”When I travelled in the Transylvania region of Romania in 1993, relations between ethnic Hungarians and ethnic Romanians were still tense. There had been outright confrontation and violence in 1990, particularly in Targu Mures. By 1993, the conflict had largely migrated to the political realm. In Cluj – the old Hungarian town of Kolosvar – the nationalist politician Gheorghe Funar had taken over as mayor. He banned signs in Hungarian. He put a plaque on the statue of King Matyas in the town center that qualified his military successes – a deliberate provocation to ethnic Hungarians who revere Matyas”, according to John Feffer, journalist at Huffington Post.”At that time I met with some of the young ethnic Hungarian activists in Cluj. One of them, Kinga Kerekes, told me about the Hungarian youth organization and its major demand – the restoration of the Bolyai University in Cluj as a Hungarian-language institution. The students had gone on strike with this demand in 1990 but it had been halted in part because of the violence in Targu Mures.
Twenty years later, I met up again with Kinga Kerekes in Cluj. Today she is a teacher in the economics department of the same university where she’d been a student. The university – Babes Bolyai – had not been divided into Romanian language and Hungarian language institutions as they’d been before 1959 and as the student group had demanded. But Kerekes teaches her students only in Hungarian. For more than a decade, the economics department has maintained a separate Hungarian-language degree program.
It’s a sign of the remarkable transformation of Transylvania. There are still some tensions between the different ethnic communities. But there’s also a vibrant mixing that would have been difficult to imagine 20 years ago.
„There will be a graduation celebration for the Hungarian study line, and everything will be in Hungarian: all the speeches, everything,” Kerekes told me in an interview in her office last May. „It will take place in a big concert hall, so it’s not a hidden thing. When I graduated high school, we had the official event in Romanian, but then we had to hide to have a small event in Hungarian language. Compared to that time, it’s a big difference.”
But the changes extend beyond the classroom. Since 2010, Cluj has sponsored a Hungarian cultural festival in August. „There have been three editions of it without any major problems,” she said. „Nobody demonstrated against it. Each time the organizers got all the allowance from the local authorities.”
At one of the festivals, the organizers even showed a film of the rock opera Istvan, a Kiraly (King Istvan). „It’s a cult thing, something like the Hungarian Hair,” Kerekes explained. „In 1985 or 1986 it was composed and presented in Hungary with famous Hungarian rock musicians. It became very popular. But it was forbidden in Romania even to listen to it! You could be charged if you had a tape of that music. Istvan was the first Hungarian king, and it’s about his story. It’s history, but it has a lot of connotations of freedom, of becoming a nation. It had a lot of meaning in the 1980s, perhaps even more meaning for Hungarians here than in Hungary. But it was forbidden. In 2010 or 2011, at one of the editions of this cultural festival, this film was projected on the main square in Cluj.”
Interethnic tensions have not disappeared entirely. Football games can get nasty. But the changes are palpable. And in a recent note, Kerekes reported that Istvan a Kiraly appeared again at this August’s festival – not as a poorly projected film but this time as a live show in front of a huge audience”, says John Feffer.
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