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 3 of 4)
Kertesz divides his time between Berlin and Budapest. He remains controversial in Hungary, especially among conservatives, who regard an emphasis on Hungary's anti-Semitic past to be unpatriotic. I was surprised, therefore, when our interview was interrupted by former prime minister Viktor Orban, a staunch conservative, who greeted Kertesz warmly and professed admiration for his novels.
Hungary's bitterly polarized politics create the impression that the country is mired in a permanent election campaign. The acrimony is rooted in history. Many conservatives refuse to forgive former Communists and other leftists for their support of the Russians in 1956. Many leftists denounce the right for backing fascism during the 1930s and allying the country with Nazi Germany in World War II.
Orban is only 42. Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany, who heads a coalition of socialists and centrists, is 45. "There is a very deep gap between the two sides," says Minister of Economy Janos Koka, himself only 33. "One reason is that democracy is very young and we aren't yet used to the new rules of the game." Still, he notes with pride, there has been no bloodshed in the 16 years since Hungary moved from a state-run to a free-market economy and from a Communist Party dictatorship to a multiparty democracy.
After making a fortune as a computer-software entrepreneur, Koka accepted an invitation to join the government and apply his business skills to the state bureaucracy. "Unlike the business world, it is very hard to turn a decision into action," he says. "You need a lot of enthusiasm to break through walls of government bureaucracy."
Hernadi, the oil company chairman, admires Koka’s brashness. "When I was as young as Koka, I also thought I could accomplish any task," he tells me. "But now I am 45, and trying to change the way government operates would be too much of a shock for me." Hernadi grew up 30 miles northwest of the capital, on the outskirts of Esztergom, a cathedral town where his father was a veterinarian. Recently, Hernadi bought a choice residential site on a hill facing Esztergom Cathedral. He then informed his wife, who is a Budapest native, that he wanted to retire to his hometown. "She told me, 'No way,'" Hernadi says. "That is how I realized that I had become a Budapester."
On my last day in the city, I attend a traditional Hungarian dinner, prepared by my youngest friend in Budapest, Judit Mako, 28, a press aide in the office of the prime minister. The meal, she told me, would not consist of the beef goulash with heavy, tomato-based sauce that most foreigners associate with Hungarian cooking. We meet to shop early on a Saturday morning at Central Market Hall, overlooking the Danube. The exquisite wrought-iron-and-glass structure, built in 1895, is almost as big as Budapest's main train station.
Mako suggests we first have breakfast at a small bar on the mezzanine. We order langos—flat, puffy bread with either garlic or a cheese-and-cream topping. Over strong coffee, we peer down at crowds of shoppers, and I am reminded of a touching vignette in Kertesz's most recent novel, Liquidation (2003), which also takes place at Central Market Hall. The main character, known only as B., waits his turn to buy vegetables. His former lover, Sarah, shopping nearby, sees him with his hands clasped behind his back. "She sneaked up behind him and suddenly slipped her hand into B.'s open palm," writes Kertesz. "Instead of turning around (as Sarah had intended), B. had folded the woman's hand tenderly, like an unexpected secret gift, in his warm, bare hand, and Sarah had felt a sudden thrill of passion from that grip...." The love affair resumes.
I follow Mako through the crowded aisles as she selects produce for her wicker shopping basket. At one stand she buys cauliflower, onions, garlic and potatoes; at another, carrots, cucumbers and tomatoes; at a third, kohlrabi, parsnips, turnips and cabbage. Last, but not least, she selects paprikas, the Hungarian peppers that are the essential seasonings of Hungarian cuisine. Mako buys fiery green paprikas and also a sweet, red, powdered variety.
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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