Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai, Theologia Reformata Transylvanica, / ()
DOI: 10.24193/subbtref.69.1.13
Published Online: 2024-06-30
Published Print: 2024-06-30
©2024 Studia UBB Theologia Reformata Transylvanica. Published by Babeş-Bolyai University.
is work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-
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LÁNYI Gábor
1
:
Bereczky Albert (1893–1966) budapesti
lelkipásztor szerepe a németellenes ellenállásban és
az embermentésben (1944–45)
Abstract. The role of the Rev. Albert Bereczky (1893–1966) in the Anti-
German Resistance and in the Rescue of People (1944–45)
Albert Bereczky, the pastor of the Reformed Congregation on Pozsonyi Street
(Budapest), joined the anti-German resistance after the German invasion of
Hungary on 19 March 1944 and became one of its most committed activists. His
friendship with Zoltán Tildy, President of the Smallholders Party, led Bereczky into
the resistance movement, and he helped him to organize one of the main bodies of
the movement, the Hungarian Front. Miklós Mester, State Secretary at the Ministry
of Religion and Public Education, and Ottó Komoly, President of the Hungarian
Zionist Federation, also became important associates. It is mainly in the light of the
memoirs and diaries of the latter two that our study gives an insight into Bereczky’s
multifaceted and varied activities, the main elements of which were liaising between
different resistance groups and hiding those who had been persecuted on racial or
political grounds. Bereczky also played a major role in the Reformed Church in
Hungary’s outreach to Jews, for example, in organizing the ultimately unsuccessful
public church protest against the deportations.
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Dr. habil. Lányi Gábor János a Károli Gáspár Református Egyetem Hittudományi Kar
Egyháztörténeti Tanszékének habilitált egyetemi docense; e-mail: lanyi.gabor@kre.hu.