Continental Crossroads
East greets West as Hungary's history-rich capital embraces the future
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Photographs by Scott S. Warren
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
At a three-hour rehearsal, Saccani greets the 70 musicians with a rousing Buon giorno! Swirling a tiny baton, he barks—"More staccato!" "Stronger crescendo!"—as he leads them through bombastic passages of Rossini’s 1823 opera, Semiramide, as well as works by Schumann, Grieg and Tchaikovsky. I ask Saccani how the orchestra has changed since Communist days. "In those times," he says, "because of generous state subsidies, many more operas and concerts were performed, and ticket prices were so low that attendance was huge." Since 1989, when government financing began to dry up, there have been fewer performances, and many seats are occupied by foreign tourists who can afford the higher ticket prices. The average monthly salary for a BPO musician is only about $700, before taxes.
The next day, one of those musicians, trombonist Robert Lugosi, 27, meets me at the nearby Liszt Academy, Hungary's premier music conservatory. As we wander the halls, muffled sounds of various instruments escape from the closed doors of small practice rooms. Lugosi shows me the school's 1,200-seat, Art Nouveau auditorium, reputed to possess the finest acoustics of any concert hall in Hungary. We pause in the place Lugosi describes as "for me, the most important in the building"—the front lobby stairwell where he met his future wife, Vera, who was a piano student at the time.
Torok, the guidebook author, speaks of Budapest as a layered city. "If you penetrate Budapest one way, it is a hectic, cosmopolitan place with wonderful museums, office buildings and shops," he says. "But approach it from a different axis and it becomes more humble and slower paced." On his advice, I board Bus 15 and spend 40 minutes crossing the city from south to north. The first half of the journey takes me past well-known landmarks: the massive Parliament building on Kossuth Square, named after the leader of the failed Hungarian independence revolt in 1848-49, and Erzsebet Park, the leafy preserve honoring the Hapsburg queen Elizabeth, admired for her sympathetic attitude toward Hungarian nationalists in the years before World War I.
But during the second half of my trip, the bus passes through far less prosperous neighborhoods. Beauty salons advertise long-outdated hairstyles; young men wielding wrenches tinker with motor scooters. Older women in dowdy clothes stroll by. Suit jackets sag on hangers behind open windows, airing out. Small family-run restaurants advertise home cooking and all-you-can-eat buffets.
"I still love those narrow, cozy streets—that is the city where I grew up," says Imre Kertesz, 76, Hungary's Nobel laureate in literature. We meet in the splendidly restored, marble-floored lobby of the Gresham Palace Hotel, a 1903 masterpiece of Art Nouveau architecture, where Budapest's most famous bridge, the Lanchid, straddles the Danube.
In Kertesz's childhood, more than 200,000 Jews lived in Budapest—one quarter of the city's inhabitants. By the end of Nazi occupation in 1945, more than half of them had been killed, many by Hungarian fascists. Kertesz himself survived both Auschwitz and Buchenwald.
After the war, he became a journalist, until he was fired for his reluctance to lionize the new Communist regime. "I could not take up a career as a novelist, because I would be considered unemployed and sent to a labor camp," he tells me. "Instead, I became a blue-collar laborer—and wrote at night." Still, he chose not to flee Hungary during the chaos of the 1956 uprising against the Communists. The Russian Army crushed the revolt, leaving an estimated 3,000 people dead, imprisoning thousands more and sending 200,000 into exile. "Yes, I could have left," says Kertesz, who was only 27 at the time and had yet to write his first novel. "But I felt I would never become a writer if I had to live in the West, where nobody spoke or read Hungarian."
His novels—the best known are Fatelessness (1975) and Kaddish for an Unborn Child (1990)—take up themes of pre-war Jewish life in Budapest and of the Holocaust. Although acclaimed internationally, his works were virtually ignored in Hungary until he received the Nobel Prize in 2002. The next year, more than 500,000 copies of his books sold in Hungary—or about 1 for every 20 countrymen. "But at the same time, there were many protest letters from Hungarians to the Nobel committee in Sweden," says Kertesz. "Most objections were about my being Jewish."
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Comments (1)
I look forward to visiting Budapest in Oct. 2011. This article was very well written and provides some insight into where we might explore within the city. Thanks.
Posted by Bob Barton on December 16,2010 | 09:25 AM