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A Testament of Revolution (Eastern European Studies) [Hardcover]

Bela G. Liptak (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Eastern European Studies May 2001
Terse, staccato, like a dispatch from the front, Béla Lipták's A Testament of Revolution gives readers a vivid, firsthand look at the brief, doomed struggle of Hungarian freedom fighters against Russian oppressors.

Written in 1956 in an Austrian refugee camp, where the author had fled to escape reprisals for his role in the rebellion, Lipták's memoir compellingly sketches the conflict between university students, factory workers, and Hungarian nationalists on the one side and the hated Hungarian secret police and Russian army troops on the other.

In a memoir that is both history and a saga of his coming of age, Lipták relates his transformation from carefree university student to impromptu revolutionary leader. His story unfolds with unsparing honesty as he makes the reader privy to his conflicts, faults, and failures of judgment and courage, laying bare his struggles with the enemy and with himself.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Lipt k here recalls one of the Cold War era's darkest episodes: Hungary's heroic 1956 revolution. At the time, the author was an apolitical, 20-year-old student in Budapest, and his transformation into a freedom fighter presents a fine account of student politics confronting Soviet oppression. The book's strength lies in its portrayal of the mindset of the revolution's actors. Lipt k himself inadvertently became a respected student leader who was nevertheless incapable of firing his weapon at a critical moment. The casual student camaraderie starkly contrasts with the drama of sudden death and the sheer brutality of the Hungarian Secret Police (cVH). The author recalls the "lying American president" whose encouragement was understood to mean a promise of intervention. The author's flight to Austria and later to the United States concludes the story. Especially interesting are the footnotes, informing readers, for example, that the resulting emigration, death, and deportation cost Hungary nearly three percent of its population. Despite its strengths, this book, as the preface warns, "is not a history book." Instead, it offers a fragmentary perspective that does not probe deeply into the revolution's larger significance for Hungary, communism, or Eastern Europe. Recommended for larger academic and public libraries. Zachary T. Irwin, Pennsylvania State Univ., Erie
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

*Starred Review*
Liptak, a Hungarian emigre after the 1956Hungarian revolution who has spent almost the last five decades in hisadopted U.S., has given us nothing less than a littlemasterpiece chronicling the hour-by-hour events of that doomed andforeshortened student-led rebellion against Soviet tyranny. There issuch urgency in his reporting simply because the book is basically atranslation of the author's own journal from that time, when he wasone of the leaders of the student revolt. The book consists of thatjournal sandwiched between a contemporary prologue andpostscript. What he reports on was perhaps one of the noblest ofuprisings, where baskets of monetary donations left on street cornersfor the suffering rebels would go untouched by an honest citizenry, asdid department stores, opened to all via broken plate-glass windows,yet went unlooted. Ultimately, this is a sad tale of a short-livedrebellion that fell victim to an oppressive enemy and to the inactionof perceived friends (the U.S. foremost among them, whose expectedsupport failed to come through despite Eisenhower's lip service toliberation movements). Riveting photographs round out this gem of abook. Allen Weakland
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 206 pages
  • Publisher: Texas A&M University Press (May 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585441201
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585441204
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,710,283 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gripping eyewitness account of 1956 revolution, May 24, 2001
By 
Frank Sellin "political scientist" (Charlottesville, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Testament of Revolution (Eastern European Studies) (Hardcover)
Bela Liptak has given us a tremendously valuable account as an eyewitness to, and leading participant in, the Hungarian revolution of 1956. Written in a frequently humorous, conversational style, you can't help but feel as if his younger self, a twenty-year-old student nicknamed "Ocsi", is one of your own good friends. Through Ocsi's eyes, Liptak drives home the reality surrounding historical characters who endure an incredible roller-coaster of emotions, from exhilarating joy to bitter, ultimate sacrifice of lives and hopes in the few short weeks of chaotic revolution against the Soviet occupation.

_Testament to Revolution_ is a fast, gripping read, easily accessible and rewarding to everyone, not just students of Eastern European history and politics. As a political scientist, I was especially gratified to see an account of not just the view of political events from the ground, but also how difficult it was to coordinate mushrooming centers of heroic resistance by all social classes, especially by young students. As a human being, it will be hard for anyone not to be ashamed of the indifference of the West to the tragedy played out throughout Hungary, but especially in Budapest (even after admitting that bipolar confrontation in a nuclear age would have made direct intervention in a Warsaw Pact member exceedingly risky business). If you go to the Buda side of the city today, you can still see bullet and shell marks pocking the walls of buildings around the castle, and get some idea of what Liptak and his fellow revolutionaries faced.

My major criticism concerns the strident and often indefensible nationalist statements interspersed not only in the short introductory "history lesson" but occasionally throughout the text. Sure, the Treaty of Trianon unquestionably punished Hungary harshly after losing WW I. But frequent lamentations about the vast Hungarian regional diaspora with not-so-subtle references of old Hungarian borders extending from the "artificial states" (a frequent phrase) of former Czechoslovakia to Romania to Yugoslavia to the Adriatic coast of present-day Croatia do not win Liptak any great trust or sympathy for his presentation of history. Indeed, this is exactly the kind of barely disguised irredentism that can be and is used to underpin counterproductive and often violent behavior throughout the region, with known tragic consequences. There's no physical, reasonable way to draw the borders of every East European country without leaving ethnic minorities outside the mother country, as is the case with every one, not just Hungary. And statements that Transylvania's Szeklers are today (in 2001!) "...threatened by *systematic* *forced* assimilation" (p. 73, my emphasis) are flat out wrong, not to mention dangerously tendentious when simultaneously glossing over examples of assimilationist behavior of the Austro-Hungarian empire in the 19th century (not mentioned at all).

