Béla Vihar | |
Birth Date: | 1908 5, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Hajdúnánás, Kingdom of Hungary |
Death Place: | Budapest, Hungary |
Resting Place: | Kozma Street Cemetery |
Occupation: | poet journalist writer teacher |
Notableworks: | Yellow Book, Facts of the Wartime Sufferings of Hungarian Jewry |
Period: | 1924–1978 |
Spouse: | Magda Widder (1915–2002) |
Children: | Judit Vihar Gábor Vihar (1948–1975) |
Awards: | Attila József Prize |
Béla Vihar (in Hungarian pronounced as /ˈbeːlɒ ˈvihɒr/) (23 May 1908 – 24 November 1978), born Béla Weisz, was a Hungarian poet, journalist, writer and teacher. He is known for his book entitled "Yellow Book, Facts of the Wartime Sufferings of Hungarian Jewry" which was the first documentary book about The Holocaust in the world. His famous poem, "A Soldier walking in the snow" (Hungarian: Egy katona megy a hóban, translated by László Tehel) commemorates all the soldiers who lost their lives in war.
Béla Vihar was born on 23 May 1908 in Hajdúnánás. His parents were Samuel and Terez (nee Glucklich) Weisz, who would become Jewish victims of the Holocaust.
Béla married Magda Widder, the daughter of painter Félix Bódog Widder, and their daughter was Judit Vihar.[1]
His poems were published in English, Bulgarian, Czech, French, Hebrew, Croatian, German, Italian, Russian, Romanian, Spanish and Slovak languages. In the 1970s his radio drama "Der Fremde. Hörspiel – Ballade" (The Stranger. Radio Drama – Ballad) was a great success in Germany.