Greetings,
We are entering this week the 46th anniversary of some amazing events that took place in Soviet-occupied Eastern Europe, most notably Poland and Hungary. To commemorate the events, I've thrown a quiz together that I hope you enjoy. Yes, this is probably the toughest quiz I've made for those not familiar with Eastern European history, but I try to make the answers easily guessed based on my question.
In any event, give it a try and have fun!
1. What did Stalin taking a Georgian sauna on the evening of 5. March, 1953, have to do with the events of October 1956?
2. What was the difference between a "native" and a "Moscow" communist in 1950s Soviet Eastern Europe?
3. Wladyslaw Gomulka, the "native" communist leader of Poland from 1944-1949, was a long-time communist who was very lucky to be sitting in a Polish prison in 1938. Why?
4. In the spring of 1956, Poles were reading about Khrushchov's speech to the 20th Congress of the CPSU (Communist Party of the Soviet Union) of 24. February. Through what means (route) were they reading this speech?
5. 1956 was a bad year for Poland's commies. After Khrushchov's speech, tens of thousands of Polish political prisoners were suddenly released from the Soviet gulag system and returned to Poland with tales of Siberian horrors, while workers in Poznan rioted against living conditions and required the military to suppress them. The economy was almost as bad as it had been in 1944, and reformists were plotting a takeover. In the midst of all this, the Polish communist leader, (who was also leader of the pro-Stalinist faction) Boleslaw Bierut, failed to return from a trip to Moscow. Why?
6. On 21. October the Stalinist-Reformist feud came to a head at the 8th Plenum of the Polish communist party Central Committee. Reformists carried the day and elected the disgraced postwar leader, Gomulka, to lead the country again. Some special visitors from out of town suddenly arrived unannounced and tried to seize control of the meeting. Who were they?
7. Throughout the night of the 21st into the 22nd, the heavily-armed KBW and UB (Polish communist security forces) began occupying Warsaw and its approaches in full force. Who were they preparing for?
8. During that night the Polish army general staff let the defense minister, Konstantin Rokossovsky, know that the Polish Army would not obey his orders. What was unusual about the Polish defense minister?
9. Over the next two days Gomulka and Khrushchov hammered out an agreement that left the reformists in power. Problem over for Moscow, right?
10. On 23. October, the day after Gomulka and Khrushchov had reached their agreement in Warsaw, a youth organization in Hungary led a processional march to the statue of József Bem in Budapest, a Polish general who had led a Hungarian army against the Russians n the 1848-49 Hungarian War for Independence. After some speeches in support of the Poles and Gomulka, the by-now large crowd split up. Half went and tore down the huge statue of Stalin while the other half went to Parliament Square to demand the pro-Stalinists' resignations and the enstatement of the moderate communist Imre Nagy. Nagy came out on the balcony of the Parliament building trying to calm the crowd, but he was only able to utter one word when the crowd erupted into boos and demands for retraction. What one word did Nagy say that provoked the crowd's anger?
11. That first night of the revolution in Hungary, the Stalinist puppet leader Ernö Gerö broadcast a speech condemning the "counter-revolution". In response, crowds gathered at the radio station and demanded Gerö's speech be retracted, when AVH (Hungarian communist KGB) men inside opened fire on the crowd and a battle ensued that ended with the crowd doing some particularly gruesome things to the AVH men. As soon as word spread that the revolutionaries had seized control of the radio station, the Budapest police and the Hungarian Army reacted swiftly. What did they do?
12. From 23.-.28 October battles raged around Budapest but by the 28th the Soviets withdrew. A revolutionary government ruled almost all of Hungary by 30. October. Gerö fled to the USSR, and the hated AVH were dissolved. Over a couple days time the revolutionary government formulated a basic policy aim, that Hungary would become a neutral state along the lines of what recently (1955) liberated country?
13. The Soviets withdrew their forces on 28. October but invaded Hungary with a new force on the night of 1. November. What was different about this 2nd invasion force from the first?
14. What events unfolding outside Europe, beginning on 30. October, provided an international distraction that allowed the Soviets to re-invade Hungary?
15. Fighting continued throughout Hungary until 14. November, and one of the revolutionary leaders (János Kádár) switched sides to lead the post-revolution government on 4. November. Nagy and some of his government sought refuge in the Yugoslav Embassy . What happened to Nagy after he negotiated with the Soviets a safe exit from the embassy and exile abroad?
16. József Mindszenty, Roman Catholic Cardinal of Hungary, was freed from AVH house arrest by the revolutionaries on 30. October but by 4. November he had to flee to the American Embassy for protection when the Soviets returned. (At one point near the embassy he actually had to walk by a column of Soviet tanks.) How long did Mindszenty have to stay in the American Embassy before Washington could get Budapest to agree to let him move to exile in Vienna?
17. How many Hungarians fled the country after the collapse of the revolution, but before the Soviets could seal off the Hungarian-Austrian border?
A. 6000 C. 85,000
B. 30,000 D. 200,000
18. Did Warsaw Treaty/Pact forces join the Soviets in crushing the Hungarian Revolution?
19. True or false: Both communist leaders installed in 1956 Gomulka by the success of the Polish rebels and Kádár by the failure of the Hungarian rebels enjoyed long reigns in power that ended with both dying peacefully in office.
20. What happened to poor old Imre Nagy in June, 1989?
21. What eventually became of the Soviet ambassador to Hungary in 1956, before his death in 1984?
Good luck folks!
