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Minority Building in the German Diaspora: The Hungarian-Germans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2009

John C. Swanson
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of History at Utica College of Syracuse University, Utica NY 13502.

Extract

Issues concerning the status and rights of ethnic minorities in Central and Eastern Europe have become significant in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. A focus on co-nations in neighboring states, “others” in so-called nation-states, and questions of immigration dominate the media in many areas in Europe. Even though ethnic minorities and ethnic identity are part of modern conversation, the subject of ethnic minorities needs to receive serious scholarly attention to demonstrate its nuanced sense of meaning. Like nations, ethnic minorities are not static entities; they are not primordial. They are constructed or imagined in the same way nations are, even though there has been little scholarly attention devoted to minority building. In order to understand the complex meaning of an ethnic minority, one needs to view the creation of a minority—minority building—on different levels, and understand it as members of the minority understand it and as others perceive it.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 2005

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References

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2 “Minority building” is an ever-changing category used and constructed by different individuals and groups for different goals, even though it is similar to “nation building,” which often invokes a ideological sense of development.

3 This follows the advice of Rogers Brubaker, who argues in support of viewing nationhood as a category of practice, not a category of analysis. Brubaker, Rogers, Nationalism Reframed: Nationhood and the National Question in the New Europe (Cambridge, 1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar The writing of Fredrik Barth has also influenced the arguments in this article, especially concepts of self-ascription and ascription of others. Barth, Fredrik, Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Culture Difference, repr. ed. (Long Grove, 1998).Google Scholar

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8 This article is part of a larger project on minority building from the late nineteenth century throughout the twentieth century, using the Hungarian-Germans as an example. For reasons of space, this article focuses on one period of this history.

9 This group will be referred to as Hungarian-Germans, as this is the current, accepted name, even though it is a designation that became popular only after World War II. See Seewann, Gerhard, “Siebenbürger Sachse, Ungarndeutscher, Donauschwabe? Überlegungen zur Identitätsproblematik des Deutschtums in Südosteuropa,” in Ungarndeutsche und Ethnopolitik (Budapest, 2000), 98.Google Scholar There also was and remains the name Schwabe or svàb (Swabian), which has very little to do with their land of origin, since only a small percentage of them originated from Swabia. It is, however, another name for the Hungarian-Germans.

10 In this article, the term Magyar will usually refer to ethnic Hungarians and Hungarian to inhabitants of the state of Hungary. This oft quoted dichotomy is a little misleading, however, since in Hungarian there is no distinction, and the original meanings of Magyar and Hungarian were the same. Ignotus, Paul, Hungary (New York, 1972), 12.Google Scholar

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38 The most infamous example is the minister-president Gyula Gömbös, whose original family name was Knöpfle. Other examples include Ferenc Erkel, Sàndor Mária, and Mihàly Munkàcsy. See Lendvai, Paul, The Hungarians: A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat (Princeton, 2003), 354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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48 Das Sonntagsblatt, 2 10 1921.Google Scholar

49 This expression is the title of a speech given by Gustav Gratz to the members of the student organization Suevia in November 1937. Published in Gratz, Gustav, Deutschungarische Probleme (Budapest, 1938), 9.Google Scholar

50 There was often conflict between the two newspapers. O.L. K.28–208–1925–71.

51 Landpost, 6 04 1924.Google Scholar

52 Bleyer had been a researcher and teacher of German studies and folklore. Bonomi, Eugen, “Mein Weg als Volkskundler,” Archiv der Suevia Pannonica 4 (1967): 4349.Google Scholar

53 This is from a report dated 29 June 1921 in the Archiv des auswartigen Amtes (hereafter cited as PA AA). PA AA-po.5/R74172–8. III U 974.

54 The most obvious example is Franz Basch, who succeeded Bleyer after his death in 1933 as the leader of the Hungarian-Germans. Even in 1929, the German government was informed that many younger Hungarian-Germans were not satisfied with Bleyer's style and tempo. PA AA-po.5/R74172–8. A.Nr 129 P.24.

55 Ignotus, , Hungary, 59.Google Scholar

56 According to Macartney, C. A., “Magyar opinion, conscious and unconscious, underwent a violent and perhaps a natural reaction to the old ideas and practices. It felt that concessions to the nationalities were not only futile but wrong in principle.… If the nationalities had only been Magyarized they would never have been lost. The fault had thus lain, not in too much Magyarization, but in too little.” Macartney, C. A., Hungary and Her Successors: the Treaty of Trianon and its Consequences, 1919–1937 (London, 1937), 447.Google Scholar

57 Làszló Kontler uses this expression as a chapter title in his book: Kontler, Làszló, A History of Hungary: Millennium in Central Europe (New York, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

58 In Hungary this led to a preoccupation with the concept offaj, which can be translated as species or breed. Cornelius, Deborah S., In Search of the Nation: The New Generation of Hungarian Youth in Czechoslovakia, 1925–1934 (Boulder, 1998), 147.Google Scholar See also Fach, Zsigmond Pál, ed., Magyarorszàg története, 1918–1919, 1919–1945 (The history of Hungary) (Budapest, 1976), 812.Google Scholar

59 Balogh, Sándor, éd., A magyar àllam és a nemzetiségek: a magyarorszàgi nemzetiségi kérdés történetének jogforràsai 1848–1993 (The Hungarian state and the nationalities: Legal sources concerning the history of the Hungarian nationality question) (Budapest, 2002), 186200.Google Scholar

