Orbán opens institute in honor of Nobel laureate Kertész

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán on Saturday opened Budapest’s new Kertész Imre Institute.

In his opening address, the prime minister said that “Kertész, a man of vast intellect, could not be labelled in a single category and it was no question that his legacy should be in Budapest, rather than in Berlin, because this was his city”.

Orbán included several quotes by Kertész in his address, and said that “anti-Semitism is contagion, an ideological epidemic, a pastime for filthy souls that turns into murder”, and criticised Hungary’s Left for “running an anti-Semite” in Sunday’s interim parliamentary election in Tiszaújváros, in northeastern Hungary.

The prime minister also quoted Kertész as saying that “there is no species called a multi-cultural society”.

According to Kertész, Orbán said, the problems of European civilisation should be resolved within that very civilisation because “imported solutions won’t work, whether it is ideology or people”. “A liberal spirit, originally all good intentions, have led intellectuals to nihilism and the masses to uncertainty through the faithlessness of the postmodern,” he said.

kertész institute
Photo: MTI/Máthé Zoltán

Orbán said that “heated and low-level” disputes around Kertész winning the Nobel Prize had “put him in a drawer where he would not want to be because a deep intellect could not be restricted by barriers” adding that the author had “stood outside communism because he wanted to live clean” and chose not to participate. “He chose internal emigration in Budapest,” Orbán said.

Referring to the new institute, Orbán said the Hungarian government had undertaken cultural projects “beyond its means” becasue “we are a nation of culture”.

He said that the Hungarian government had spent over 4,000 billion forints on such projects since 2010, and cited the Liget Project, a museum complex in Budapest’s City Park, renovation of the State Opera and financing to the film industry as examples.

Mária Schmidt, head of the Central and Eastern European Historic and Social Research Foundation, which will run the new institute, said that apart from researchers the broader public will be welcome to the institute, to attend a wide range of literary and art programmes. The institute will also launch research and translation scholarship schemes, she added.

The Kertész Institute is housed in an Art Nouveau mansion in Benczúr Street, in the sixth district. The foundation has bought the building from the City of Budapest at a price of 762 million forints (EUR 2.1m) and paid 2 billion forints on renovation.

kertész imre
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Source: MTI

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