False testimony

15. November 2013. – 15. December
MegnyitóOpening: November 14, 2013, 7:00 pm
MegnyitjaRemarks by: Soharóza
The subject of the False Testimony exhibition is the Tiszaeszlár Trial of 1883. Following the disappearance of a 14-year-old girl Eszter Solymosi on April 1, 1882, in the Hungarian village of Tiszaeszlár, local rumors and suspicions of Jewish ritual murder led to a high-profile murder case in the summer of 1883.

Relying heavily on forensic medicine, the prosecution’s case was not proved against the 14 male Jewish defendants, who were proclaimed not guilty on August 3. The trial was closely interwoven with the birth of modern antisemitism in Hungary: shortly after the verdict and a spate of antisemitic riots around the country, Hungary’s first National Antisemitic Party (1883-1892) was formed. “Tiszaeszlár” later became an important element in the radical Right’s historical narrative and subsequent constructions of national martyrology.

The series of photographs entitled Loud Place documents the contemporary right-wing cult of Eszter Solymosi and the grave erected in her honor in 1994. Silent Place 1 shows the former courtroom in its empty state, while Silent Place 2 shows the Jewish cemetery in Tiszaeszlár which, today, is unmarked, and enclosed by a concrete wall.

The central pieces of the exhibition, False Testimony (one version of the Version) and False Testimony (version 3), use the transcript of Miklós Erdély’s classic 1981 film Verzió to rework one of the key scenes of the trial. In these videos, a choir and the soloists perform two different versions of the scene in which the prosecution’s witness, 14-year-old Móric Scharf, is trained to confess, which confession he later repeats over and over.

The photographs, videos and objects in the exhibition examine individual and collective memory and identity, the processes of psychological and cultural acquisition, and the learning of antisemitic witness and national martyrology.

At the opening a live choral performance False Testimony (version 3) will be presented by Soharóza. Choirmaster: Dóra Halas. Soloists: Tamás Bernáth Atom, András Meszerics, Dániel Jankó.

In conjunction with the exhibitions, the following presentations and discussions will be held:

November 28
The social and legal history aspects of the Tiszaeszlár trial – Modern era blood libels Participants: Tamás Kende, György Kövér, István Stipta

December 5
Reproduction – The reception of the Tiszaeszlár trial on the extreme right after 1989 Participants: Gwen Jones, Zoltán Kékesi

December 12
From Sakter Polka to Healthy Scalp – Musical sub-cultures related to the Tiszaeszlár trial Presentation by Dániel Véri

False Testimony – Versions and Options Presentation by Hajnal Németh and Zoltán Kékesi

December 15
Screening of the film of the opera Red Cow by Iván Fischer