We are entering this week the 46th anniversary of some amazing events that took place in Soviet-occupied Eastern Europe, most notably Poland and Hungary. To commemorate the events, I've thrown a quiz together that I hope you enjoy. Yes, this is probably the toughest quiz I've made for those not familiar with Eastern European history, but I try to make the answers easily guessed based on my question.
In any event, give it a try and have fun!
1. What did Stalin taking a Georgian sauna on the evening of 5. March, 1953, have to do with the events of October 1956?
2. What was the difference between a "native" and a "Moscow" communist in 1950s Soviet Eastern Europe?
3. Wladyslaw Gomulka, the "native" communist leader of Poland from 1944-1949, was a long-time communist who was very lucky to be sitting in a Polish prison in 1938. Why?
4. In the spring of 1956, Poles were reading about Khrushchov's speech to the 20th Congress of the CPSU (Communist Party of the Soviet Union) of 24. February. Through what means (route) were they reading this speech?
5. 1956 was a bad year for Poland's commies. After Khrushchov's speech, tens of thousands of Polish political prisoners were suddenly released from the Soviet gulag system and returned to Poland with tales of Siberian horrors, while workers in Poznan rioted against living conditions and required the military to suppress them. The economy was almost as bad as it had been in 1944, and reformists were plotting a takeover. In the midst of all this, the Polish communist leader, (who was also leader of the pro-Stalinist faction) Boleslaw Bierut, failed to return from a trip to Moscow. Why?
6. On 21. October the Stalinist-Reformist feud came to a head at the 8th Plenum of the Polish communist party Central Committee. Reformists carried the day and elected the disgraced postwar leader, Gomulka, to lead the country again. Some special visitors from out of town suddenly arrived unannounced and tried to seize control of the meeting. Who were they?
7. Throughout the night of the 21st into the 22nd, the heavily-armed KBW and UB (Polish communist security forces) began occupying Warsaw and its approaches in full force. Who were they preparing for?
8. During that night the Polish army general staff let the defense minister, Konstantin Rokossovsky, know that the Polish Army would not obey his orders. What was unusual about the Polish defense minister?
9. Over the next two days Gomulka and Khrushchov hammered out an agreement that left the reformists in power. Problem over for Moscow, right?
10. On 23. October, the day after Gomulka and Khrushchov had reached their agreement in Warsaw, a youth organization in Hungary led a processional march to the statue of József Bem in Budapest, a Polish general who had led a Hungarian army against the Russians n the 1848-49 Hungarian War for Independence. After some speeches in support of the Poles and Gomulka, the by-now large crowd split up. Half went and tore down the huge statue of Stalin while the other half went to Parliament Square to demand the pro-Stalinists' resignations and the enstatement of the moderate communist Imre Nagy. Nagy came out on the balcony of the Parliament building trying to calm the crowd, but he was only able to utter one word when the crowd erupted into boos and demands for retraction. What one word did Nagy say that provoked the crowd's anger?
11. That first night of the revolution in Hungary, the Stalinist puppet leader Ernö Gerö broadcast a speech condemning the "counter-revolution". In response, crowds gathered at the radio station and demanded Gerö's speech be retracted, when AVH (Hungarian communist KGB) men inside opened fire on the crowd and a battle ensued that ended with the crowd doing some particularly gruesome things to the AVH men. As soon as word spread that the revolutionaries had seized control of the radio station, the Budapest police and the Hungarian Army reacted swiftly. What did they do?
12. From 23.-.28 October battles raged around Budapest but by the 28th the Soviets withdrew. A revolutionary government ruled almost all of Hungary by 30. October. Gerö fled to the USSR, and the hated AVH were dissolved. Over a couple days time the revolutionary government formulated a basic policy aim, that Hungary would become a neutral state along the lines of what recently (1955) liberated country?
13. The Soviets withdrew their forces on 28. October but invaded Hungary with a new force on the night of 1. November. What was different about this 2nd invasion force from the first?
14. What events unfolding outside Europe, beginning on 30. October, provided an international distraction that allowed the Soviets to re-invade Hungary?
15. Fighting continued throughout Hungary until 14. November, and one of the revolutionary leaders (János Kádár) switched sides to lead the post-revolution government on 4. November. Nagy and some of his government sought refuge in the Yugoslav Embassy . What happened to Nagy after he negotiated with the Soviets a safe exit from the embassy and exile abroad?
16. József Mindszenty, Roman Catholic Cardinal of Hungary, was freed from AVH house arrest by the revolutionaries on 30. October but by 4. November he had to flee to the American Embassy for protection when the Soviets returned. (At one point near the embassy he actually had to walk by a column of Soviet tanks.) How long did Mindszenty have to stay in the American Embassy before Washington could get Budapest to agree to let him move to exile in Vienna?
17. How many Hungarians fled the country after the collapse of the revolution, but before the Soviets could seal off the Hungarian-Austrian border?
A. 6000 C. 85,000
B. 30,000 D. 200,000
18. Did Warsaw Treaty/Pact forces join the Soviets in crushing the Hungarian Revolution?
19. True or false: Both communist leaders installed in 1956 Gomulka by the success of the Polish rebels and Kádár by the failure of the Hungarian rebels enjoyed long reigns in power that ended with both dying peacefully in office.
20. What happened to poor old Imre Nagy in June, 1989?
21. What eventually became of the Soviet ambassador to Hungary in 1956, before his death in 1984?
Good luck folks!