Louis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot and Mason, was ever the stalwart champion of the spiritual, moral, social, and political ideals which serve as the core of the democratic ideal.
One
of the joys of living in or near Washington, D.C., is the opportunity to
meet people from all nations of the world. Over the years, friends from
a wide variety of countries have helped me understand mankind’s universal
pursuit of personal liberty and national freedom. Everywhere and always,
man has sought to liberate himself from the yoke of spiritual, political,
and economic tyranny. Almost invariably in Western culture, this impetus
has been advanced by Freemasonry.
Only recently, for instance, a good friend of mine, knowing my lifelong
dedication to Freemasonry, excitedly showed me a book she had discovered
while visiting her homeland, Hungary. To her amazement, many of the great
men who had labored to free her country from Austrian, Russian, and other
political dominations had been Freemasons. The most prominent of these
was Lajos (Louis) Kossuth (1802-1894). His life is an eloquent, dramatic
testimony to Freemasonry and its influence for good on the world scene
in the 19th century.
As early as 1837, Bro. Kossuth, then age 35, was imprisoned by the
Austrian government on political charges. During his three years in prison,
he taught himself English, and, upon his release, he became the editor
of a prominent Hungarian daily newspaper, Pesti Hirlap. The publication
became a forum for his liberal views and a major influence on the public,
leading to significant constitutional changes as a result of the bloodless
revolution in Hungary in March 1848. Kossuth was made minister of finance
in the first Hungarian government which was responsible to an elected Parliament.
When the Habsburg “camarilla” repealed the new laws and sent an army
to crush Hungary, Kossuth raised a defense force which defeated and expelled
the invaders by May 1849. The Hungarian Parliament dethroned the Habsburg
dynasty in 1849 and elected Kossuth Governor of the country. All that prompted
the Russian Czar, the leading member of the “Unholy Alliance,” to dispatch
300,000 soldiers to help his imperial brother, Francis Joseph. That intervention
settled the fate of an independent Hungary. On August 11, 1849, Kossuth
fled first to Turkey, where he was under government supervision for a year,
and then to England.
The fame of his cause circled the globe, and the United States pressed
for his release, even sending the U.S.S. Mississippi to bring him to London.
Greeted there as a hero of liberty, Kossuth campaigned for Hungarian freedom
at every opportunity. His military bearing and oratorical ability won audiences
to his cause, and in 1851, he journeyed to America, which he saw as the
birthplace of modern liberty. Reflective of the popularity he enjoyed,
Kossuth was greeted as “Freedom’s Angel” by the famous American writer
Ralph Waldo Emerson who welcomed him to Concord, Massachusetts. Horace
Greeley, the famed journalist, called Kossuth a leader “of the first rank,”
and the poet John Greenleaf Whittier hailed him as “the noblest guest the
Old World’s wrong has given to the New World of the West.”1
Little wonder that a monumental statue of Kossuth, according to its inscription,
was “Erected by a Liberty Loving Race of Americans of Magyar Origin to
Louis Kossuth, the Great Champion of Liberty” on Riverside Drive in New
York City.2
Kossuth was the first foreigner after Lafayette to be invited to address
both Houses of Congress in January 1851. Speaking everywhere to large audiences,
Kossuth traveled throughout the United States and was naturally drawn to
Freemasonry. In 1851, he wrote an extraordinary letter to Brother Ferdinand
Bodmann, Worshipful Master of Lodge No. 133, Cincinnati, Ohio. He wrote:
To the Worshipful Master, Wardens and Brethren of Cincinnati Lodge
No. 133 of Free and Accepted Masons. The petition of the subscriber respectfully
showeth that having long entertained a favorable opinion of your ancient
institutions, he is desirous of being admitted as member thereof if found
worthy. Being an exile for liberty’s sake, he has now no fixed place of
residence, is now staying in Cincinnati; his age is 49 ½ years,
his occupation is to restore his native land, Hungary, to its national
independence, and to achieve by community of action with other nations,
civil and religious liberty in Europe.”3
The petition made the case of emergency, and the very next day, February
19, 1852, Kossuth, along with four members of his group (Col. Count Gregory
Bethlen, Peter A. Nagy, Paul Hajnik, and Julius Utasy Strasser), were initiated,
passed to Fellowcraft and then raised as Master Masons the following day.
