György Nyisztor (22 December 1869 – 7 January 1956) was a Hungarian politician, who served as People's Commissar of Agriculture during the Hungarian Soviet Republic in 1919. After the fall of the communist regime he was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1920. However, in the next year he was taken to the Soviet Union on the occasion of a prisoner exchange. Nyisztor returned to Hungary in 1945.
György Nyisztor | |
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People's Commissar of Agriculture of Hungary served alongside Sándor Csizmadia (until 3 April 1919), Jenő Hamburger and Károly Vántus | |
In office 21 March 1919 – 24 July 1919 | |
Preceded by | Barna Buza |
Succeeded by | Jenő Hamburger Károly Vántus |
Personal details | |
Born | Szatmárnémeti, Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary (now Satu Mare, Romania) | 22 December 1869
Died | 7 January 1956 Budapest, People's Republic of Hungary | (aged 86)
Political party | SZDP, Communist Party of Hungary |
Spouses |
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Parent(s) | Görgy Nyisztor Anna Buga |
Profession | politician |
Early years
editHis father, György Nyisztor, was a farmer, and his mother, Anna Buga, was a servant. In his childhood, he first worked as a servant, later as a goulash cook, then became a canner, and then a woodcutter. He then worked as a day laborer at the Szatmárném distillery. He joined the labor movement at the beginning of the 1890s, where he encountered socialist ideas, and together with two of his friends, he founded the local organization of the Social Democratic Party of Hungary (Magyarországi Szociáldemokrata Párt or MSZDP) in Szatmárnémeti.
He went to the countryside, where he worked on the organization of harvest strikes and labor unions of Hungarian and Romanian workers and farm workers. On 7 January 1906 the founding meeting of the Hungarian Land Workers' National Association elected him to the central leadership, after which he became the Association's secretary.
He took part in the booming strike movements in various parts of the country as an independent leader, and soon emerged as one of its best-known agitators. He was considered a gifted orator. He took part in the debates organized against Vilmos Mezőfi and his followers. In 1907, he also assisted in the work of the liberal education congress in Pécs. His articles were published by Világszabadság, the land workers' newspaper. He represented the consistent left-wing position in the leadership of the association.
Revolutionary career, exile and return
editHe was present at the social democratic meetings that prepared the revolutionary movement of October 1918. After the Hungarian Soviet Republic was proclaimed, he belonged to the left within the MSZDP. He became a member of the Party of Communists in Hungary (Hungarian: Kommunisták Magyarországi Pártja or KMP) in March 1919, and worked as a People's Commissar for Agriculture during the Hungarian Council Republic.
After the fall of the Soviet Republic, he set himself the goal of further maintaining the Land Workers' Union, but was arrested on 5 August. In 1920, he was brought to court together with nine of his fellow people's commissars, and in the people's commissar trial he was sentenced to life imprisonment.
In 1921, he was transferred to the Soviet Union as part of the Soviet-Hungarian prisoner exchange, from where he returned home as a pensioner in 1945. He did party work until his death.
References
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