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Fact (and fiction also): Budapest-based author completes a notable double

May 30, 2013 10:54
Adam LeBor — seen in front of Budapest’s Chain Bridge — says his novel’s origins can be traced back to his JFS days

By

Gerald Jacobs,

Gerald Jacobs

2 min read

Hungary is not the best place to be Jewish at the moment, with rising antisemitism and the extreme nationalist Jobbik party a major force in the country’s parliament. Earlier this month, on the eve of the World Jewish Congress’s defiant plenary assembly in Budapest, Jobbik was allowed to stage a quasi-military antisemitic rally.

Yet unlikely as it seems, Jewish culture appears to be enjoying a revival in Hungary’s capital city. Budapest has more than a dozen active synagogues, a kosher butcher and several Jewish restaurants. There is a regular Jewish summer festival and the old Jewish quarter has, I am reliably informed, the best nightlife in the land.

Though far from being the presence they were before the Second World War, Jews still figure within the general Hungarian cultural fabric, too. And in a country that has produced such Jewish writers as Arthur Koestler, Ferenc Molnar and Antal Szerb, it is not altogether surprising that Jews can still flourish in the literary field.

The two most eminent Jewish writers are Gyrorgy Konrad — whose latest book is perhaps tellingly titled A Guest in My Own Country — and the Nobel Prize-winning Imre Kertesz. They continue to enjoy great popularity despite being strong critics of the establishment. Kertesz has issued uncomfortable reminders of Hungarian complicity in the Holocaust. Konrad speaks out against Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s indulgence of right-wing extremism.

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