Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Ernő Gerő

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Preceded by
  
Matyas Rakosi

Name
  
Erno Gero

Succeeded by
  
Janos Kadar

Nationality
  
Hungarian

Role
  
Political leader


Born
  
8 July 1898Terbegec, Austria-Hungary (
1898-07-08
)

Died
  
March 12, 1980, Budapest, Hungary

Political party
  
Hungarian Communist Party, Hungarian Working People\'s Party

Ernő Gerő [ˈɛrnøː ˈɡɛrøː] (born Ernő Singer; 8 July 1898 – 12 March 1980) was a Hungarian Communist Party leader in the period after World War II and briefly in 1956 the most powerful man in Hungary as first secretary of its ruling communist party.

Contents

Ernő Gerő me oktber 23 fszerepli feminahu

Early career

Ernő Gerő Hatvan ve trtnt 1956 szeptember 8 Hrad

Gerő was born in Terbegec, Hungary (now Trebušovce, Slovakia) to Jewish parents, though he later totally repudiated religion. An early Hungarian communist, Gerő fled Hungary for the Soviet Union after Béla Kun's brief communist government was overthrown in August 1919. During his two decades living in the USSR, Gerő was an active KGB agent. Through that association, Gerő was involved in the Comintern—the international organization of communists—in France, and also fought in the Spanish Civil War. There he performed purges against Trotskyist groups in the International Brigades; as a result he was called the "Butcher of Barcelona".

The outbreak of the Second World War found him in Moscow again, and he remained for the duration of the war. After the dissolution of the Communist International in 1943, he was in charge of propaganda directed at enemy forces and prisoners of war. Gerő was among the very first communist functionaries to return to Hungary in early November 1944. Ernő Gerő was a member of Hungary's High National Council (provisional government) between 26 January and 11 May 1945.

Ernő Gerő Ger Ern Wikipdia

In the November 1945 election, the Hungarian Communist Party, under Gerő and Mátyás Rákosi, got 17% of the vote, compared to 57% for the Smallholders' Party, but the Soviet commander in Hungary, Marshal Kliment Voroshilov, installed a coalition government with communists in key posts. The communists staged a sham election and took full control in 1949, with Rákosi as party leader. Gerő and Mihály Farkas were Rákosi's right-hand men.

Rákosi took over the and premiership as well in 1952. However, his authority was shaken a year later by the death of Stalin, when the Soviet Union insisted on Imre Nagy taking over as prime minister. Gerő was retained as a counterweight to the reformers. Rákosi, having managed to regain control, was then undermined by Nikita Khrushchev's secret speech in early 1956 denouncing Stalinism and forced to leave office on 18 July 1956 by Anastas Mikoyan. He retained enough influence that the MDP designates Gerő to succeed him as party leader.

Gerő interregnum

Ernő Gerő Ger Ern Wikipdia

Gerő led the country for a brief period, known as the 'Gerő Interregnum', from 18 July 1956 to 24 October 1956, just over three months. He was almost as detested as Rákosi had been. Not only had he been Rákosi's close associate since 1948, but he was fully implicated in the purges, the forced industrialization and collectivization of Hungary.

Later life and death

The Soviet envoys finally forced Gerő to resign on 25 October 1956, during the second day of the Hungarian Uprising, after he gave an unduly harsh speech that enraged the people. The central committee met and agreed that János Kádár should be made party leader and Imre Nagy be made prime minister, marking the end of the Gerő interregnum. Gerő fled to the Soviet Union, but after the revolution was crushed, the more moderate Communist regime of Kádár initially refused to let him return to Hungary.

He was finally allowed to return from exile in 1960, but was promptly expelled from the Communist Party. He worked as an occasional translator in Budapest during his retirement. His character plays a central role in Vilmos Kondor's 2012 novel Budapest Noir and the whole series. He died in Budapest in 1980 at the age of 81.

References

Ernő Gerő Wikipedia