Canada

The oldest man in Canada is a 110-year-old Hungarian chess player

Canada’s oldest man lives in a seniors’ home in Toronto. He was born in Hungary, and lived through two world wars, emigrating after the Second World War, all the while playing chess and becoming a champion first in Hungary, then in Canada. 24.hu reports on The Globe and Mail’s interview with Zoltán Sárosy.

On June 28, 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie Chotek were assassinated. The event triggered the First World War. Zoltán Sárosy was not yet 8 years old at the time, living with his mother and his military doctor father in a military base on the Adriatic, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

“One morning I came out of my room to see my mother packing. She said war is coming, we have to leave within 12 hours,” says Mr. Sárosy. The family made their way to Herzegovina on board a torpedo boat, to Trieste via passenger ship, and finally reached Budapest by train.

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Today, Mr. Sárosy lives in a seniors’ home in Toronto. He is celebrating his 110th birthday on August 23, which, according to The Globe and Mail, makes him the fourth oldest person in Canada after three women, and the oldest and probably only man who still remembers the beginning of the First World War.

Zoltán Sárosy was born in Budapest in 1906. His chess career started at the age of 10 when he noticed someone playing in a public park.

“I was with my mother and I saw a boy playing chess and I asked, ‘What is that?’ The next day I was back at the park. That boy’s mother wouldn’t let me play with him but I found others,” said Mr. Sárosy.

He played throughout school and at university. He studied international trade in Vienna, graduating in 1928, then he returned to Budapest, and soon became a grandmaster.

“In 1943, I played in the Hungarian championship and gained the Hungarian [chess] master title,” he says.

sarosy-zoltan-chess
Photo: 24.hu

He served in the Second World War as a volunteer translator, speaking Hungarian and German, while the men of his generation were drafted and sent to the front. However, after the war was over, he fled from Hungary, worried that he might get caught by the Russians for his role in the war as a military translator. He left his wife and daughter in Hungary.

He lived in places all over Europe, from Salzburg to a refugee camp, and finally in Alsace, a German-speaking province taken back by France after the war. In 1950, he discovered that Canada was welcoming immigrants, and he applied.

He arrived in Halifax on December 27, 1950, then went to Toronto where he found employment doing tiling work on an upper floor in the Bank of Nova Scotia Building.

“I started my career in Toronto at a high level,” he jokes.

Once he settled in Canada, he sent for his family but his wife didn’t want to leave the country, so they got divorced. His daughter visited him at one point, and considered moving to Canada, but then changed her mind.

Sárosy wanted to be independent and did not want to work for other people, so he started selling cosmetics, eventually importing them himself, as well.

Some years later, he bought a convenience store, which he ran until the late 1970s. He continued his chess career as well, winning his first championship in Canada in 1955. He became the Canadian Correspondence Champion in 1967, 1972, and 1981, and he is a member of the Canadian Chess Hall of Fame.

After his first marriage, he married Heino Mallo, an Estonian immigrant. She died in 1998, and Sárosy moved to the seniors’ home in 2000, at the age of 94. It was another 10 years before he started using a mobility scooter to get around. Today, he uses a wheelchair, but his mind is as sharp as ever.

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“He remembers the past but what amazes me is his short-term memory,” says Elena Yeryomenko, lifestyle program manager of Sárosy’s home. “It is phenomenal at this age to have such a sharp mind. He remembers his life as a child and he remembers what he had for breakfast.”

In 1999, he also purchased a computer to play chess. A game of correspondence chess, which he played with people from around the world via mail, would take four or five years to finish and he was worried that at 93 he might not make it to the end of the game.

When asked about the secret of long life, Zoltán Sárosy laughs. He started then quit smoking as a teenager, and only drank in moderation, but he doesn’t have a definite answer.

“I’m still working on the formula. However, when I get it, I’ll go to the patent office,” he says. “I’m like an old used car with rusty body, wobbly wheels but a good engine.”

