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==External link==
==External link==
*[http://www.hhrf.org/kmksz/ Website of the Cultural Alliance of Hungarians in Subcarpathia]
*[http://www.hhrf.org/kmksz/ Website of the Cultural Alliance of Hungarians in Subcarpathia]
*[http://www.umdsz.uz.ua/start.html Website of the Hungarian Democratic Federation in Ukraine]


{{Hungarian diaspora}}
{{Hungarian diaspora}}

Revision as of 21:51, 23 March 2008

Ethnic map of Zakarpattia Oblast in 2001.
  Ukrainians (incl. Rusyns)
  mixed Ukrainians (incl. Rusyns) and Russians

The Hungarian minority of Ukraine consists of 156,600 people, according to the Ukrainian census of 2001. The minority is largely concentrated in the Zakarpattia Oblast, where ethnic Hungarians form the largest minority at 12.1% of the population (12.7% when native language is concerned).

History

Zakarpattia was part of Kingdom of Hungary, a consituent part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, until the latter's demise at the end of World War I. This region was briefly part of the short-lived West Ukrainian National Republic in 1918 and occupied by Romania at end of that year. It was later recaptured by Hungary in the summer of 1919. After the defeat of the remaining Hungarian armies in 1919, the Paris Peace Conference concluded the Treaty of Trianon that awarded Zakarpattia to the newly formed Czechoslovakia as the Subcarpathian Rus, one of the four main regions of that new state, the others being Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia.[1]

During the World War II German occupation of Czechoslovakia, the southern part of the region was awarded to Hungary under the First Vienna Award in 1938. The remaining portion was constituted as an autonomous region of the short-lived Second Czechoslovak Republic. After the occupation of Bohemia and Moravia on March 15, 1939 and the Slovak declaration of an independent state, Ruthenia declared its independence (Republic of Carpatho-Ukraine) but it was immediately occupied and later annexed by Hungary.[1]

When the Soviet Army crossed the pre-1938 borders of Czechoslovakia in 1944, Soviet authorities refused to allow Czechoslovak governmental officials to resume control over the region, and in June 1945, President Edvard Beneš formally signed a treaty ceding the area to the Soviet Union. It was then incorporated into the Ukrainian SSR. After the break-up of the Soviet Union, it became part of independent Ukraine as the Zakarpattia Oblast.[1]

The minority's situation in independent Ukraine

Probably due to its interest in the ethnic Hungarian population in Zakarpattia, Hungary was the first country to recognize Ukraine's independence. Árpád Göncz, who was president of Hungary at the time, was invited to visit the region, and a join declaration, followed in December 1991 by a state treaty, acknowledged that the ethnic Hungarian minority had collective as well as individual rights. The treaty rovided for the preservation of the minority's ethnic, cultural, linguistic, and religious identities; education at all levels in the mother tongue; and the ethnic Hungarians' participation in local authorities charged with minority affairs.[2]

Minority rights

Residents in seven of Mukachivskyi Raion's villages have the option to learn the Hungarian language in a school or home school environment. The first Hungarian College in Ukraine is in Berehovo, the II. Rákoczi Ferenc College.

Organisation

The Hungarian minority is organised in the Cultural Alliance of Hungarians in Subcarpathia (KMKSz). The alliance is associated with the political party KMKSz – Hungarian Party in Ukraine, which was established in February 2005. In March 2005, the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice also registered the Hungarian Democratic Party in Ukraine upon the initiative of the Hungarian Democratic Federation in Ukraine (UMDSz).[3]

Demographics

The following data is according to the Ukrainian census of 2001.

Distribution of ethnic Hungarians in cities in the Zakkarpattia Oblast[4]
City name Population Number of ethnic Hungarians Percentage
Uzhhorod (Ungvár) 115,600 8,000 6.9%
Berehovo (Beregszász) 26,600 12,800 48.1%
Mukacheve (Munkács) 81,600 7,000 8.5%
Khust (Huszt) 31,900 1,700 5.4%
Distribution of ethnic Hungarians in raions in the Zakkarpattia Oblast[4]
Raion name Population Number of ethnic Hungarians Percentage
Berehivskyi Raion (Beregszászi járás) 54,000 41,200 76.1%
Velykobereznianskyi Raion (Nagybereznai járás) 28,200
Vynohradivskyi Raion (Nagyszőlősi járás) 118,000 30,900 26.2%
Volovetskyi Raion (Volóci járás) 25,500
Irshavskyi Raion (Ilosvai járás) 100,900 100 0.1%
Mizhhirskyi Raion (Ökörmezői járás) 49,900
Mukachivskyi Raion (Munkácsi járás) 101,400 12,900 12.7%
Perechynskyi Raion (Perecsenyi járás) 32,000
Rakhivskyi Raion (Rahói járás) 90,900 2,900 3.2%
Svaliavskyi Raion (Szolyvai járás) 54,900 400 0.7%
Tiachivskyi Raion (Técsői járás) 171,900 5,000 2.9%
Uzhhorodskyi Raion (Ungvári járás) 74,400 24,800 33.4%
Khustskyi Raion (Huszti járás) 96,900 3,800 3.9%

References

  1. ^ a b c Subtelny, Orest (2000). Ukraine: A History. University of Toronto Press. p. 448. ISBN 0-8020-8390-0.
  2. ^ Kovrig, Bennett (2000) ‘Partitioned nation: Hungarian minorities in Central Europe’, in: Michael Mandelbaum (ed.), The new European Diasporas: national minorities and conflict in Eastern Europe, New York: Council on Foreign Relations Press, pp. 19-80.
  3. ^ Hungarian Government Office for Minorities Abroad
  4. ^ a b Source: State Statistics Committee of Ukraine