by Adrienn Sztana-Kovács
“Youth is
eternal.” How true is this statement? Does student life actually change? Let us
get a glimpse into it, and into an interesting education program, in 1930s
Hungary. University student hostels were very important spaces for third level
education between the two World Wars in Hungary. They were both living quarters
and educational centers for the students. Some of them, under charismatic
leadership, became real communities. We try to show everyday life,
opportunities opened to the students, and educational work at these
institutions of the Elisabeth University in Pécs.
Student hostels
of the Hungarian Royal Elisabeth University
The University
of Pozsony[i]
was founded in 1912 and changed its location twice in a short period.[ii]
After moving to Pécs, in 1923 the first student hostel of the
university was founded in an empty building on the Dániel Irányi Square. It
opened for male students and was named after King Louis the Great of
Hungary (also Louis I). This building functioned until 1931, because of the
difficulties in getting accommodation in the town, and because the purpose-built
hostel – ‘Peace Palace’ - was used to accommodate the professors and their
families in separate flats. The Elisabeth Hostel was set up for female students
in 1925.[iii]
The Louis the
Great Student-hostel (1923-1945)
The building was
planned by Andor Pilch to house a primary school and built between 1922 and
1923. It was remodelled and let to the university for use, but because of the
characteristics of the building it wasn't a suitable or cosy student-hostel. According
to Professor Mihály Pekár[iv]
the “barack-roomish” feel of the accomodation wasn't very attractive for the
youths. He suggested building a new hostel building in 1926, but he didn't get
any support.
Up to 1928, this little reference
and Pekár’s suggestion are all that we know about the hostel. Huge part of the
sources relate to the period after 1930, when Prof. Béla Entz[v]
became headmaster of the hostel. After moving the student hostel to the Peace
Palace, which was used to accommodate the professors prior 1930, the number of
the places for students rose to 133 and this number grew to 140 by 1940.
The
new student hostel opened in December 1931. It had space for communal rooms, including
a reading room, playing room and lounge in the basement near the laundry room, and
storage. There were 5, 3 and 2 bed dorms upstairs. The furnishings were simple
and practical.[vi] Every
faculty sent a member to the hostel committee, the headmaster was Prof. Béla
Entz, the caretaker was Tibor Falcsik and the housemaster was Dr. Márton Vörös.
The committee published annual reports from 1932, and these are our main
sources, about everyday life in the hostel. We have exact data about the
religious, national, residential, and faculty background of the students.
The ‘Elisabeth
Student-hostel’
The city council
of Pécs bought the ‘Savage Hotel’[vii]
and donated it to the university in 1923. The building was used as a canteen
and student hostel for female arts and medical students from January 1925.[viii]
It contained 21 rooms with altogether 70 beds. The number of tenants was
between 30 and 50, and they lived in 2 and 3 bed dorms. The food rations were
rich, the students got 3 courses for lunch and 2 courses for dinner. Unfortunately
we haven't got exact sources about the number of students, their residential
villages and towns, or they their social backgrounds. The hostel places were
few, considering that out of the 1200 students of the university in 1925, 400
were women. The members of the board of directors were: Prof. Mihály Pekár
headmaster, Gézáné Nánásy née Anniella Szanathy[ix]
housemaster, and Matild Fischer deputy master in charge.
Aniella
Szanathy (?-?)
Life in the student-hostels
Every
student-hostel tried to provide wide range of self-education opportunities for
their students, for example at the “Louis the Great Student-hostel” they had
access to a library, where the number of the book loans rose from 50 to 440
between 1935 and 1942. Another example is the free foreign language course,
which was provided for the students at every hostel of the university.[x]
There was an annual rent, which was
to be paid at the begisning of the first term of the academic year. This didn't
happen on several occasions, as can be seen from the vast pile of parental
letters[xi]
addressed to Prof. Entz. In the correspondence, the parents express their
gratitude for learning about their children's behavior, including that the
students, instead of paying rent, actually spent it. The parents requested Prof.
Entz's ‘paternal attention and strictness’ towards their sons. The most serious
case happened in October 1941, when some of the students of the Louis the Great
Student Hostel stayed out in the city night after night, spending their money
at a secret gambling den. Prof. Entz, after a short discussion with the students
concerned, confiscated the winnings of one of them for the relief funds of the
university students, while the others had lost their money at the den.[xii]
Prof. Entz beyond the educational work tried to shape a good community for his
students. They had trips[xiii]and
Christmas celebrations every year from 1925[xiv]
onwards.
Cutural and public health experimental
projects
In the spring
term of the 1932-1933 academic year, Prof. Entz organized cultural regional
meetings of the Cultural Committee of the Louis the Great Student Hostel in most
towns of Baranya County. Students gave lectures in the fields of medical
science, law and arts or reported on their foreign travels and scholarships,
for example about their stay in England or in Sweden.[xv]
Prof Enzt wrote about these
occasions in his annual report: ‘We achieved with these serious lectures, that
the youth debuted in front of a wide audience, [that] they [the youth] were
immersed in the subject of a serious paper and finally they established
connections with the educated residents of the given community’.
In the same academic year Prof. Entz
launched a mothers’ and children health protection project in Baranya County.
