander Goldberg’s response in last week’s paper to my recent piece (The Jews of Hungary do not Live in Fear, JC November 16) in which he claims antisemitism in Hungary is so bad that Hungarian Jewish students must come to British universities to “feel safe”. 


We hear on a regular basis about how Jewish students are harassed and abused on our university campuses — especially where there are strong Muslim student organisations, allied with leftist fellow travellers — and where pro-Arab speakers are welcomed but pro-Israeli ones are no-platformed. If the UK is where they come to feel safe, heaven help them. But who knows, perhaps his own Surrey University is a bastion of harmony and philo-semitism.


I would take issue with him, however, on a vital point of history. Hungary’s wartime leader Nicholas Horthy may well have been an antisemite of the old school, all too common throughout most of Europe, but it wasn’t he who deported the Jews. The Jews of Hungary were deported only after the country was occupied by the Nazis in the spring of 1944. In fact, the Hungarian government’s failure to deport them was one of the chief reasons for the occupation. Once the Wehrmacht and the Gestapo and Adolf Eichmann had arrived, Horthy became little more than a figurehead, powerless to stop deportations. 


Monica Porter
London

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