KALLAY, MIKLOS


Meaning of KALLAY, MIKLOS in English

born Jan. 23, 1887, Nyregyhza, Hung., Austria-Hungary died Jan. 14, 1967, New York, N.Y., U.S. politician who, as prime minister of Hungary in World War II, unsuccessfully attempted to extricate his country from the German alliance. Born of an old and influential family of local gentry, Kllay served first as lord lieutenant of his county (192129), moving later to the national government as deputy under secretary of state in the Ministry of Trade (192931) and minister of agriculture (193235). Resigning in 1935 in disagreement with the extreme right-wing policies of Prime Minister Gyula Gmbs, Kllay withdrew from active politics until 1942, when he was asked by Mikls Horthy, the regent of Hungary, to form a government that would reverse the policies of Lszl Brdossy, whose government had involved the country in a dangerous dependence on Nazi Germany. Under the Kllay government (March 9, 1942March 19, 1944), Jews enjoyed a degree of protection almost unparalleled on the European continent, and the press and the parties of the left continued to function. Internationally, Kllay pursued a policy of armed opposition to Russia concurrently with peaceful overtures to the Western powers. Dissatisfied with the manner in which Hungary was pursuing the war, Germany occupied Hungary in March 1944. Kllay was forced into hiding and subsequently taken prisoner, being held at the concentration camp of Dachau and, later, Mauthausen. Released when Germany collapsed, Kllay went into voluntary exile in 1946, eventually settling in the United States in 1951. His memoirs, Hungarian Premier; A Personal Account of a Nation's Struggle in the Second World War, appeared in 1954.

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