Read the original article HERE.

Photo: 24.hu

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World Meeting of Kuvasz Breeders: The Hungarian Kuvasz in growing numbers abroad

The World Meeting of Kuvasz Breeders is being held for the first time on August 12-15 in Hortobágy. The event will be attended by visitors from eleven countries, such as Germany, Sweden, Transylvania, Serbia, Slovakia, Switzerland, and even Brazil and Canada, nepszava.hu writes.

The opening on Friday will be followed by a day of lectures by foreign experts on the future of the breed, its use, and other questions. The meeting will also provide opportunities for breeders to share their experience on issues and tasks related to the breeding of the Kuvasz, and to discuss the place of the breed in Europe today, said Ferenc Pischoff, president of the Hungarian Kuvasz breeders’ association MKFE.

These shepherd dogs have practically lost their field of work, since very few of them are still used in their original environment. Thus the purpose for which they were bred hundreds of years ago needs to change, but they still need to be provided with tasks and training similar to their original function, said Ferenc Pischoff.

[box] The Kuvasz is one of nine Hungarian dog breeds whose breeding is under state supervision. The other protected Hungarian breeds are the Komondor, the Puli, the Pumi, the Mudi, the Transylvanian Hound, the Vizsla, the Wirehaired Vizsla, and the Hungarian Agár.[/box]

The popularity of the Kuvasz has been increasing in recent years. A few years ago the number of registered dogs was 100-150, whereas today this number has grown to a yearly 250 newly registered dogs, and there are also many unregistered animals.

The Kuvasz is getting more and more popular not only in Hungary but abroad as well. Many dogs live in Germany, Canada, and the USA, and there is an increasing interest in the breed in Sweden and Norway as well.

Interestingly, Ferenc Pischoff said, the Hungarian Kuvasz has even reached Australia. A local breeder would like to naturalise the Kuvasz and use it for its original purpose, as a shepherd dog. Compared to other dogs, the Kuvasz is an exceptionally good working dog, and they can be used in other fields as well, for example as therapy dogs, he added.

The professional programmes of the meeting will be followed by a dog show, in which more than 70 dogs will participate. The jury judges male and female dogs separately, and the dogs will be evaluated based on not only their appearance but their behaviour and character as well.

[box] The Kuvasz is one of the oldest Hungarian dog breeds. It arrived in the Carpathian Basin with the Hungarians around 895 A.D. Its primary function was guarding the livestock on higher grounds, while other breeds, like the Komondor, served as sheepdogs on lower pastures. In the 15th century, the Kuvasz became a highly priced dog among the nobility. During and after the Second World War, the Kuvasz population in Hungary drastically diminished and the breed almost disappeared. The dogs tend to be very protective of their family, and German and Soviet soldiers actively sought out and killed almost the entire population. Since then, dedicated breeders have managed to restore the breed, which today enjoys increasing popularity not only in Hungary but in foreign countries, as well. (wikipedia.org)[/box]

Photos: allbigdogbreeds.com, haziallat.hu

Copy editor: bm

Surprisingly much money is sent home by Hungarians working abroad

Hungarians working in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada sent the largest amount of money home among those working abroad in 2014, Hungarian Academy of Sciences’ (MTA) economic study, The Hungarian Labour Market 2015 reveals.

The largest sum of money (USD 952.2 million) was sent to Hungary from Germany in 2014; more than the amount sent from the United Kingdom (USD 396.3 million) and Australia (USD 361.1 million) together.

It is surprising that so much money has been sent to Hungary from the United States and Canada, as little could be heard – compared to other target countries for emigrants seeking their fortune abroad – about Hungarians emigrating to these countries. MTA’s study also reveals that Austria, Switzerland, Sweden, and Slovakia are similarly among the top countries from where Hungarian citizens transfer money back to their homeland.

It has been found that the amount of money sent to Hungary increased in two separate waves in the past two decades; first, after joining the European Union in 2004, and then after 2009.