Still, if you can look past the inflammatory nature of such unnecessary comments from a more analytical point of view, you'll gain a first-hand understanding of how Hungarian nationalism consists of not only understandable patriotic sentiment, such as antipathy to Soviet occupation, but also has its darker sides. And there's no denying that Hungarian patriotism was a mobilizing force with historical importance in the 1956 revolution.

Don't get me wrong; Liptak and his fellow revolutionaries are among my heroes for their tragic sacrifice, and Liptak himself has played an impressive political and organizational role in causes such as fighting the Gabcikovo dam debacle on the Danube (mentioned in passing near the end). If you can overlook the nationalist comments in this book, 1956 will no longer be dusty history. Instead, 1956 will become a vicariously lived memory with moral force for the future, thanks to Liptak.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A much-needed perspective of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, July 4, 2001
This review is from: A Testament of Revolution (Eastern European Studies) (Hardcover)
I read Liptak's book with particular interest because, based on the first-hand experiences of the eyewitness and the participant, it gives an excellent and authentic insight into the Revolution and events leading up to it. I have had a personal interest because, within my means and circumstances, I was one of the Revolution's chroniclers, if not its participant. As an announcer, then reporter, at the Voice of America, I had often broadcast the speeches and statements of Eisenhower and Dulles, promising that "If you liberate yourselves, we will be with you." With my youthful naiveté and enthusiasm I, too, believed them. I believe it is safe to say that in November 1956, my generation lost its political innocence.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Street fighting men (and women) in 1956, August 2, 2003
This review is from: A Testament of Revolution (Eastern European Studies) (Hardcover)
Liptak's memoir compares favorably with Sandor Kopacsi's "In the Name of the Working Class." SK explains his role as the Budapest deputy chief of police who switched sides and aided the rebels; BL offers the view from a student leader's encounters on the pavement below the offices where SK and his counterparts worked to advance the aims of 1956. While SK insists that the revolt was for a purer, worker-dominated type of communism (perhaps akin to an anarcho-syndicalist model) free of Soviet imperialism, this argument dims in BL's account. He gives the points that the students and workers distributed and proclaimed, but the whole question of how the Hungarians' new state would contrast with both the capitalist and the communist systems appears rather muddled in his narrative. Maybe such nuanced planning could not be taken in the heat of the moment, as the Hungarians struggled in a few days to drive out the Soviets.

Where it excels is in simply telling it like it was: the hunger, the generosity, the giddy sleeplessness, the state of his corduroy jacket, the grease-slicked rifle he hoists. You become so caught up in his vivid descriptions that you wonder why so little about this revolution has reached the West in easily accessible form. His footnotes add valuable details about the fate of his fellow revolutionaries and the mental framework of a "typical" young man hearing the demands of the leaders for the first time at the university conveys itself here unforgettably.

As well, the emotion of encountering liberating and opposing troops in the street, the fear of entering the AVH (secret police) headquarters and the shock of what he and his fighters find there, and the sheer amateur heroics coming up against the jolt of a Soviet muzzle at one's neck makes for an honest re-creation of what Liptak and his young fighters encountered as the counter-attacks flattened the idealistic students waiting for NATO to arrive. Liptak, to his credit, narrates all of the conflicting emotions that result once these guerrillas faced the Soviet troops--some in the latter's ranks thought that they faced the Nazis or Israelis on the Suez Canal!

Liptak clearly tells how the Suez crisis overshadowed the Hungarian revolt--and how the Hungarians believed that the West engineered it to distract the world from the revolt. Also, Liptak reminds us of Eisenhower's upcoming election, and why Ike might have wanted to avoid the issue of sending aid to Budapest as he faced re-election.

A couple of points that would have benefitted from more in-depth analysis: first, the role of the CIA in infiltrating the National Student Association and the Hungarian students assisted in their education after they fled to the US is not mentioned. As one who participated in this process, Liptak, given his smarts, either keeps silent out of loyalty or ignores the pressures faced by these students to spy for the CIA as perhaps tangential to his own story. Still, given the importance of this whole event of the 1956 rebellion in Cold War terms, Liptak's silence on this topic surprises me.

Second, the lack of comparative bibliographical references appears to weaken the wider impact of his testimony. Why does BL not mention SK's own memoirs, published about a decde earlier in North America? I'd be interested in what BL thinks about the previous work, and other first-person accounts and third-person studies of 1956 and its aftermath. He does not fit his own detailed account into any broader tradition of such narratives.

Overall, Liptak's account, in its verve and freshness, remains worthwhile reading and I recommend it as one non-fiction book that kept me up late in the night to finish it! Inevitably, all of our own individual accounts rely upon our own limits of evaluation and Liptak does present the tale at its heart as one from "Ocsi," his younger self. But the older self might have stepped into the conclusion and presented how he had changed and evolved in his historical understanding of the events which his younger self helped shape. Maybe a sequel is in order?

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