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THE COALITION'S PROJECTS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN 2004
The Hungarian American Coalition is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit
organization
founded in 1991. Its mission is to identify and promote the interests of the
Hungarian-American community. Its goals are:
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To foster appreciation of Hungary's history
and culture;
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To protect and preserve the human and minority rights
and cultural heritage of Hungarians throughout the world;
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To encourage educational and cultural interaction
between the people of the U.S. and Hungary;
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And to support democratic institutions and economic
development in Hungary.
Education and Culture
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Co-sponsored
with the Department of State and the US Embassy in Budapest a
three-week-long Public Policy Seminar and Training (PPST) that brought eight
Hungarian Mayors to Cleveland, Ohio, and Washington, DC in July.
This program built on last year’s very successful Seminar, held exclusively
in Washington, DC for 22 Hungarian Parliamentarians. The 2004 PPST added the
Cleveland component, when participants became acquainted with a Midwestern
city, met its civic and business leaders, visited its Hungarian American
community institutions, and enjoyed the enthusiastic hospitality and active
participation of Coalition members and supporters who provided home stays
and social events for the 11-day-long Cleveland program.
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Continued cooperation with Dr. Charles Simonyi, whose Charles Simonyi
Research Scholarship Award was presented to three outstanding
Hungarian researchers on June 1, 2004 at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
in Budapest. First established in 2000, this annual award in the amount of
2.5 million HUF was assured with the cooperation of the Hungarian American
Coalition in 2002 to serve the goal of encouraging outstanding scientific
research by Hungarians.
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Provided
administrative
assistance and sought support from the newly established U.S. charitable
entity, the Charles Simonyi Fund for Arts and Sciences.
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Represented the
Coalition at the September opening of the Hungarian Selye Janos University
in Komarno, (Komarom), Slovakia.
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Supported projects that benefit cultural and educational institutions of
Hungarian minorities in the neighboring countries:
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Gave significant operational support
to Madách Posonium Publisher of Pozsony (Bratislava), for publication of its
weekly newspaper, Szabad Újság, four magazines, as well as for the maintenance
of eight Hungarian bookstores in Slovakia.
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Underwrote the fourth
annual presentation of the
„Posonium Literary Awards” for outstanding achievements in Hungarian literature
to seven Hungarian writers in Slovakia.
Information
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Operated
an Office of Information in
Washington, D.C. since 1991.
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Provided up-to-date information on issues of interest to
Coalition members to officials of the National Security Council, the State
Department, and some members of Congress.
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Coalition leaders visited scenes of anti-Hungarian
incidents and consulted with Hungarian community leaders about the
background of the conflicts in the region. Communicated the deep concern of
our community to Secretary of State Colin Powell and others regarding the
aforementioned incidents.
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Issued special Newsletter focusing on the Coalition’s
support of autonomy in Romania, as an internationally recognized and, in
many nations, a successfully implemented solution that leads to the peaceful
coexistence of national minorities with governing majorities. Continued to
monitor the extremely slow progress of Hungarian church property restitution
in Romania.
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Maintained contact with US Embassy officials in Hungary;
establishing a close working relationship with U.S. Ambassador George
Herbert Walker, newly appointed DCM, Philip Reeker, and others.
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Gathered and disseminated information on the granting of
US visas to Hungarians, as well as on the topic of voting rights of
Hungarian Americans in Hungarian elections.
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Continued contact with U.S. Ambassador Michael Guest to
Romania, and initiated contact with new Ambassador, J.D. Crouch, and others;
facilitated meetings for officials with ethnic Hungarian leaders, and
assisted in solving several cases of visa refusals.
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Maintained
contact with leaders of Hungarian minorities in Romania, Slovakia and
Vojvodina, in order to gain insight and obtain timely information on events
affecting the Hungarian minority communities of the region.
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Continued to urge various officials of the Hungarian government to provide
the necessary resources for the long-sought sociological survey of the
Hungarian American Community, especially its existing organizations.
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Provided
planning assistance to organization members, including The Friends of
Hungarian Higher Education Foundation, Manhattan Hungarians, and the
Széchenyi István Hungarian School and Kindergarten of New Brunswick.
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Continued to widen the
Coalition’s base by welcoming as new members the 118-year-old fraternal
insurance group, the William Penn Association, and the organization of young
New York and area professionals, the Manhattan Hungarian Network.
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By year-end, the Coalition
will have published four issues of the Hungarian American Coalition
Newsletter, each with a different policy focus.
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Disseminated “Noticed in
the Press,” a selection of newspaper articles from American and Hungarian
newspapers on topics of interest to Coalition members and supporters.
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Will organize the
traditional Coalition activities on December 3-4, 2004, in Washington, D.C.,
including a State Department Briefing, the annual Mikulás Dinner, and the
Board and Annual Meetings.
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Continue to update the Coalition’s
home page. (www.hacusa.org)
Magyar verzió

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