Moreover, while only USD 280 million arrived to Hungary from abroad in 2000, the sum rose to USD 4473 million in 2014, which means that the amount of money sent to Hungary increased by almost 1600% in fifteen years.

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It is noteworthy that in the years following the entry to the EU, the amount of money sent to Hungary constituted about 1.5-2 % of GDP, while it already represented 3 % of GDP in 2014.

translated by Gábor Hajnal

People love the Hungarian chimney cake in Canada

According to travelo.hu, the eater.com gastro website recommends a Canadian food truck and it turned out that the amazing chimney cake is made by Hungarians.

Éva was born in Budapest and is a ’56 immigrant, who left behind everything to start a new life in Canada with her husband and two children. She always talked about chimney cakes, the deliciousness of her homeland, nostalgically. Éva’s grandson, Justin, married a girl named Kristin and they decided to make their big dream real, sold everything and traveled around the world for two years. Their last stop was Budapest, where they tried the chimney cake mentioned so many times by Justin’s grandma. They knew right after the first bite where to continue their world tour. They returned home, joined Éva, bought a food truck, and this is how Eva’s Original Chimneys was born.

Canadians love their delicacies ever since. Last year, they won the prize of the best freshmen at the AwesTruck competition, we can find them on the street food toplists of Canada, but they are even recommended as local curiosity, a sight, by blogs and magazines.

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Photos: www.facebook.com/Eva’sOriginalChimneys

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Ombudsman’s office condemns discrimination of Roma in airport checks

Budapest (MTI) – The check-in process for international flights must not involve discrimination, nor must airport personnel humiliate passengers or harm their dignity, the office of the ombudsman for fundamental rights said in a statement on Friday.

The office has received several complaints after Roma individuals and families were denied boarding at Budapest’s international airport despite their presenting valid travel documents and tickets to Canada. According to the complainants, “persons of unknown authority” interviewed them at the check-in points and banned them from boarding their flights.

Deputy ombudsman for national minorities Erzsébet Szalay Sándor conducted an investigation and established that the airport checks did not meet the requirements of a fair procedure, violated citizens’ right to legal remedy, as well as the dignity of people exercising their right of free movement.

“Preliminary checks at Budapest’s Liszt Ferenc Airport must not be discriminative for any passenger leaving for Canada,” the statement quoted the official as saying. Procedures must be conducted under a written protocol and in the same manner each time, while passengers should be advised on the purpose of the check in advance, the document added.

TTIP deal ‘highly unlikely’ in 2016?

Brussels, May 13 (MTI) – It is “highly unlikely” that a deal will be reached this year on the TTIP free trade pact between the United States and the European Union, István Mikola, state secretary at the Hungarian foreign ministry, said in Brussels on Friday.

Speaking after a meeting of EU foreign ministers, Mikola said Friday’s talks focused on the TTIP and the EU-Canada CETA deal. While most member states were not overly optimistic about the state of the TTIP talks, negotiations on CETA are reaching their final stages, he said. The agreement will be signed in the summer, after which the ratification process can begin, Mikola added.

The state secretary called CETA a very important agreement “which we will all benefit from”. The TTIP pact, however, still needs a lot of work and it is unlikely to be signed in the near future, he said.

The debate about TTIP centered on the proposed investor-state dispute settlement mechanism and the overall nature of the pact. Hungary does not support the dispute settlement mechanism in its current state, but the US is committed to it, Mikola said. He said Hungary, like several other member states, wants TTIP to be a “mixed” agreement, requiring ratification by national parliaments. If the deal is not good enough, it can be vetoed “in the last minute”, he said.

The 14th round of TTIP negotiations is expected to take place in Brussels in July.

The meeting also touched on China’s alleged dumping of cheap steel products on the EU market, which officials said threatens jobs in the bloc’s steel industry.

