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Radnóti Miklós

Miklós Radnóti
Radnoti1.jpg
Miklós Radnóti
Born Miklós Glatter
(1909-05-05)5 May 1909
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
Died 10 November 1944(1944-11-10) (aged 35)
near Abda, Hungary
Occupation Poet
Nationality Hungarian
Spouse Fanni Gyarmati (m. 1935-1944; his death)

Miklós Radnóti, birth name Miklós Glatter (5 May 1909 – 10 November 1944) was a Hungarian poet who died in The Holocaust.

Radnóti was born Miklós Glatter in Budapest into an assimilated Jewish family. His life was considerably shaped by the fact that both his mother and his twin brother died at his birth. He refers to this trauma in the title of his compilation Ikrek hava ("Month of Gemini"/"Month of the Twins").

He identifies strongly as a Hungarian. His poetry mingles avant-garde and expressionist themes with a new classical style, a good example being his eclogues. His romantic love poetry is notable as well. Some of his early poetry was published in the short-lived periodical Haladás ("Progress"). His 1935 marriage to Fanni Gyarmati (1912–2014) was exceptionally happy.

Radnóti converted to Catholicism in 1943. Numerous Jewish writers had done so at that time due to the prevailing pervasive anti-Semitism in Hungarian society.

In the early 1940s Radnóti was conscripted by the Hungarian Army, but as a Jew by birth he was assigned to an unarmed (munkaszolgálat) ("labour battalion"). The battalion assigned to the Ukrainian front, and then in May 1944 the Hungarian Army retreated and his battalion was transferred to the copper mines in Bor, Serbia.

In August 1944 as Yugoslav Partisans led by Tito advanced, Radnóti's group of 3,200 Hungarian Jews was force-marched to central Hungary. On the march most of them died, including Radnóti.


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