During the 4-7 day courses the (mainly) last year medical students from the
afore-mentioned student hostels gave lectures on infant and child healthcare
and public health. The statistical data sheet contained only estimated numbers
on attendance, and none on the students who took part.[xvi]
According to this chart they called on 11 villages during 75 days, they gave
181 lectures, which were attended by 21,000 people. Prof. Entz underlined the
usefulness of this work for the students:
The moral effect of these courses will be a lifelong influence on the lecturing youth, whether the lecturer was a future doctor, lawyer, or teacher, they [the courses] directed their attention to the common people, they [the courses] filled their souls with serious questions and problems and they created an everlasting connection with the people.[xvii]
Pécs University
Archives, reference number: VIII.108. 30
d. 26th of October in 1934
The headmistress of the Elisabeth
Student Hostel gave an interview about the hostel and within it she mentioned
the program. The interview was printed on the pages of the Hungarian Women's
Review in 1935. ‘Beside the study of specific sciences, [and] the learning of
foreign languages, the undertaking of social work creates a new type of
student, in whom, once employed, will be empathy, vigour and temperance for
social understanding, and today this is the crown of everything’.[xviii]
Despite of the initial achievements,
the program was stopped. The real cause behind ending this experimental work is
unknown at this stage of our research. We have just an obscure allusion from Prof. Entz's report: ‘The future of the
work of these courses, as has been in advance decided, became unfortunately
uncertain because of the unforeseen changes in circumstances’.[xix]
We had some information about the
restoration of the program out of a radio interview with Prof. Entz from 1941.[xx]
The Louis the Great Student Hostel of Pécs kept away from propaganda with the late Prime Minister, Pal Teleki's personal support, [and] created such a nation-educating experimental program that it surpassed in its structure, but mainly in its results every other work, should that be folklore research or vernacular education. [xxi]
Under the new circumstances, with
Hungary at war, life in the student hostels started to change and there was no longer
any time or place for experimental programs. The first strong sign of these
changes came at the beginning of the 1942-1943 academic year, with plans for
building an air-raid shelter.
[ii] You can read about the
deatils of the foundation and the seat changes in our previous blog post:
Summer Universities, within the international relationships of the Hungarian
Royal Erzsébet University between 1920 and 1946.
http://historyofeducationsociety.blogspot.co.uk/2014/09/summer-universities-within.html
[iii] The third students hostel
of the university was built between 1926 and 1929 and named after St. Maurice
for male students. There was another oppurtunity for evangelist women, they
could get accommodation at the Baldauf Home.
[iv] Mihály Pekár (1871-1942)
medical professor of the Hungarian Royal Elisabeth University.
[v] Béla Entz (1877-1959)
medical professor of the Hungarian Royal Elisabeth University.
[vi] The hostel committee
ordered 100 drawing desks, wardrobes and chairs.
[vii] It was built in 1886.
[viii] After the Faculty of Arts
closed in 1940, the law students moved in in lieu of the arts students.
[ix] Gézáné Nánásy nee Anniella
Szanathy (?-?) took a law degree in 1928, about her life and work Tünde Árvai
wrote in her blog post in Hungarian: http://pecsi-notortenet.blog.hu/2013/04/13/szanathy_aniella_az_erzsebet_kollegium_anyja
[x] More about the foreign
language teaching at the Elisabeth University in our previous blog post:
http://historyofeducationsociety.blogspot.co.uk/2014/09/summer-universities-within.html
[xi] According to prof. Entz's
report there was 2130 Pengő outstanding rent. In some cases they got permisson
to pay monthly. Pécs University Archives, reference number: VIII.108. 29 d. 26th
April in 1932.
[xii] Pécs University Archives,
reference number: VIII.108.30 d. 21st October in 1940. The amount
was 300 Pengő. In 1937 1 USD was 5.40
Pengő. 1 GBP was 4.94 USD. 1 GBP was approx. 26.67 Pengő.
[xiii] For example there was a trip
to Manfa, that was closed with an exciting tenpin bowling match. The local
newspaper reported about the trip. Pécsi Hirek, 19th June 1933.
[xiv] Every year there was a
Christmas party at the “Louis the Great” Student-hostel on 24th of
December. The 40-50 students got a dinner and some little presents, like 1
packet cigarette for the male students and a little bottle of eau de toilette
or a box writing paper for the females.They got full board the next two days
too. There was a rivalry between the leaders of the “St. Maurice” and the
“Louis the Great” Student-hostels. In 1934 the headmaster of “St. Maurice”,
Damján Vargha, would have liked to move the christmas party into his hostel,
but the chairman of the student-hostels committee, prof. Mihály Pekár was
against his plan, and the party stayed in its former place. Pécs University Archives,
reference number: VIII.108. 30 d. 14th of December in 1934.
[xv] Some of the titles of the
lectures: Historical miniatures from the circle of medical science, The new
Italy, The Soviet marriage, The crisis of the capitalist economic system and
the fascism, The discovery of the pathogen of malaria. Pécs University
Archives, reference number: VIII.108. 30 d. 25th of March, 20th
and 30th of May in 1933.
[xvi] Pécs University Archives,
reference number: VIII.108. 30 d. 26th of October in 1934.
[xvii] Pécs University Archives,
reference number: VIII.108. 30 d. 26th of October in 1934.
[xviii] Magyar Női Szemle
(Hungarian Women's Review) I./1–2. (1935. január–február) 30–31. It was cited
by Tünde Árvai.
http://pecsi-notortenet.blog.hu/2013/03/14/az_erzsebet_kollegium_1935-ben.
[xix] Pécs University Archives,
reference number: VIII.108. 30 d. 26th of October in 1934.
[xx] The Prime Minister, Pal
Teleki, committed suicide on 3 of April in 1941, as a protest against the
German army starting its march through Hungary, against Yugoslavia.
[xxi] Pécs University Archives,
reference number: VIII.108. 30 d. 1941 (?).