US, Canadian ambassadors open Ibero-American Week in Pécs

Daily News Hungary

Budapest, May 12 (MTI) – US Ambassador Colleen Bell and Canadian Ambassador Lisa Helfand opened the 17th Ibero-American Week scientific and cultural programme in Pécs on Thursday.

Researchers and scholarship fellows pursuing American studies serve as an important “bridge” in US-Hungary relations, Bell said in her address at the opening.

Researchers help maintain a dialogue between the two cultures and give one another inspiration, she said.

The US ambassador is a patron of the Ibero-American Week, which has been organised by the University of Pecs in partnership with the Hungarian Association for American Studies (HAAS).

Chief patron of the programme is Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó.

Air Transat has launched a direct flight between Budapest and Toronto

Canadian airline Air Transat has recently launched a direct flight between Budapest and Toronto, turizmusonline.hu writes.

The seasonal flights will operate between 2 June and 13 October. Planes will depart from Budapest on Thursdays and from Toronto on Wednesdays. Air Transat has excellent connections from Toronto to Montreal and Vancouver, too.

The airline belongs to the Transat group of companies, which is one of the biggest Canadian holiday travel airlines. Air Transat has flights to 30 countries and 60 destinations, and was voted North America’s Best Leisure Airline in 2015.

One of the most special services of the airline is the computer operated cabin lighting, which can create 1 million different colour combinations, and chooses the one which is the most fitting for the eyes depending on where and when the travel takes place.

Usually four colour combinations are used: one for departing, one for servicing food, one during the night and sleeping, and one in the morning. Choosing the most appropriate colour for travelling can help passengers overcome jetlag.

Turizmusonline.hu also collected 10 reasons why tourists should choose Air Transat:

  1. The airline provides a direct flight between Budapest and Canada
  2. Benefits and leisure services provided by the Club Class
  3. The Option Plus service provides extra benefits for passengers choosing the Economy Class
  4. Ergonomic cabins with special seats and cabin lighting
  5. Customizable entertainment system aboard
  6. Wide range of food menus
  7. Friendly staff and attentive service
  8. Luggages are free of charge up to 23 kg
  9. Family programs
  10. Competitive all-inclusive prices

Photo: Air Transat’s Facebook page

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LMP calls on Orbán to veto EU-Canada free trade deal at summit

Budapest, March 25 (MTI) – The green opposition LMP party’s co-leader said he would bring before parliament a resolution proposal to oblige the prime minister to veto the CETA free trade deal between the European Union and Canada the next time the pact is on the agenda at an EU summit.

András Schiffer told a press conference on Friday that his proposal would prohibit the government from supporting free trade agreements whose effects would be harmful to the environment, public health, food safety, human rights or workers’ rights. Signing agreements with “anti-democratic” dispute settlement clauses would also be prohibited.

Under the proposal, the government would not even be allowed to sign into effect such agreements for a limited period without the approval of parliament.

Schiffer emphasised that the proposal would not only refer to CETA, but to the EU-US TTIP and TISA agreements as well, arguing that any clauses that make their way into CETA were bound to be included in the other agreements, too. He said CETA destroys many of the EU’s strict health, environmental and labour regulations meant to protect the rights of citizens.

If CETA’s text were to be signed into Hungarian law, both the country and the EU would “fall prey to agro-terroristic multinational companies”, Schiffer said. Hungary could say goodbye to its GMO-free status if the EU-Canada deal is implemented, he added.

Hungarians celebrated the Hungária Gala Ball’s 60 anniversary in Calgary

Hungarians celebrated The Hungária Gala Ball’s 60 anniversary Saturday evening in Calgary (Canada). The ball was organized by the Hungarian Veteran’s Association.

Few hundred people gathered at the Westin Hotel’s Grand Ballroom on Saturday evening. The ball acts as a link for the Calgary Hungarian community.

