Miklós Bátori

{{Short description|Hungarian Roman Catholic writer (1919/20–1992)}}

Miklós Bátori, pen name of Miklós Bajomi (1919The [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb125882891/PUBLIC authority notice] of the general catalogue of the Bibliothèque nationale de France gives this date of 1919 with a question mark. Gyula Borbándi also indicates 1919 in her encyclopedia {{harv|Borbándi|1992}}. or 1920Back cover of his novel Les Briques, Robert Laffont, reprint. 1984 {{ISBN|2-221-04311-1}}. – 25 February 199223 March 1919 — 18 February 1992 according to Magyar Emigráns Írók és Műveik [Les écrivains hongrois émigrés et leurs œuvres], on Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum (Musée de la littérature, Budapest): {{in lang|hu}} [http://opac.pim.hu/index.jsp?page=details&dbname=database_lnt&term=405387 "'Bajomi Miklós"].) was a Roman Catholic writer of Hungarian origin.

Life

Born in Bátaszék (Hungary), in 1944 he published his first novel, {{lang|hu|Ingovány}} (literally: "Mudflat") in Budapest, still under the name Miklós Bajomi.{{in lang|hu}} [http://opac.pim.hu/index.jsp?page=details&dbname=database_kkv&term=2049643 Ingovány : regény — Bajomi Miklós], on Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum: notice of Endre Illés' copy with the dedication "À mon modèle - L'auteur, 5 mai 1944". He was taken prisoner of war in France in 1945, and enrolled at the Sorbonne after his release. He returned to Hungary in January 1947 for family reasons and then went on to study at a university in Budapest. He then taught in the provinces (from 1951 to 1956) in a technical high school in Győr where he was also director of the boarding school.{{Cite web |title=Az internátustól a kollégiumig |url=http://www.jaisz.hu/index.php/evkonyv-2000/diakelet-felnottsorsok?start=1 |website=Jedlik Ányos Gépipari és Informatikai Középiskola és Kollégium |first1=László |last1=Szerencse |language=hu}} [Lycée technique et internat Jedlik Ányos, Győr].

He fled Hungary after the crushing of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and moved to Paris. He was a member of the editorial board of the Hungarian literary and cultural magazine in Paris {{lang|hu|Ahogy Lehet}}{{harvsp|Borbándi|1992}}, "[http://mek.oszk.hu/04000/04038/html/a.htm#AhogyLehet Ahogy Lehet]". and also wrote in other Hungarian emigration newspapers.

In 1960, he published in Hungarian {{lang|hu|Kálvária}} in Cologne (Calvary Road) after the address of his high school (in French Un étrange paradis), which describes the time when, as a teacher at Győr, he fled with a group of Catholics persecuted by the communist power{{Cite web |title=Bibliographie des œuvres de Miklo[s] Batori |url=http://philippebrindet.chez.com/140104a.html |website=revue Thomas |author1=Philippe Brindet |date=2014-01-04}} and in 1961, {{lang|hu|A halál a szőlőskertben}} (literally: "Death in the vineyard"), which evokes the effort of Christians to recover, under a hostile regime, the purity of the early Church. This last book, translated and published in French in 1965 under the title Le Vignoble des saints, was awarded the Grand prix catholique de littérature.

In 1963, Les Briques is a novel from the last days of the Hungarian revolution.

In 1967, Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu features the evangelist Mark who tells what he has seen throughout his life.

His following works were written directly in French.

Bátori died in Paris.

Work

  • Un étrange paradis,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26186429 Un étrange paradis] on WorldCat Plon, 1961 (translated from Hungarian) {{lang|hu|Kálvária}}, Cologne 1960)
  • Les Briques,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/77416729 Les Briques] on WorldCat Éditions Robert Laffont, 1963 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript){{BNF|347472544}}
  • Le Vignoble des saints,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/902520416 Le Vignoble des saints] on WorldCat Robert Laffont, 1965 (translated from Hungarian {{lang|hu|A halál a szőlőskertben}}, Cologne 1961, Grand prix catholique de littérature.
  • Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/459481545 Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu] on WorldCat) Robert Laffont, 1967 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript{{BNF|32915054j}} {{ISBN|978-2221014745}} (crowned by the Académie française){{Cite web |title=Miklos BATORI |url=http://www.academie-francaise.fr/miklos-batori |website=Académie française}}
  • Le lièvre a pleuré,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/718470123 Le lièvre a pleuré] on WorldCat Robert Laffont, 1969, {{ISBN|2221014731}}
  • La vie est un océan,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/700976955 La vie est un océan] on WorldCat Robert Laffont, 1973
  • Bakfitty,[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/418320571 Bakfitty] on WorldCat Fayard, 1977
  • Notre ami, Lazare (chronique),[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/865299894 Notre ami, Lazare (chronique)] on WorldCat Éditions du Cerf, 1983){{Cite book |title=Nyugati magyar irodalmi lexikon és bibliográfia; Encyclopédie et bibliographie de la littérature hongroise à l'Ouest |first1=Gyula |last1=Borbándi |year=1992 |url=https://mek.oszk.hu/04000/04038/html/b.htm#B%C3%A1toriMikl%C3%B3s%20B%C3%A1tori%20Mikl%C3%B3s |publisher=Hitel |location=Budapest |isbn=963-04-1859-2 |language=hu}}.

References