György P. Bulányi (Budapest, 9 January 1919 – Budapest, June 6, 2010[1]) was a Piarist priest, teacher, and leader of the Bokor Catholic youth discipleship movements in Croatia and Hungary which faced strong suppression from the Hungarian communist government and Catholic hierarchy for their advocacy of conscientious objection.
Bokor opposed the atheistcommunist ideology of the Hungarian state under Mátyás Rákosi,[1] and continued to clash specifically on the topic of pacifism. The Hungarian State Church Office to the Bishop warned them that this position would not be tolerated, but Bokor held firm on this issue.[9][3] The Hungarian government viewed the Bokor community as an illegal anti-state organization,[citation needed] and sentenced Bulányi to life imprisonment in 1952.[2][1] He escaped in October 1956 during the Hungarian revolution[2] and became a parish priest in downtown Budapest.[1] However, he was arrested again in April 1958 and later released again in 1960.[1] At this time, he was one of the most controversial figures in Hungarian Catholicism.[1] He then worked as an unskilled labourer while he wrote a book, Seek the kingdom of God![3]
Bokor grew throughout the 1960s and became even more visible after 1970,[10] despite ongoing suppression from both the government and the Catholic hierarchy.[citation needed] For those interested in deeper discipleship, Bokor offered a 5 year theological course involving about 78–80 spiritual exercises per year.[4]
In 1989, Bokor had 185 leaders, 35 of whom were priests.[4] The movement was connected to the base communities of Latin American liberation theology.[3] Bokor continued to be suppressed by the Hungarian government until 1990.[11]
Conscientious objection advocacy
From the end of the 1970s into 1981, Bulányi became more vocal in preaching pacifism and conscientious objection publicly, and the practice increased markedly.[12][13] Dozens of Bokor members were imprisoned for their pacifist stance.[10][13]Hungarian Catholic officials, led by László Paskai, archbishop of Esztergom-Budapest, strongly objected to Bulányi's teaching, considering it harmful and dangerous.[12][6] They issued a formal condemnation of conscientious objection in October 1986.[14] These officials supported government suppression of conscientious objectors,[12] and imprisonments continued throughout the 1980s.[6] Continued advocacy from groups like Bokor and interaction with Catholics outside of Hungary softened their perspective, however, and in March 1988, Paskai suggested that the Prime Minister allow alternative civilian service.[14] Paskai later claimed to have been constrained by the autocratic government and said that he had no choice but to collaborate in suppression.[12]
Conflict with Catholic hierarchy
The Hungarian government and Catholic hierarchy responded by seeking to discredit Bulányi by presenting evidence that his writings were heretical. There was significant debate about Bulányi's writings such as Church order and Is obedience a virtue?, drawing input from theologians such as Hans Küng.[1] In a 31 December 1986 letter, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, asked Bulányi to publicly withdraw his teachings on the universal priesthood of the laity as false, dangerous ambiguous, and heretical.[1][9][15] Bulányi did not agree with Ratzinger's assessment, and for a decade these strong official statements against Bulányi remained.[1] After the change in government in Hungary in 1989, the Hungarian state requested forgiveness from Bulányi.[16] However, leaders of the Catholic Church did not apologize.[16]
Finally, in February 1997, Bulányi and Ratzinger came to an agreement, with John Paul II offering greater freedom of conscience than Ratzinger had previously accepted.[citation needed] Bulányi cooperated, clarified his teachings, and signed a statement requested of him.[1] On 5 April 1997, Ratzinger wrote that he considered the matter closed.[1] On 10 September 1997, there was a public announcement of the formal rehabilitation of Bulányi in the Catholic Church,[citation needed] and he was once again permitted to conduct mass.[11]
The Hungarian Catholic Bishops' Conference published the statements of Bulányi and Ratzinger without comment. Some Hungarian Catholics were disappointed that the Conference didn't offer an apology for their behavior toward Bulányi and his supporters. These Catholic viewed the actions of the Catholic hierarchy as improper use of power in collaboration with an immoral autocratic state.[1] Even after rehabilitation, Bulányi continued to be marginalized within the Catholic community.[17][3] From 2005 until his death, Bulányi lived with other Piarists in the Kalazantinum [hu] of Budapest.[citation needed]
Views
Bulányi identified with the views of Marcion of Sinope in rejecting the Old Testament as uninspired, immoral, and incompatible with the character of the God of Jesus who is love.[18]
György Bulányi (1945). A magyar hangsúly romlása [The deterioration of Hungarian accent] (in Hungarian). Budapest: University Press.
