With this title, the article of economist Zoltán Felföldi was published on the Erdély.ma portal, which we also publish.

Péter Márki-Zay really wants to go on a campaign tour to Transylvania. And - as he says - not even on a campaign tour, but just to talk with the Transylvanian Hungarians. However, after they briefly informed Péter Márki-Zay that they had nothing to talk to him about, the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely took solace in Felvidék.  

Rather, in Slovakia, because - as we learned from him - it's like Felvidék, not only that it doesn't exist, but it never existed. At least a Slovak to state that "Hungarians must accept that Slovaks have lived in the territory of Slovakia for the past thousand years".

Márki-Zay P.

So I do not know. I did not major in history, as Márki-Zay supposedly did, but according to my knowledge, Slovaks lived in the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary until 1920. What they called and still call Uhorsko, and what they considered their own country to such an extent that - unlike the Romanians or the majority of the Serbs - they fought on the same side as us in our freedom wars.

It's lucky that Márki-Zay prefers politics and doesn't use his history teaching degree, which he supposedly obtained in 2002 at the University of Szeged. Although after this it is hard to believe that his diploma is real and that he did not take it at Ecserin. For such a saying, he would be cut off from the rigors of medieval Hungarian history without his feet touching the ground.

If not with the Hungarian historian professors researching the Middle Ages, they would certainly understand each other well with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis.

 

Romanian head of state

As Erdély.ma also wrote, he recently stated that "we decided in a referendum, i.e. we, as a people, said that we want to belong to Romania" and that "that's how Transylvania became part of Romania, then Subcarpathia also became Ukraine part and so on.”

What a denial, it was also a nice speech, and not only because there was no referendum (if there had been, the Romanian president would only be able to visit Cluj today with a passport), but also because the time planes in the president's statement slipped a little.

At the time of the alleged referendum, Ukraine didn't even exist yet - and neither did Slovakia - so Transcarpathia didn't become part of Ukraine at all then (in 1920), only 71 years later, in 1991. Of course, this also means that we, Hungarians, also have to accept that Ukrainians have been living in Subcarpathia for 1000 years.

I hereby congratulate Péter Márki-Zay for reaching the Romanian level in falsification of history, which is no small feat considering the very strong competition!

After that, I'm curiously waiting to see when the candidate for Prime Minister of the Hungarian opposition will declare to a Romanian portal that the Hungarians must accept that the Romanians have been living in the territory of Dacia for 2000 years...

Source: Erdély.ma