Miklos Vamos at PostGlobal

Miklos Vamos

Budapest, Hungary

Miklós Vámos is a Hungarian novelist, screenwriter and talk show host. He is one of the most read and respected writers in his native Hungary. He has taught at Yale University on a Fulbright fellowship, served as The Nation’s East European correspondent, worked as consultant on the Oscar-winning film Mephisto, and presented Hungary’s most-watched cultural television show. Vámos has received numerous awards for his plays, screenplays, novels and short stories, including the Hungarian Merit Award for lifetime achievement. The Book of Fathers is considered his most accomplished novel and has sold 200,000 copies in Hungary. Close.

Miklos Vamos

Budapest, Hungary

Miklós Vámos is a Hungarian novelist, screenwriter and talk show host. more »

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Israel Must Accept Status Quo

The Current Discussion:Israel celebrated its 60th birthday last week. Will it survive to celebrate its 100th?

I know that Israel was artificially created in a hostile territory, surrounded by people who did not like the new nation at all. But this is how the Roman Empire came into existence. Or the United States. Or Hungary. Almost all the countries in this world have been created under similar circumstances – but no one doubts that they will celebrate their next anniversary.

Israel has successfully defended its lands up until now, and I do not see any reason to believe that this won’t happen the same way in the future. I know that Europe would have been a better place without the Trianon Peace Treaty, which redrew the borders after World War I. But any aggressive change of an unfair status quo results in more unfairness, so there is no other way towards the future than forgetting the unfair steps in the history of the countries and continents. This is how the neighbors of Israel should accept the existence of the 60-year-old nation. At the same time, Israel should forget and forgive hostile moves it has endured.

Everybody should focus on the present in favor of a better future. I know this sounds a bit solemn, but that doesn’t mean it cannot be true.

I have no doubt that Israel will be around to celebrate its 100th anniversary. But will *I* be around to celebrate, when I am 98?

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