György Bulányi. Church Order.
György Bulányi (1989). Erény-e az engedelmesség? [Is obedience a virtue?] (in Hungarian). Luzern: The Hungarian Center for Theological-Pasticization Studies.
György Bulányi (2002). Napló [Diary] (PDF) (in Hungarian). Püski.[dead link]
György Bulányi (1991). Örököljük a földet? [Are we inheriting the earth?] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Irotron kiadó. ISBN978-963-04-1614-6.
It was laid in Jászol. Christmas meditations by György Bulányi, 1949–1993; Irotron, Bp., 1993
György Bulányi (1986). Nagypénteki levél [Good Friday letter: Correspondence with Cardinal Ratzinger] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Irotron. ISBN9789638462008.
György Bulányi (1995–1996). Saint Paul's theology 1–6. Budapest: Bokorliget.
György Bulányi (2013). Pál szintézis [Paul's synthesis] (in Hungarian). Faragó Ferenc.
György Bulányi; Gyula I. Simonyi (2000). Rapture of the Gospel (1. Church Order, 2. Economy of LifeHarmony, Challenge of Nonviolence). Translated by John Eibner; Katalin Simonyi. Székesfehérvár, Hungary: BOKOR, BOCS Foundation. ISBN978-963-640-415-4. OCLC43934408.
Ferenc Faragó; Schanda Beáta, eds. (2015). Bulányi György füves könyve [The grassy book of György Bulányi] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Bokor Community Development Cultural Association. ISBN9789631222111.
György Bulányi (1995). A Bokor lelkisége [Bokor's spirituality] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Bokorliget K. ISBN978-963-04-5285-4. OCLC908989070.
György Bulányi (1968). Keressétek az Isten országát! [Seek the kingdom of God!] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Irotron. ISBN978-963-02-7669-6. (six-volumes)
^"Az Ószövetség nem Isten igéje" [The Old Testament is not the Word of God]. Flag Polgári Magazine (in Hungarian). 2014. Retrieved 16 April 2018., reprinted from an April issue of Magyar Mérce, published by Jobbik.
Csiszer, Monika (2009) Towards a new vision of the laity and their mission : an exploration of the response of the Roman Catholic Church in Hungary to the Vatican II documents, University of South Africa, Pretoria hdl=10500/2493
Elliot, Mark (1983). "The Leningrad museum of the history of religion and atheism". Religion in Communist Lands. 11 (2). Informa UK: 124–129. doi:10.1080/09637498308431072. ISSN0307-5974.
Jobbágy, András (12 December 2015). "The Ideology of the Hungarian Catholic 'Bokor' Movement through the Writings of György Bulányi, 1970s–1980s". Journal of Religion in Europe. 8 (3–4). Brill: 321–334. doi:10.1163/18748929-00804005. ISSN1874-8910.
Jobbágy, András (7 May 2015). "Religious Policy and Dissent in Socialist Hungary: The Case of the Bokor Movement". Journal of Church and State. 58 (3). Oxford University Press (OUP): 508–528. doi:10.1093/jcs/csv030. ISSN0021-969X.
Luxmoore, Jonathan; Babiuch, Jolanta (1995). "In search of faith, part 3: Religious and secular impulses among Hungary's ex-Marxist intellectuals". Religion, State and Society. 23 (4). Informa UK: 383–396. doi:10.1080/09637499508431720. ISSN0963-7494.
Máté-Tóth, András (1996). Bulányi und die Bokor-Bewegung [Bulányi and the Bokor movement] (in German). Wien: UKI.
Máté-Tóth, András. "Bulányi György TEOLÓGIÁJA" [The theology of György Bulányi] (in Hungarian). Archived from the original on 18 December 2002. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
Niessen, James P. (2017). "Vatican II Behind the Iron Curtain. Edited by Piotr H. Kosicki. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2016. x + 225 pp. $65.00 cloth". Church History. 86 (3). Cambridge University Press (CUP): 953–955. doi:10.1017/s0009640717002001. ISSN0009-6407. S2CID166100762.
von Klimó, Árpád (2007). "A katolikus önértelmezés új irányai az 1960-as években Olaszországban és Magyarországon: Don Lorenzo Milani és Bulányi György példája" [New trends in Catholic self-interpretation in the 1960s in Italy and Hungary: The examples of Don Lorenzo Milani and György Bulányi]. Századvég (in Hungarian). 44: 131–163.