http://www.bosnewslife.com/europe/hungary/3632-hungary-sets-up-trianon-memorial-park-for-los

Hungary Opens Trianon Memorial Park For Lost Territories    
Friday, 06 June 2008 (3 hours ago)

By BosNewsLife News Center in Budapest

Bishop Laszlo Tokes has urged Hungary not to forget Trianon.     

BUDAPEST, HUNGARY (BosNewsLife)-- Hungary has opened a memorial park 
south of Budapest to commemorate the Treaty of Trianon which deprived 
the country of almost two-thirds of its territory and millions of 
Hungarians.

Under Trianon, signed after World War One, most of the divided territory 
went to Romania and what was then Czechoslovakia and the Kingdom of 
Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.

Speaking at the opening of the Trianon Park, a key ethnic Hungarian 
Reformed bishop from Romania, Laszlo Tokes, said he regrets that almost 
nine decades later Trianon still seems a
taboo topic in Hungary, BosNewsLife learned Friday, June 6.  “The treaty 
of Trianon is still considered taboo in political debates,” Hungarian 
News Agency MTI quoted him as saying.

Tokes, who is also a member of the European Parliament, played a key 
role in Romania's  1989 revolution which overthrew the regime of 
Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, ending decades of persecution of 
Christians and ethnic Hungarians.   

HUNGARY'S "TRUTH"

Bishop Tokes suggested that following the democratic changes across the 
region, it was time for Hungary to  “face up to its past” and not to 
forget Trianon, “because peace and safety can only be established on truth.”

Yet, the bishop has been criticized for stirring nationalistic tensions 
by demanding more autonomy for ethnic Hungarians living in Romania, 
charges he strongly denies. There were apparently no statements made by 
government officials.

The Trianon Memorial Park is in Dunavarsany, a village of 7,000 
residents, many originating from areas that were annexed from Hungary as 
a result of the Trianon treaty. A bell will toll every day at 16:32, the 
time when the document was signed on June 4, 1920, at the Grand Trianon 
Palace in Versailles, France, Mayor Zoltan Bona told reporters.

The $75,000 park also includes a bell tower and a traditional crafted 
gate.  

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