Klementina Angyalfi, one of the organizer said to Caligary Metro News:

“The Hungarian Gala Ball for the last 60 years has become a bridge between the Calgary community and the Hungarian community. Many young Hungarians have introduced their Canadian friends to Hungarian culture through music, dance and, of course, food. Friendships last a lifetime. Through them come understanding and the ability to build a vibrant Canadian society.”

Visit the Hungária Ball’s website to get more information.

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State Secretary Takacs holds talks in Canada

Washington, DC, February 2 (MTI) – Szabolcs Takács, state secretary at the prime minister’s office, held talks and met members of the Hungarian community during an official visit to Canada.

Speaking to MTI by phone, Takács said he first visited Toronto where he held talks with members of Canada’s organisation for Catholic-Jewish dialogue in his capacity as rotating chair of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA).

He also gave a lecture at the University of Toronto on IHRA’s role and activities.

Takacs also had talks with Andrew Bennet, the head of IHRA’s Canadian Delegation.

In the capital city he met Deputy Foreign Minister Daniel Jean and discussed further cooperation possibilities between Hungary and Canada. They also discussed international affairs such as the migration crisis and the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

15-year-old Hungarian hockey player sang the National Anthem in front of Canadian audience – VIDEO

According to index.hu, the Hungarian U16 hockey national team played in the international tournament in Kamloops, Canada. The sound system broke down just before the match of the Hungarian team, so a Hungarian boy had to sing the National Anthem.

The 15-year-old Laszlo Horvath stood up and began to sing.

According to the nemzetisport.hu, the Hungarian team won the match 5-1.

Photo: 5 year old Hungarian Hockey Player sings National Anthem after PA failure

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Another manipulative video attack on Hungary

Guy Verhostadt, President of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, attacked Hungary in Wednesday’s debate of the European Parliament, alfahir.hu wrote.

The Belgian liberal politician posted a 25-second video on Facebook, which shows that, while illegal immigrants have to duck under barbed wire at the border, they are welcomed in Canada, because Justin Trudeau, the ultra-liberal Prime Minister accepts them with a hug.

On the MEP’s Facebook page several of his commenters drew attention to how this is a huge misstatement. The politician answered that he understands the world being not black and white and that history will consider how Europe treated the refugee crisis. However, he is disappointed that there is no strategy, no quota system and fair and humane registration for the refugees; in addition, he has not seen any results of the European summits in the last six months.

 

Posted by Guy Verhofstadt on Tuesday, December 15, 2015

American representative stood up for Hungary

But of course, there are other types of foreign expressions regarding Hungary as well: Ted Poe, representative of Texas stood up for the Hungarian migrant policy in the Congress of Washington on Tuesday.

He said Hungary is a sovereign country that makes its decisions “according to its interests and concerns”. He added that they themselves would not be happy if Canada wanted to tell them what to do. Hungarians do not want other countries, like Germany, dictate them what to do, either.

According to the Houston politician, refugee crisis is a complex issue, and there are two sides of the moral argument: refugees fleeing war must be helped, but a government also has to protect its citizens.

The American politician cited OECD data as well about the Hungarian economy, and he underlined that Budapest should rather invest in its own nation and economy than spend billions on accomodate other people.

based on the article of alfahir.hu

Photo: Guy Verhofstadt Facebook page

Copy editor: bm

Official discusses cultural cooperation in Canada

canada flag

Washington, D.C., December 3 (MTI) – Hungary’s cabinet deputy state secretary for social relations discussed opportunities for cultural cooperation with Jewish communities of Hungarian origin in Canada over the past week.

Csaba Latorcai told MTI over the phone that the Hungarian delegation, which included Andras Heisler, the head of the Federation of Hungarian Jewish Communities, met Jewish community leaders in Toronto to discuss initiatives that could serve as models for Hungarian Jewish communities for establishing complex institutions.

Latorcai said the partners discussed potential ways the Hungarian government could support Jewish community initiatives. He said investors in Toronto indicated that they would be willing to join the government in supporting nonprofit cultural and public education institutions.

