"But the tiger doesn't pretend to be a jackal or a fox. He has no need to. It's not true that we didn't know about his tiger's nature. Let's confess that we often found it pleasing. In this world of hissing reptiles and screeching monkeys it was good to see ...Viktor Orbán has no limits in Hungary. Indeed no opposition of any kind stops a politician like him."
In the 1980s, a stocky young man in the Hungarian countryside conferred with his father. He was in two minds about going to university or becoming a professional footballer. "Go to university," his father said, "it's about time someone in this family did." So Orbán went off to university to study law.
In British culture, countryfolk are largely fodder for ridicule. Not so in Hungary. The peasants were always esteemed for their sharp wits. One of the great figures of Hungarian folklore is Matyi the Gooseherd, a trickster who metes out revenge on the rich and powerful. Orbán's village, Alcsútdoboz, is only a short distance from Budapest, but Orbán's rustic credentials are impeccable. The young Orbán had to go out into the fields at harvest-time to help out. He was given a spade to deal with the rats and he maintains he learned an important political lesson: "You have to hit the rats very hard the first time, otherwise they run up the spade and bite you."
The country boy's time at university was uneventful at first; he was so bored that he considered quitting, but his father advised him: "In this family when we start something, we finish it." It is a precept that Orbán's opponents will ruefully concede he has taken to heart.
At the end of his university studies Orbán and some of his fellow students started hanging out with the small "democratic opposition", the intellectuals who had a small samizdat business, so small that the communists happily tolerated them.
By 1988 however, because of generational change in the Communist Party in Hungary and Gorbachev in Moscow, things eased even more. The communists had a clever scheme to create a tame, lame opposition and allowed an organisation called the MDF (the Hungarian Democratic Forum) to come into being to create an illusion of democracy.
In March 1988, 37 students and recent graduates met in Budapest to create the Alliance of Young Democrats (Fidesz). It was the first independent youth movement since 1956. The wooden prose of their founding declaration demonstrated the prevalence of lawyers and economists. One of the founders was Viktor Orbán.
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