-
Gábor Rakonczay Completes Solo Atlantic Crossing in Canoe - 5 mins ago
-
Orbán: Supermarket chains in Hungary have one week to cut prices - 8 mins ago
-
Austin Cindric, Ross Chastain trying to move on after taking their lumps - 10 mins ago
-
Floodwaters still threaten parts of Australia’s east coast as tropical storm cleanup begins - 15 mins ago
-
Octopuses Use Venom for Safe Sex, Biologists Reveal - 32 mins ago
-
In bird flu fight, Agriculture Department almost doubling the $1.1 billion already spent - 34 mins ago
-
“Historic” Gas Solidarity Agreement Signed with Romania - 37 mins ago
-
FM: Polish government are ‘trampling on the rule of law’ and peace - 42 mins ago
-
Is that iPhone app spying? Apple’s App Privacy Report reveals all - 45 mins ago
-
2025 NCAA Conference Tournaments: Schedule, brackets, auto bids tracker - 54 mins ago
President Sulyok: Culture is what allows a community to survive
The president called the Csángó Ball a meeting point for the Csángó Hungarians returning home to Hungary and those “longing to be in Csángó Land in spirit”.
President Tamás Sulyok said culture is what allows a community to survive.
“And this is essential for the Csángó communities that are seriously exposed to the threat of assimilation and are at risk of disappearing,” President Sulyok said in his address at the 28th Csángó Ball in Budapest on Saturday.
The president called the Csángó Ball a meeting point for the Csángó Hungarians returning home to Hungary and those “longing to be in Csángó Land in spirit”.
President Sulyok said the ball also offered an opportunity for the people of the 21st century to get acquainted with centuries-old Hungarian folk music.