The Hungarian delegation had talks with Helen Angus, Ontario’s deputy minister of citizenship, immigration and international trade on cultural cooperation and joint memorial events to be held on the 60th anniversary of the 1956 revolution. They also discussed 1956 commemorative events in the Department of Canadian Heritage and Latorcai noted that the Hungarian government is prepared to contribute 25 million forints (EUR 80,550) to the construction of a memorial honouring the victims of communism to be set up in Ottawa.

In Boisbriand, Quebec, near Montreal, Latorcai met representatives of the orthodox Jewish community to discuss infrastructure developments in pilgrimage tourism.

The delegation met Peter Boehm, Canada’s deputy foreign minister, and discussed the crisis in the Middle East and Europe’s migration crisis.

Hungarian House opens in Toronto

toronto

Budapest, October 25 (MTI) – Hungarian officials inaugurated the Hungarian House in Toronto, which is a 21st-century design, “suited to cater for all needs of the Hungarian community,” the Hungarian state official in charge of policy for Hungarian communities abroad said.

Arpad Janos Potapi told MTI over the phone that his visit to Canada had three aims: to inauguarate the Hungarian House, to present an award to the Canadian-Hungarian Cultural Council and to take part in commemorations of the anniversary of Hungary’s 1956 anti-Soviet uprising.

The Hungarian House was built from 1.8 million Canadian dollars, financed in two-thirds by the local Hungarian community, Potapi said. The Hungarian government offered 600,000 dollars for the cause, he said.

LMP leader demands Hungary steps against EU free trade pacts with Canada, US

Budapest, October 12 (MTI) – The green opposition LMP has demanded that Hungary take action to prevent the ratification of the Comprehensive Trade and Economic Agreement (CETA) between the European Union and Canada.

Andras Schiffer, the party’s co-chair and group leader, also called on the Hungarian prime minister on Monday “to genuinely represent” the country’s national interests at talks between Brussels and the United States on the prospective Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).

Speaking at a press conference in Eger, in northern Hungary, he urged Viktor Orban to find allies in eastern and southern Europe in efforts to lobby Brussels to suspend talks on these agreements as soon as possible.

The Hungarian prime minister should build “an alliance” for this cause, similar to the one he managed to bring together in central Europe on the migration crisis, Schiffer said.

“Pending ratification by the individual countries, the CETA is the anteroom to the TTIP,” Schiffer said, adding that “let’s have no illusions … anything included in CETA will ultimately be part of the TTIP as well.”

A provision in CETA allows multinational companies the possibility to “punish” national governments by launching a lawsuit in an “offshore international tribunal,” Schiffer said, adding that by ratifying that pact, Hungary would “bid farewell” to the country’s GMO-free status, which is encoded in the country’s basic law.

LMP demands that the Hungarian prime minister state clearly the government’s position on the CETA and Hungary’s veto to that pact, Schiffer said.

The next round of TTIP talks in Brussels will focus on the auto industry, he noted, adding that “it is no accident that the VW scandal emerged just before this.” The scandal goes to show that such cases can seriously harm vulnerable economies, such as Hungary’s, which depend on manufacturing, Schiffer added.

There is a “TTIP coalition” in Hungary composed of the opposition Socialists and their “satellite parties”, as well as the ruling Fidesz party, and they applaud free trade pact because the auto industry accounts for a major part of Hungarian industrial output and GDP, he said.

Schiffer called it “outrageous” that the talks are being held in complete secrecy.

“The lobbyists of a couple of multinationals are clutching the hands of the leaders of the EU and the United States while they attempt to conceal everything from the public,” he said.

Schiffer noted that petitions signed by 3 million EU citizens, demanding immediate termination of the TTIP talks, were submitted to Brussels last week and a demonstration by 250,000 against the deal was held in Berlin on Saturday.