Today, Kossuth’s certificate of Masonic Lodge membership is preserved in
the Hungarian National Archives.4
During his speaking tour of America, Bro. Kossuth made it a point,
whenever possible, to speak to the Brethren of at least one of the Lodges
in the city he was visiting. For instance, he spoke to Center City Lodge
No. 23, Indianapolis, Indiana, and to St. John’s Lodge No. 1, Newark, New
Jersey. Also, on May 10, 1852, he addressed the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts
saying: “It will be the great aim and effort of my life to walk worthy
of the character of a Mason and to fulfill the Masonic duties which devolve,
according to his ability and rank, upon every member of our noble institution.”5
Such was Kossuth’s popularity in America and worldwide that in Mississippi
a town was named after him as were two Lodges, now disbanded, in New York,
one in Argentina, and four in Hungary before Freemasonry was prohibited
in 1920 and, again, in 1950 by Soviet Communists. Today, however, Hungary
is at last the free nation Bro. Kossuth envisioned, and there are eight
Lodges, seven in the capital of Budapest and one in Szeged.6
There is also a Supreme Council, 33°, of the Scottish Rite for Hungary
led by Ill. Peter Kozma, 33°.
Unfortunately, Bro. Kossuth passed away in exile long before this rebirth
of Freemasonry and freedom in his homeland. After his year in America,
he returned to England, traveled throughout Europe, especially Italy, and
died in Turin in 1894. Bro. Louis Kossuth will always be honored in Hungary
and among Freemasons everywhere, for he truly deserves the title of “the
Washington of Hungary.”7
Similarly, Americans honor Louis Kossuth, and there is a bust of him
in one of the doorways of the United States Capitol which was dedicated
by Congress on March 15, 1990. It bears the inscription:
Kossuth
1802-1894
Father of
Hungarian Democracy
Hungarian Statesman
Freedom Fighter
1848-1849
David
Kruger
has been very active in a variety of civic causes in
Alexandria, Virginia. Among them are the Red Cross, Boy Scouts, United
Givers Fund, Kiwanis (President 1960), Salvation Army, Men of All Faiths
(one of the group’s founders), Alexandria Board of Health (Secretary),
and the Alexandria Hospital, Community Welfare Council, Tuberculosis Association,
Boys Club, and Family Service. He served as Vice President of Temple Beth
El in Alexandria for nine years and was active in the Conference of Christians
and Jews. Ill. Kruger, who practices optometry in Alexandria, became a
50-year member of Norfolk Lodge No. 1 in 1996 and has been a Life Member
of the Scottish Rite Research Society since its founding in 1991. A Scottish
Rite Mason in the Valley of Alexandria since 1946, he is an expert Masonic
ritualist and has served in many leadership roles in the Rite, including
President of the Scottish Rite Conference of Virginia in 1975. His outstanding
service to the Order was recognized early when he was invested with the
rank and decoration of K.C.C.H. in 1953 and coroneted an I.G.H. in 1963.
Ill. Kruger became S.G.I.G. in Virginia in 1985 and then Grand Secretary
General of the Supreme Council in 1989. He is an Honorary Member of the
Supreme Council of Canada and the Supreme Council of the International
Order of DeMolay. In 1991, the Grand Lodge of Virginia awarded Ill. Kruger
one of its highest honors, the John Blair Medal for Distinguished Service.
Other awards and honors continue to recognize Ill. Kruger’s service to
Freemasonry and humankind.
Endnotes
1Sebestyen, Endre. Kossuth. Pittsburgh: Expert Printing Co., 1950, p. 7.
2Endre, front-cover illustration.
3Denslow, William R. 10,000 Famous Freemasons, vol. III. Trenton, Mo.:
Missouri Lodge of Research, 1961, p. 39–40.
4Berényi, Zsuzsanna Ágnes. “Louis Kossuth, Hungarian Freedom Fighter and Freemason.” Scottish Rite Journal (May 1995), p. 11.
5Berény, p. 12.
62001 List of Lodges. Masonic, Bloomington, Ill., Pantagraph Printing Co., 2001, p. 269.
7Berény, p. 12.