Arrow Cross Party

The Arrow Cross Party (Hungarian: Nyilaskeresztes Part Hungarista Mozgalom, literally "Arrow Cross Hungarianist Movement") was a pro-German anti-Semitic fascist party led by Ferenc Szlasi which ruled Hungary from October 15, 1944 to January 1945. During its short rule, 80,000 Jews, including many women, children and old people were deported from Hungary to their deaths. After the war, Szlasi and other Arrow Cross leaders were tried as war criminals by Hungarian courts. The party was founded by Szlasi in 1935 as the Party of National Will but was outlawed two years later for its violent radicalism. It was reconstituted in 1939 as the Arrow Cross Party, modelled fairly explicitly on the Nazi Party of Germany. Its iconography was clearly inspired by that of the Nazis; the Arrow Cross emblem was an ancient symbol of the Magyar tribes who settled Hungary, thereby representing the racial purity of the Hungarians in much the same way that the Nazi swastika was supposed to allude to the racial purity of the Aryans. The party's ideology was somewhat similar to Nazism - nationalism, the promotion of agriculture, anti-capitalism, anti-Communism, and militant anti-Semitism. It subscribed to the Nazi ideology of "master races" which, in Szlasi's view, included the Hungarians, Germans and Japanese, and it also supported the concept of an order based on the power of the strongest - what Szlasi called a "brutally realistic tatism". However, its espousal of a "Greater Hungary" and Hungarian values (which Szlasi labelled "Hungarizmus" or "Hungarianism") clashed with Nazi ambitions in central Europe, delaying by several years Hitler's endorsement of the party. The Arrow Cross obtained most of its support from a disparate coalition of military officers, students, nationalists and urban and agricultural workers. It was only one of a number of similar openly fascist factions in Hungary, but was by far the most prominent. When it contested the May 1939 elections - the only ones in which it stood - the party won more than 25% of the vote and 30 seats in the Hungarian Parliament. It thus became one of the most powerful parties in Hungary. However, the Arrow Cross was banned on the outbreak of World War II, forcing it to operate underground. By 1944, however, it had gained the open support of Germany and the pro-German Prime Minister Dme Sztjay legalized the party again in March 1944. In October 1944 Hungary's ruler, Regent Mikls Horthy, was forced to resign by the Germans, who installed the Arrow Cross Party in government and appointed Szlasi as prime minister and head of state. Its rule was bloody but short-lived, as Soviet and Romanian forces were already fighting in Hungary even before Szlasi's takeover. Budapest fell in December 1944 and the Arrow Cross government effectively fell the following month. Arrow Cross members and German forces continued to fight a rear-guard action in the far west of Hungary until the end of the war in April 1945. After the war, many of the Arrow Cross leaders were captured and tried for war crimes; many, including Szlasi himself, were executed. The ideology of the Arrow Cross has resurfaced to some extent in recent years, with the Neo-Fascist Hungarian Welfare Association prominent in reviving Szlasi's "Hungarizmus" through its monthly magazine, Magyartudat ("Hungarian Awareness"). However, it is very much a fringe element of modern Hungarian politics.

 

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