We cannot let go of the hands of the Hungarians across the border. State support is not everything, we can also be the staples that strengthen Hungarian-Hungarian relations - Ferenc Solti, the chairman of the Pest County National Policy Working Group of the Christian Democratic People's Party, told vasarnap.hu.

Being Hungarian also means a spirituality. I must confess honestly, it is very difficult for me to understand the indifference of our present towards the Hungarians across the border. Solti said. They are us, regardless of where the national border is. As a Catholic, a person of faith, I know exactly that all people must be understood, accepted and, ultimately, loved.

The goal should not be that they also feel pain in Trianon, but that they should pay more attention and devotion to Hungarians across the border and their challenges.

In today's multi-cult world, it is not easy to be receptive to God and country, but we must try to serve this goal with all possible means.

Hungarians living abroad, under the authority of another state, are in many cases heroes who undertake to live out their lives as minorities. This involves a lot of resignation and sometimes humiliation. In recent years and months, the greatest attention has understandably been focused on the Hungarians of Subcarpathia: no exaggeration, everything has changed there. There is a great need for social cohesion, because the best can only come now.

By December 2004, in connection with the double referendum, the truth was revealed and proved that there is no popular, national left. The left-liberal political parties and their successors have not been able to wash off this stamp. At the same time, this caused a lot of pain to the Hungarians across the border.

An indescribable disappointment, as a result of which hundreds of thousands of our Hungarian compatriots felt that we had betrayed them.

To this day, I always experience this when I visit Székelyföld. They resent us because of the invalid referendum.

The domestic left-wing parties do not even think about the nation as much as the previous ones. So, in my view, the situation is even worse in this area. They promote globalist values, which is the reason why they have no contact with the Hungarians across the border. If so, only with liberal, urbanist circles.

Understanding the Hungarians across the border requires heart, empathy and many, many human connections.

These personal experiences must be reinforced in our young people, if this happens on both sides of the border, then we have a future and Hungarianness will remain in the Carpathian Basin.

 

Source and featured image: vasarnap.hu/ Gábor Tóth