László Almásy

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Bust of László Almásy at the Hungarian Geographical Museum in Érd.
Bust of László Almásy at the Hungarian Geographical Museum in Érd.
The native form of this personal name is zsadányi és törökszentmiklósi gróf Almásy László Ede. This article uses the Western name order.

Count László Ede Almásy de Zsadány et Törökszentmiklós (22 August 189522 March 1951) was a Hungarian aristocrat, motorist, desert researcher, aviator, Scout-leader and soldier who also served as the basis for the protagonist in Michael Ondaatje's 1992 novel The English Patient and the movie based on it.

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[edit] Biography

Almásy was born in Borostyánkő, Austria-Hungary (today Bernstein im Burgenland, Austria), into a non-titled Hungarian noble family (his father was the zoologist and ethnographer György Almásy), and was educated by a private tutor in Eastbourne (UK) at Berrow, 17 Carew Road, from 1911 to 1914. During World War I, he served with the Austro-Hungarian Imperial and Royal Aviation Troops. He returned after the war to join Eastbourne Technical Institute while lodging again at the same address from November 1921 to June 1922. He was a member of the pioneering Eastbourne Flying Club. [1]

After the war, Almásy continued to support King Karl of Austria, and, on two occasions, drove him to Budapest, Hungary when he tried to get his throne back. It may be that Karl bestowed him unofficially with the title of count that Almásy only used outside of Hungary.

After 1921, Almásy worked as a representative of the Austrian car firm Steyr Automobile in Szombathely, Hungary and won many car races in their colors. He also organized hunting trips in Egypt for visiting Europeans. During his drive from Egypt to Sudan along the Nile in 1926, he developed an interest in the area and later returned there to drive and hunt. He also demonstrated Steyr vehicles in desert conditions in 1929 with two Steyr lorries and led his first expedition to the desert.

In 1932, he left to find the legendary Zerzura, The Oasis of the Birds, with three Britons, Sir Robert Clayton, Commander Penderel and Patrick Clayton, who were sponsored by Prince Kemal el Din. The expedition used both cars and an aeroplane. They discovered prehistoric rock art sites, including the Cave of Swimmers, in Uweinat and Gilf Kebir, and Almásy claimed that in 1933 he found the third valley of Zerzura in Wadi Talh.

He also discovered the Magyarab tribe in Nubia[citation needed], who speak Arabic but believe that they are the descendants of Hungarian soldiers who served in the army of Turkey in the 16th century.

Almásy had succeeded in turning from an autodidact into a serious explorer. Almásy was given the nickname Abu Ramla ("Father of the Sands") by his Bedouin friends. However, by the mid-1930s, the time for research and adventure was drawing to a close. In 1932 his former sponsor Clayton died — not from a crash-landing as described in "The English Patient" — but of an infection from a desert fly contracted in the Gilf Kebir region. However, Clayton's wife did die one year later (1933) in a mysterious plane crash.

Almásy recorded some of his adventures in the book Az ismeretlen Szahara (English: The Unknown Sahara), first published in 1934 in Budapest. The German edition, under the title Unbekannte Sahara. Mit Flugzeug und Auto in der Libyschen Wüste (The Unknown Sahara. By Aeroplane and Car in the Libyan Desert), was published five years later (1939) by Brockhaus in Leipzig. It contains accounts of his most sensational discoveries like the one of the Jebel Uweinat (the highest mountain of the Eastern Sahara desert), of the rock paintings in the Gilf Kebir and of the lost oasis of Zerzura.

Almásy's role in relation to the Gilf Kebir was not that of a discoverer. The Bedouins already knew it was there, but tended to avoid the caves except when searching for stray livestock, attributing the cave paintings inside to djinn or unpredictable spirits. Egyptian Prince Kemal ed Din wrote an article about Gilf Kebir for National Geographic in 1921. What Almásy did was to map and enter each cave and draw the paintings inside.

In the following years, Almásy led archeological and ethnographical expeditions with the German ethnographer Leo Frobenius. He also worked in Egypt at Al Maza airfield as a flying instructor. After the outbreak of World War II in 1939, he had to return to Hungary. The British suspected that he was a spy for the Italians — and vice versa. In fact he was a Hungarian who worked for which ever colonial power offered him the best surveying contract. Hungary formally joined the Axis powers by signing the Tripartite Pact in November of 1940.

