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Hungary’s March 15 national holiday marked up and down the country

“March 15, 1848 is a common legacy and celebration of all Hungarians. Wherever we live in the world, we all remember the young heroes of the revolution and those who fought together under the banner of Hungarian freedom," the prime minister said.

Hungary’s March 15 national holiday was marked up and down the country yesterday.

The Hungarian flag was hoisted with military honors in front of Parliament. President János Áder and House Speaker László Kövér were in attendance.

The single central event of this year’s March 15 national holiday was attended by only a few people in Kossuth Square. All other central events, including Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s speech, which had been due to be delivered in front of the National Museum, and the award ceremony of the Kossuth and Széchenyi prizes, have been cancelled due to the coronavirus outbreak.

March 15 marks the beginning of the 1848 revolution, part of a series of uprisings in Europe that year. On March 15, citizens of Pest gathered in front of the National Museum and demanded independence from Habsburg rule. Hungary’s first independent government with Count Lajos Batthyány as prime minister approved a reform package called the April laws. Later, the uprising grew into a war of independence, stifled by Austria and Russia in late 1849.

President János Áder said the strength of March 15 lies in freedom and loyalty. Referring to the coronavirus outbreak, the president asked Hungarians to commemorate 1848 at home “at this time under more modest circumstances, with a little bit more concern, but with trust”.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán greeted Hungarian communities in neighboring countries on the March 15 national holiday. In a letter sent to ethnic Hungarian communities in Romania, Serbia, Slovakia and Ukraine, the prime minister commemorated Hungary’s 1848/49 revolution and freedom fight as well as the centenary of the Trianon Peace Treaty. “March 15, 1848 is a common legacy and celebration of all Hungarians. Wherever we live in the world, we all remember the young heroes of the revolution and those who fought together under the banner of Hungarian freedom.”

PM Orbán said this year’s celebration is given a special emphasis by the fact that the year 2020 marks the 100th anniversary of the signing of the WWI Trianon Peace Treaty under which two-thirds of Hungary’s territory was ceded to neighboring countries.

“Just as 172 years ago, Hungary cannot exist today without the Hungarian communities in Transylvania, Northern Serbia, Southern Slovakia and Transcarpathia, and it is our shared duty and responsibility to strengthen these communities and protect their rights,” he said in his letter.

Photo credit: Mandiner