60 Already in 1879, a law was passed making Hungarian the language of instruction. Balogh, , A magyar àllam és a nemzetiségek.Google Scholar

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66 Ronald Smelser has argued that, after 1933, Volkstumsarbeit can be divided into three types of organizations. There were the traditionalist-type organizations, which had existed long before Hitler; there were the official National Socialist organizations; and there were radical, splinter organizations, which were more radical than the National Socialists. Among the various organizations represented by these three types there were many differences. Perhaps the most important difference between traditionalists and Nazi organizations was in their understanding of the role of the ethnic Germans. Traditionalists focused on the lives of ethnic Germans abroad, whereas National Socialist policy put Germany first and saw ethnic Germans as useful to the Reich. Smelser, , The Sudenten ProblemGoogle Scholar, 14ff.

67 Brubaker, , Nationalism Reframed, 119.Google Scholar

68 Martin Broszat argues that völkisch, however, was far from a unified, objective category used by everyone to mean the same thing. Broszat, Martin, “Die völkische Ideologie und der Nationalsozialismus,” Deutsche Rundschau 84 (1895): 56.Google Scholar

69 See, for example, articles from a Cologne newspaper in O.L. K.28–93csomó-193tétel. O.L K.28–193–1926–C–11179.

70 Tilkovszky, Loránt, Die Weimarer Republik und die Deutschen Minderheiten im Donaubecken (Budapest, 1980), 6.Google Scholar

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75 Ibid., 106. Yet since the Nazis suspected liberalism and pacifism among the Wandervögel, the organization was disbanded once Hitler came to power. Ibid., 104.

76 PA AA R74209. 19 June 1929.

77 See Aubin, Hermann et al. , eds. Deutsche Ostforschung: Ergebnisse und Aufgaben seit dem Ersten Weltkrieg (Leipzig, 1943).Google Scholar

78 Paikert, , The Danube Swabians, 107–8.Google Scholar See also Ritter, Ernst, Dos Deutsche Ausland-Institut in Stuttgart, 1917–1945: Ein Beispiel deutscher Volkstumsarbeit zwischen den Weltkriegen (Wiesbaden, 1976).Google Scholar

79 O.L. K.28–93csomó–193tétel. O.L. K.28–193–1926–332.

80 Tilkovszky, , Die Weimarer Republik, 26.Google Scholar Also see Burleigh, Michael, Germany Turns Eastwards: A Study of Ostforschung in the Third Reich (Cambridge, 1988).Google Scholar

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82 Weber-Kellermann, , ed., Zur Interethnik, 17.Google Scholar

83 The language-island research of Max Hildebert Boehm served as the foundation of his three-volume 1934 handbook of German Volkskunde that could be used for National Socialist activity in the East, such as Germanizing conquered territory in Poland. Ibid., 77ff. This is the reason why scholars such as Weber-Kellermann have changed the model to interethnic relations.

84 Fink, Carole, “Defender of Minorities: Germany in the League of Nations, 1926–1933,” Central European History 5, no. 4 (1972): 336CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Brubaker, , Nationalism Reframed, 129.Google Scholar

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89 Solymàr, Imre, “Fleiss and Sparsamkeit: die zwei wichtigsten Momente des wirtschaftlichen Verhaltens und der Mentalität der Deutschen in Südtransdanubien,” in A magyarorszàgi németség története Szent Istvàn koràtól napjainkig (The history of the Hungarian-Germans from the era of Saint Stephan to today), ed. Füzes, Miklós (Pécs, 1997), 159–70.Google Scholar

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96 A search of a number of different district collections in Baranya county has led to no documents concerning German activity in the 1920s. See also O.L. K.28–194–1929–4257.

97 Borrowing from sociolinguistic explanations of language use, the anthropologist Susan Gal has written on “code-switching.” Gal's work focuses on the symbolic association between language and social group, especially regarding status, power, and solidarity. She looks at bilingual communities, including Hungarian-Germans, and their “code-switching” practices and language choice as a form of “resistance” to the language of the nation-state. See especially Gal, Susan, “Codeswitching and Consciousness in the European Periphery,” American Ethnologist 14 (1987): 637–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

98 Das Sonntagsblatt, 17 09 1922, 12.Google Scholar

99 These exchanges were often reciprocal, with Hungarian children going to German-language villages. These children, boys and girls, were called Tauschkinder/cseregyerekek (exchange children). Andràsfalvy, Bertalàn, “Die Arbeitsbeziehungen zwischen ungarischen und deutschen Dörfern in der Umgebung von Budapest,”Google Scholar in Zur Interethnik, ed. Weber-Kellermann, 301–14.Google Scholar

101 Das Sonntagsblatt, 16 04 1922, 4.Google Scholar

101 Das Sonntagsblatt, 11 12 1921, 7.Google Scholar

102 Brubaker, , Nationalism Reframed, 61.Google Scholar

103 There is a growing literature on viewing peasants as active participants in defining their ethnicity or nationness. See Lehning, James, Peasant and French: Cultural Contact in Rural France during the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Stauter-Halsted, Keely, Nation in the Village: The Genesis of Peasant National Identity in Austrian Poland, 1848–1914 (Ithaca, 2001).Google Scholar