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In the Name of the Working Class

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Sandor Kopacsi was Budapest's chief of police when the Hungarian Revolution erupted on October 23, 1956. In a dramatic shift of allegiance, Kopacsi--once a Communist true believer--refused to obey orders to disperse demonstrators demanding liberalization of the regime and withdrawal of Russian troops from Hungary. Arrested several weeks later for his role in the uprising and ultimately convicted, Kopacsi survived to write this extraordinary memoir, the only blow-by-blow insider's account of the first armed challenge to Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. The memoir, which contains an added chapter and epilogue, is the riveting, eloquent, and unique story of Hungary's heroic bid for freedom, written by a man who witnessed and participated in the revolution.

304 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1987

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Roberta.
1,983 reviews334 followers
December 26, 2021
L'ultimo capodanno prima del covid l'ho passato a Budapest. Città bellissima, ma non ho capito l'odio ungherese per il passato comunista, essendo passati ormai così tanti anni.
Dopo aver letto questo libro ho capito molto, molto di più.
Non so se Kopácsi sia un narratore naturale o abbia avuto l'aiuto di qualche ghost writer, ma la storia è appassionante. Sua moglie, Ibolya, è una spalla eccellente, l'eroina femminile in un mondo di uomini.
Il libro racconta dell'ascesa del figlio di un operaio che si unì alla resistenza contro l'occupazione nazista, entrò poi nel partito comunista ungherese e, dopo una breve carriera in polizia, diventò questore di Budapest. Tutto va bene finché i sovietici non decidono il contrario: invadono la nazione, dichiarano gli ex-eroi traditori, uccidono e arrestano.
Kopácsi sopravvive ed esce di prigione grazie all'amnistia generale decretata da Nikita Chruščëv, ma viene ancora ostracizzato, tanto che alla fine preferisce emigrare in Canada, dove vive la figlia. Il suo libro-testimonianza è uno dei memoir più importanti sulla storia dell'Ungheria.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Lisa.
23 reviews1 follower
July 18, 2009
This book gives a great insight into the Hungarian Revolution. It was a bit hard to follow but the first hand experience from the author made it very interesting despite the writing style.
Profile Image for James Christensen.
180 reviews2 followers
July 29, 2017
943.9052/KOP - well written and first-hand account of the Revolution of 1956 by the man who was Budapest's chief of police at the time - intelligent, relatively objective - a good read

Incredible revelation of the Soviet mentality. Sad, Sad, Sad.
Profile Image for Marco Secchi.
5 reviews
December 19, 2020
Excellent book gives you a great insight into the Hungarian Revolution and the time around 1955. It is not easy to follow sometime but is a great reading!
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