Has Hungary forgotten its Palestinian students trapped in war-torn Gaza?

Almost two dozen Palestinian students, each holding an acceptance letter from a Hungarian university and a fully funded scholarship from the Hungarian government, are stuck in Gaza. Only two Stipendium Hungaricum students have managed to escape the area; 23 are still there, hoping that Prime Minister Orbán’s membership of President Trump’s Board of Peace might secure a safe passage for them from the war-torn region.
‘We refuse to let war define our future’
As we reported earlier, 25 Palestinian students were stuck in Gaza, fearing they would lose their Stipendium Hungaricum scholarships and the chance of a better, more peaceful life. Nine of them had been accepted for the 2024/2025 academic year and had reached the deferral limit last summer.

One of the scholarship recipients messaged us their story at the time, explaining that most of them studied by candlelight or small flashlights owing to the drones and the war. Since the borders were closed, they could not leave, and there was no evacuation route for them either. Meanwhile, other countries such as Germany, France and Ireland evacuated their students from Gaza. ‘We study not because it is easy, but because we refuse to let war define our future,’ they wrote to us in July.







We don’t want them! Stay where you are!!! Gaza is your home!!!
Of course it is there home.
Was and will.
Die of your own misery.
They are neither Hungarian nor Hungary’s students, so they are in no way the responsibility of this country or its government.
Not sure what the point of the article is, therefore.
You are not Hungarian nor a person of any value Stupid Steiner!
So shut you hole shit up!
Do the heck something useful in the morning than spreading your idiotness here Steiner!
Hungary boasts peace councils yet leaves its own scholarship students trapped in a warzone, a textbook lesson in hypocrisy.
While others evacuate their students, Orbán’s government offers nothing but hollow signatures and empty promises.
Perhaps “Make Gaza Great Again” isn’t quite the peace plan these scholars were hoping for.