House Speaker László Kövér has opened Budapest’s Csángó festival, dedicated to the culture of the 250,000-strong ethnic group living in Romania’s Moldavia region.
The festival, running between August 15th and 25th, showcases Csángó culture through a series of exhibitions, concerts and other events.
According to MTI, Kövér told the opening ceremony that the Csángó community had “preserved the treasures of our past … the way of thinking that belongs to the language, songs, ballads and myths representing the most ancient branches of our nation”.
Next year, the government will spend 130 billion HUF (EUR 400.3m) on supporting the three million Hungarians living abroad. The funding will go towards preserving their mother tongue and culture and strengthening the network of communities. Kövér said the government should continue uniting the nation across borders and its policies aiming regional cooperation with neighboring countries.
Csángós are believed to have fled from neighboring Transylvania in at least two waves, one in the 18th century. An estimated 60,000 members of the community still speak an archaic form of Hungarian.
Photo credit: Magyar Nemzet