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In the Name of the Working Class Budapesta's Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956 epub
In the Name of the Working Class Budapesta's Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956 by Sándor Kopácsi
In the Name of the Working Class  Budapesta's Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956




In the Name of the Working Class Budapesta's Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956 epub. In the Name of the Working Class: Budapest's Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956 In 1956, at the time of the Hungarian Revolution, Kopacsi was police chief in Budapest. He had Purges in the police forces during the early 1950s eventually led him to question Soviet motives. Would you like to tell us about a lower price? Sándor Kopácsi (March 5, 1922, Miskolc March 2, 2001, Toronto) was a participant in, and chronicler of, the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. At that time the Police Department was effectively a branch of ÁVH (the State Protection Authority). In the Name of the Working Class: the Inside Story of the Hungarian Revolution Sandor Kopacsi was Budapest s chief of police when the Hungarian Revolution erupted on October 23, 1956. In a dramatic shift of allegiance, Kopacsi once a Communist true believer refused to obey orders to disperse demonstrators demanding liberalization of the regime and withdrawal of Russian troops from Hungary. The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 (Hungarian: 1956-os forradalom), or the Hungarian Uprising, was a nationwide revolution against the Hungarian People's Republic and its Soviet-imposed policies, lasting from 23 October until 10 November 1956. Leaderless at the beginning, it was the first major threat to Soviet control The Hungarian Working People's Party set about to IN THE NAME OF THE WORKING CLASS The Inside Story of the Hungarian Revolution. In 1952 he became the police chief of Budapest, a position which he held in 1956, when the any major revelations about the Hungarian revolution, Mr. Kopacsi's After the Soviet troops reached Budapest on Nov. Judith Kopacsi Average rating: 4.67 9 ratings 0 reviews 1 distinct work In the Name of the Working Class: Budapest s Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956 by In the Name of the Working Class: Budapest s Police Chief During the Hungarian Revolution Tells the Extraordinary and Terrible Story of 1956 by Sándor Kopácsi,Judith Kopacsi (Afterword)





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