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A Hungarian Patriot in American Exile: Béla Bartók and Émigré Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Abstract

Béla Bartók was an intensely private man who avoided politics throughout most of his life. At the same time he was so passionately devoted to his Hungarian nation that, even during the difficult years of his American exile, he felt compelled to become involved in pro-Hungarian activities. At one point he accepted the leadership of an organization that had started out as a political lobby and a base for a possible Hungarian government-in-exile.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 Royal Musical Association

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Footnotes

Several scholars have offered useful observations on various drafts of this essay. I am especially indebted to Dr Lynn Hooker of Indiana University, Dr Tibor Frank, Director of Eötvös Loránd University's English and American Institute, and a number of anonymous commentators. Any remaining errors or omissions of facts, as well as misinterpretations, are my responsibility.

References

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23 Oszkár Róbert, ‘Látogatás Bartók Bélánál’ (‘A Visit to Béla Bartók‘), Amerikai magyar népszava (American Hungarian People's Voice), 5 November 1942, repr. in Tibor Tallián, Bartók fogadtatása amerikában, 1940–1945 (Bartók's Reception in America, 1940–1945) (Budapest, 1988), 189–92.Google Scholar

24 Bartók to Mrs Müller-Widmann, letter of 13 April 1938, quoted in Halsey Stevens, The Life and Music of Béla Bartók, 3rd edn, prepared by Malcolm Gillies (Oxford, 1993), 84–5.Google Scholar

25 Bartók was unsure about his decision to leave Hungary. Soon after arriving in America, he began toying with the idea of returning to his homeland, but postponed such plans with the onset of war between Hungary and the USA late in 1941. Béla Bartók, Jr, Apám életének krónikája (The Chronicle of my Father's Life) (Budapest, 1981), 440–4 (passim). Róbert, ‘Látogatás Bartók Bélánál’, 190–1.Google Scholar

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28 For an erudite overview of Bartók's American years see Gillies, Malcolm, ‘Bartók in America’, The Cambridge Companion to Bartók, ed. Bayley, 177–201 (pp. 195–6).Google Scholar

29 The following four paragraphs are based on John Pelényi, ‘The Secret Plan for a Hungarian Government in the West at the Outbreak of World War II’, Journal of Modern History, 34 (1964), 170–7, and, especially, Nandor F. Dreisziger, ‘Bridges to the West: The Horthy Regime's Reinsurance Policies in 1941‘, War and Society, 7 (1989), 1–23 (pp. 1–7).Google Scholar

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34 When it started to become evident that MIH might not flourish in the United Sates, Eckhardt and his associates explored the idea of moving their operations to Canada. Unfortunately for them, this plan too got shipwrecked on the rocks of pervasive anti-Eckhardt propaganda. See Nandor F. Dreisziger, ‘Mission Impossible: Secret Plans for a Hungarian Government-in-Exile in Canada during World War II’, Canadian Slavonic Papers, 30 (June 1988), 245–62.Google Scholar

35 Office of Strategic Services memorandum entitled ‘Independent Hungary Movement in the United States’, 17 July 1942, INT 32A-67 (Records of the Foreign Nationalities Branch of the OSS, National Archives of the United States (NAUS), Washington, DC).Google Scholar

36 Transatlantic communications having been what they were in wartime, Péter could not inform his parents when he would arrive in the United States. Miraculously, in the spring of 1942 Péter and his father stumbled upon each other on a street in New York. Chalmers, Béla Bartók, 201.Google Scholar

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38 The words are Balasy's and are quoted in the OSS memorandum ‘Independent Hungary Movement in the United States’, 17 July 1942 (see above, note 35).Google Scholar

39 Bartók to József Reményi, letter of 27 June 1942, 99 Bartók levél (99 Bartók Letters), ed. Ferenc László (Bucharest, 1974), Letter no. 92 (pp. 180–3). Bartók asked Reményi to treat the invitation as confidential until a list of those who responded positively to his pleas could be established.Google Scholar

40 Róbert, ‘Látogatás Bartók Bélánál’, 189–92.Google Scholar

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42 On Bartók's difficulties in booking concert tours and lectures see Tallián, ‘Bartók's Reception’, 106–11. On his state of health and his worries about finances see Béla Bartók, Jr, Apám, 445–7; Malcolm Gillies, Bartók Remembered (Boston, MA, 1990), 194–6; and Ernő Balogh's recollections (trans. Peter Laki), published in Bartók and his World, ed. Laki, 257–63.Google Scholar

43 See Bartók's letter to Albert Szirmai, 25 June 1945, repr. in Bartók Béla levelei (Béla Bartók's Correspondence), ed. János Demény (Budapest, 1976), no. 1017 (p. 714).Google Scholar

44 Serge Koussevitzky to Béla Bartók, letter of 4 May 1943, facsimile repr. in Bartók Béla köszöntése (Honouring Béla Bartók), ed. Tibor Szántó (Budapest, 1988), doc. no. 3. See also József Ujfalussy, Bartók Béla (3rd, rev. edn, Budapest, 1976), 463.Google Scholar

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47 Eckhardt's correspondence with former Prime Minister Count István Bethlen, Horthy's foremost confidant, throughout 1941–3, reveals the increasing strain that developed between him and the Hungarian leaders in Budapest. See the file ‘Bethlen’ in box 2 of the Eckhardt Papers (see above, note 30); also Kádár Lynn, ‘Eckhardt Tibor’, 200.Google Scholar

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52 Alexandra Piłtsudska, Pilsudski (New York, 1941), 280–1.Google Scholar

53 Júlia Szegő, Embernek maradni: Bartók Béla életregénye (To Remain a Man: The Life Story of Béla Bartók) (Budapest, 1981), 620. See also note 25 above.Google Scholar

54 For this reason Botstein compares Bartók not to Paderewski but to another Polish composer, Karol Szymanowski. Botstein, ‘Out of Hungary’, 1314.Google Scholar

55 This was certainly the opinion of Rustem Vámbéry, the only other Hungarian in American exile to have had the same distinction. OSS memorandum, 27 April 1945, HU 945, Records of the Foreign Nationalities Branch of the OSS, NAUS. This is also the view of the historian Mária Palasik of the Technical University of Budapest, the author of several works on post-war Hungary. Private communications from Prof. Palasik to the author, January–February 2005.Google Scholar

56 Schneider, ‘Hungarian Nationalism’, 182–3.Google Scholar

57 Texts of interviews with Béla Bartók, Jr, 1966 and 1976. Reproduced respectively in Bartók Studies, ed. Todd Crow (Detroit, MI, 1976; containing reprints from the Hungarian Quarterly), 150–1; and in Gillies, Bartók Remembered, 31.Google Scholar

58 The 1942–3 and 1943–4 concert seasons in the United States resulted in only six performances each of major works by Bartók. Tallián, ‘Bartók's Reception’, 111.Google Scholar

59 Ibid., 113.Google Scholar

60 Botstein, ‘Out of Hungary’, 4. Botstein adopted the conductor Pierre Boulez's categorization of the ‘great five’ of twentieth-century music. On this subject see also Malcolm Gillies, ‘The Canonization of Béla Bartók’, Bartók Perspectives: Man, Composer, and Ethnomusicologist, ed. Elliott Antokoletz, Victoria Fischer and Benjamin Suchoff (Oxford, 2000), 289–302.Google Scholar

61 Tallián, ‘Bartók's Reception’, 113ff.Google Scholar