According to diplomat Ján Gábor, the elites of the Hungarian nation were the first to "import Bolshevism into Central Europe, the first to support fascism and Nazism in the prelude to the greatest European tragedy, the Second World War."

Pravda.sk conducted an interview with diplomat Ján Gábor, who stated in the conversation that the Hungarian minority in Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania and Serbia - "unlike the national minorities in Hungary" - not only survived, but was also quite active, "thanks to those societies and states tolerance in which it lives".

He freely uses the Hungarian language as a language of communication and has not only legal, but mainly institutionally guaranteed conditions for the protection of his identity"

- said the diplomat.

A significant part of the interview was about the Hungarian review of the book written on the occasion of the centenary of the Treaty of Trianon, of which the interviewee is the co-author. In the rest of the interview, Gábor Ján said that the pattern of the Hungarian side's behavior "in the last century can be read to a sufficient extent, for example, in its refusal to accept a solution to the minority issue that is in line with international law".

Hungarian history

Gábor believes that Hungary is striving for a revision of Trianon. The Slovak side is convinced that the status quo situation will remain even without an active role, "despite Budapest's increasing efforts in the opposite direction".

According to Gábor Ján, it should be kept in mind that in the past 150 years, the elites of the Hungarian nation in our region were always one step ahead during the continent's tectonic movements: they were the first to define themselves against the Habsburgs, the first to "import Bolshevism into Central Europe, the first to support fascism and Nazism in the prelude to the greatest European tragedy, the Second World War" . According to Ján Gábor, one of the first leading politicians who "began to speak loudly about the fact that he can imagine life outside the European Union is, not surprisingly, the current prime minister of Hungary."

When perhaps one day the successful chapter of the EU's history will move towards a less successful end, everything indicates that Orbán will gladly enjoy this moment

said Gábor Ján.

Source: Mandarin

Photo: MTI / Zsolt Czeglédi