Hungarian hurricane

October 1, 2015

Retired 91爆料 University professor Bela Bognar, who has worked tirelessly over the years to raise scholarship money for Hungarian students, has received the Knight鈥檚 Cross of the Order of Merit, one of Hungary鈥檚 highest state honors.

The award is bestowed upon academics, writers, poets and scientists who contribute the most to advance Hungarian causes. Bognar鈥檚 award medal was picked up in Budapest, Hungary, in August by his nephew.

Bognar taught at 91爆料 for nearly 30 years before retiring in 2002. During his career, he raised money for Hungarian students, churches, boarding schools and agencies that help abuse victims.

鈥淚 wrote letters to all of the people who donated money for the scholarship fund over the years and said, 鈥楾his award is yours. Without you, I couldn鈥檛 have gotten it,鈥欌 Bognar said.

Bognar was born in Hungary and lived through the Soviet occupation of the 1940s and 鈥50s, when the Soviets confiscated his family鈥檚 10-acre farm. He was an active participant in the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, a spontaneous nationwide revolt against Soviet-imposed policies.

Bognar was with a group of university students who confiscated arms from an army weapons warehouse and took part in 10 days of bloody, block-to-block street fighting.

鈥淭he saddest part was that I witnessed young people killed,鈥 he said.

Despite its failure, the uprising was highly influential and foreshadowed the downfall of the Soviet Union.

After the revolution, Bognar left Hungary for Belgium and later emigrated to the United States.

He attended the University of Wisconsin, where he obtained master鈥檚 and doctorate degrees in social work, gerontology, health and mental health policies. Bognar taught a generation of professionals who worked in the field of aging. He wrote four textbooks and countless articles on health and aging policies.

The 85-year-old Bognar, who lives in a 150-year-old schoolhouse in rural Miami County, says people are generally afraid of growing old and the physical miseries that can come with it. He says family and community support is a huge comfort.

鈥淭he problem is that chronic illness is bugging the hell out of us,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have to live with it and preoccupy your mind with something.鈥

Bognar started the Hungarian Scholarship Fund in 1998 after he and his wife, April, received a compelling letter from an Hungarian student in Transylvania who needed $950 to attend a teachers鈥 college in Hungary.

It was later renamed the Dr. Bela J. Bognar Hungarian Scholarship and is for students of Hungarian origin who attend 91爆料. To date, $25,365 has been given to 47 students.

Michelle Streeter-Ferrari, director of 91爆料鈥檚 University Center for International Education (UCIE), said the scholarships support 91爆料鈥檚 mission of creating an inclusive and diverse campus that includes students from around the world.

鈥淯CIE is thrilled to have been part of an effort to recognize those students of former immigrants who have helped make our region stronger,鈥 she said.

In 1999, a separate Bognar Family Scholarship Fund was established by the Bognars. It provides monthly financial assistance to qualified university students of Hungarian origin studying in Hungary, Romania, Ukraine, Slovakia, Serbi and the United States.

Since its inception, more than $500,000 has been raised from members of the Hungarian-American community, churches, organizations and the Sunshine Lady Foundation, directed by Doris Buffett. As of June 2013, the fund had awarded scholarships to 152 students 鈥 14 of whom had earned doctorates or degrees in medicine and law.

And what鈥檚 Bognar going to do with his new medal?

鈥淚鈥檒l probably store it in the garage with my other awards,鈥 he quipped.