Gyula Alpari

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Gyula Alpári [ ˈɟulɒ ˈɒlpaːri ], also Julius Alpari (born January 19, 1882 , † July 17, 1944 in Sachsenhausen concentration camp ) was a Hungarian communist publicist and founding member of the Hungarian Communist Party (Magyar Kommunista Párt, MKP) after 1918.

Alpári on a postage stamp from the GDR Deutsche Post (1962)

Life

Alpári was expelled from the Social Democratic Party of Hungary (Magyarországi Szociáldemokrata Párt, MSzDP) founded in 1890 as an opposition member in the run-up to the revolution in 1918 and then joined the Communist Party .

In the Hungarian Soviet Republic, which existed for four months (1919), he held the function of People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs.

From 1921 to 1939 he was editor of the Comintern publications Inprekorr ( international press correspondence ) and Rundschau .

In 1940 he was arrested by the Gestapo in his French exile in Paris and murdered in Sachsenhausen concentration camp on July 17, 1944 .

Works

  • Critical remarks on Kurt Sauerland's “Dialectical Materialism” . 1932, DNB  820660299 .
  • The masks have fallen. On the Moscow trial against the “bloc of the right and Trotskyists” . Éditions Prométhée, Paris 1938, DNB  57328315X .

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