Hungarian sailed over the Northwest Passage for the first time

Hungarians sailed over the Northwest Passage for the first time: Zoltan Balaton and his family made the nearly 4000km-long journey on his 11m sailboat. The Northwest Passage is a sea route which connects the waters of the Atlantic with the Pacific Ocean through the Arctic Ocean along the northern coast of Canada, szeretlekmagyarorszag.hu said.

The family from Budapest started with two children, the 19-year-old Csenge and the 6-year-old Kristof from Sisimiut, a town on the west coast of Greenland on July 12 and arrived in Tuktoyaktuk, which belongs to the northwest territories of Canada, after two months in September 5 – MTI was informed.

With this performance, they are the first Hungarians who sailed over the Northwest Passage, which is open due to the continuous ice only for a short period of the year, but sailing is extremely difficult and dangerous even this time too.

According to the communication received by MTI, a total of 150 ships could sail over the passage so far.

The four-member family’s youngest member celebrated his 6th birthday in the passage. “We are over a grueling expedition” – Zoltan Balaton said. “In several cases, luck, gracious weather and the help of unselfish people saved the success of the crossing”.

Where do 100.000 szekler emigrants live around the world?

Dénes Csala, a szekler data scientist, analysed Facebook data and came to the conclusion that one can meet szeklers all around the world. He also concluded which cities are the victims of most severe migration.

According to mno.hu, he collected data from Facebook, checked the current location of people whose place of birth was a region in Szeklerland. He got 61 789 hits of the sixteen biggest cities of Szeklerland. If they analysed the migrants in the rate of the population of the cities, they would find that the fourth or fifth of the population of some cities had wandered away. The migration rate is 31% at Balabánya, 22% at Barót and 21% at Székelykeresztúr. Lastly, the scientist geocoded the data and created the migration map of the cities of Szeklerland.

It shows that the szeklers are everywhere; everywhere from Greenland to Tahiti, from Madagascar to Siberia. Though, beyond Europe and the USA, the diaspora is quite disorganised. “In Asia (without the Near East) ~50, in South America ~30, in Australia and Africa 10 fellow countrymen live. In the Near East ~100 live, more exactly 30 in both Cyprus and Israel, 16 in Iraq and 17 in the United Arab Emirates.” – wrote Dénes Csala in his post on his blog, Székelydata.

North America is a bit more populated with its szekler population counting ~200 habitants. They mostly live on the East Coast, in Canada and Mexico. It’s interesting that the sixteen szekler cities are present in the USA almost proportionately to their population.

Europe is the main target which is not surprising with its geographic and cultural proximity. Naturally, most emigrants choose Hungary and it is followed by Germany, The United Kingdom, Italy and Austria. It’s intriguing that the 2/3 of the migrants in Italy is from Maroshévíz and Balabánya. This is due to people wandering to places where they have acquaintances rather than to unknown places. Balabánya is arresting because its migrants went to the most diverse places out of all cities.

The scientist adds that the szeklers settled in many different cities of Hungary while in other countries they are concentrated in one city. “Less people move to the states of the former Soviet Union than to Africa; but more and more people move to the Canary Islands.” – writes Dénes Csala, who also showed that around 97.000 szekler habitants live abroad. He added: his analysation of Facebook data can be deceiving because the demography of Facebook users doesn’t do justice to the real szekler demography.

The scientist himself has lived abroad, in Abu-Dhabi and the USA as a student. He said to Hargita Népe that he would return there after his doctoral studies. He thinks that leaving isn’t easy but returning is harder. While he studies abroad his mates back at home build up a strong relationship network and find their way in the red tape. He added that Zoltán Néda and Albert László Barabási did a similar research in the last 5-10 years but the data hunting in media wasn’t that developed then.

At Székelydata he also mentioned the research possibilities lying in his method. “Concerning the processing of data this is a real gold mine; in a future post we’re going to check what field of work they are in, what kind of education background they have and whether or not this two can be related.”

Look out for that!

Translated by Alexandra Béni