The Abwehr (German military intelligence service) recruited him in Budapest. As a Hungarian reserve officer, he was assigned to Luftwaffe as a Hauptmann (captain) and assigned to the Afrika Korps. In 1941–1942, he worked with the German troops of Erwin Rommel using his desert experience and led military missions, including Operation Salaam, to infiltrate two German spies through enemy lines in a manner similar to the allied Long Range Desert Group. This was not a covert operation: Almásy and his team wore German uniforms, although they used American cars/truck with German crosses surreptitiously incorporated as part of the vehicles camouflage pattern. Almásy delivered the German (Abwehr) agents Hans Eppler and Peter Stanstede to Cairo in the same way. Rommel subsequently promoted Almásy to major.

The details of Almásy's role in World War II are likely to remain unclear. For delivering spies, he received the Iron Cross (Eisernes Kreuz) from Rommel. He was, however, never a spy nor a Nazi. He was a Conservative Hungarian Royalist whose loyalty was to Hungary.

After the end of the desert war, Almásy relocated to Turkey where he became involved in a plan to cause an Egyptian revolt which never materialized. He then returned to Budapest where with his contacts from the Roman Catholic Church he helped save the lives of several Jewish families at a time when Jews were being sent to concentration camps.

After the war he was arrested in Hungary and ended up in a Soviet prison. After Communists took over in Hungary, Almásy was tried for treason in the Communist People's Court but was eventually acquitted. He escaped the country reputedly with the aid of the British intelligence which reportedly bribed Hungarian Communist officials to enable his release. The British then spirited him into British occupied Austria. When he was pursued by a KGB 'hit squad', the British put him on an aeroplane to Cairo.

He returned to Egypt at the invitation of King Farouk and became the technical director of the newly founded Desert Institute.

Almásy became ill in 1951 during a visit in Austria. He died of dysentery in a hospital in Salzburg, where he was then buried. The epitaph on his grave, erected by Hungarian patriots in 1995, honors him as a "Pilot, Saharaforscher und Entdecker der Oase Zarzura" (Pilot, Sahara Explorer, and Discoverer of the Zerzura Oasis).

[edit] Scouting

From the beginning he was a member of the Scout movement.[citation needed] In 1921 Almásy became the International Commissioner of the Hungarian Scout Association. With Count Pál Teleki, he took part in organizing the 4th World Scout Jamboree in Gödöllő, Hungary where Almásy presented the Air Scouts to Robert Baden-Powell on August 9th, 1933.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Eastbourne Local History Society Newsletter Nr 143

[edit] References

  • Almásy, Ladislaus. Schwimmer in der Wüste (Swimmer of the Desert). Innsbruck: Haymon, 1997. (new edition of Unbekannte Sahara)
  • Bierman, John. The Secret Life of Laszlo Almasy: The Real English Patient. London: Penguin Books, 2004.
  • Kelly, Saul. The hunt for Zerzura : the lost oasis and the desert war. London: John Murray, 2002.
  • Mitchell, Sandy. "The Real Count Almasy" theage.com.au (2 July 2002) [1]
  • Ondaatje, Michael. The English Patient. (fiction) 1992.
  • Schrott, Raoul. Khamsin (fiction). Frankfurt am Main: S. Fischer, 2002.
  • Sensenig-Dabbous, Eugene. " 'Will the Real Almásy Please Stand Up!' Transporting Central European Orientalism via The English Patient," in: German Orientalism, Jennifer Jenkins (ed.), Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East Volume 24, No. 2, 2004.
  • Török, Zsolt: "Salaam Almasy - Almásy László életregénye". Budapest:ELTE Eötvös, 1998. (the first biography, in Hungarian, unfortunately).
  • Török, Zsolt. "László Almásy: The Real 'English patient' - The Hungarian Desert Explorer." Földrajzi Közlemények 121.1-2 (1997): 77-86.
  • Totosy de Zepetnek, Steven. "Ondaatje's The English Patient and Questions of History." Comparative Cultural Studies and Michael Ondaatje's Writing. Ed. Steven Totosy de Zepetnek. West Lafayette: Purdue UP, 2005. 115-32.
  • Totosy de Zepetnek, Steven. "Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient, 'History,' and the Other." CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 1.4 (1999) [2].

[edit] External links