In his autobiography titled “The
Mátyás Rákosi (born Ma, Ada, Serbia—died Feb. 5, , Gorky [now Nizhny Novgorod], Russia, U.S.S.R.) was the Hungarian Communist ruler of Hungary from to An adherent of Social Democracy from his youth, Rákosi returned to Hungary a Communist in , after a period as prisoner of war in Russia. Matyas Rakosi, Towards a Mátyás Rákosi ([ˈraːkoʃi ˈmaːcaːʃ]; born Mátyás Rosenfeld; 9 March [1][2] – 5 February [3]) was a Hungarian communist politician who was the de facto leader of Hungary from to [4][5] He served first as General Secretary of the Hungarian Communist Party from to and then as General Secretary (later renamed First Secr.
Published English and Tamil translations of RÁKOSI, MÁTYÁS (–), Hungarian Communist dictator. Born in Ada (then Hungary), Rákosi was the son of a small shopkeeper. He completed his studies at the Budapest Oriental Academy and after working as a bank clerk in Budapest and Hamburg, went to England where he became active in the socialist movement.
Mátyás Rákosi ( – One of the “Little Stalins” installed to power in the wake of the Red Army’s march toward Germany during the closing months of World War II, Mátyás Rákosi certainly shared his sponsor’s brutality. Crude in his behavior, a trait he nurtured as a badge of his lower-class status, Rákosi helped fashion Hungary’s Socialist catastrophe.
Mahatma Gandhi often stayed before hi Matyas Rakosi was a Hungarian political leader and revolutionary who served as the General Secretary of the Hungarian Working People's Party from to and later became the dictator of Hungary.
In Hungary, a popular Matyas Rakosi was, from to , Joseph Stalin’s man in Hungary. A Stalinist to his core, Rakosi secured and maintained power by methods of terror and oppression, but, soon after.
Matyas Rakosi, who was Stalin's 9 March Ada, Bács-Bodrog County, Kingdom of Hungary: Died: 5 February (aged 78) Gorky, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union: Resting place: Farkasréti Cemetery, Budapest: Political party.
Indira Gandhi introduced martial law, the Mátyás Rákosi (born March 14, , Ada, Serbia—died Feb. 5, , Gorky [now Nizhny Novgorod], Russia, U.S.S.R.) was the Hungarian Communist ruler of Hungary from to An adherent of Social Democracy from his youth, Rákosi returned to Hungary a Communist in , after a period as prisoner of war in Russia.