Toronto Star

Hungarians loved ‘Uncle Arpi’

- PABLO GORONDI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BUDAPEST, HUNGARY— Arpad Goncz, a much-loved Hungarian writer and translator who survived a communist-era life sentence for taking part in the 1956 antiSoviet revolt and later become Hungary’s first democratic­ally elected president, died Tuesday at age 93.

Parliament deputy speaker Istvan Hiller announced the death to lawmakers, adding, “he was a legend already during his lifetime.” A statement from Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government said Goncz had “served the renascent Hungarian democracy to the best of his knowledge for 10 years.”

Goncz was charged with treason and sentenced to life in prison by Hungary’s communist authoritie­s for taking part in the abortive anti-Soviet uprising of 1956. He was released in 1963 under a general amnesty.

Goncz was elected to a five-year term by the parliament after a free election that ended four decades of communist rule in 1990, and later re-elected by parliament for a further five years.

Though his post was largely ceremonial, he was credited by many with deftly using his limited powers to enforce Hungary’s fledgling democratic constituti­on, often putting him at odds with the post-communist government.

His fatherly manner endeared him to many Hungarians, winning him the moniker “Uncle Arpi.”

Born Feb. 10, 1922, in Budapest, he earned a law degree in 1944. As the Second World War drew to a close, Goncz was called up to fight for Hungary — then allied with Nazi Germany — but escaped from his unit and joined the anti-Nazi resistance, helping to rescue Jews and others being persecuted.

He remained politicall­y active during the turmoil that followed the war, becoming secretary of the populist Independen­t Smallholde­rs Party. The party scored a landslide victory in the first postwar election, but it never was able to govern effectivel­y as the communists steadily usurped power, finally eliminatin­g all op- position in rigged elections in 1948.

Goncz worked as a locksmith and an agronomist until running afoul of the communists for political activities in support of the 1956 uprising.

After his release from prison, he was a co-founder of the liberal Alliance of Free Democrats. The party finished second to the conservati­ve Hungarian Democratic Forum in the 1990 elections, but Goncz became president in a compromise between the rival parties.

Once in office, he often blocked government appointmen­ts and legislatio­n. Goncz repeatedly refused to dismiss the heads of state-run radio and television as the government, with its popularity waning, tried to tighten its grip on the media. That drew the wrath of right-wing nationalis­ts, who accused him of oversteppi­ng his powers and being a puppet of Jewish and western interests.

After Ferenc Madl, a conservati­ve, replaced him as president in 2000, Goncz stepped out of the limelight, devoting himself to charitable causes.

The government said it would take care of the funeral arrangemen­ts in consultati­on with Goncz’s family.

He is survived by his wife, Maria Zsuzsanna, and four children, including daughter Kinga, a former foreign minister.

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