In 1839 two Scottish missionaries set
out for Palestine to reach out to the Jews. Riding on camels, one of them
fell off the camel’s back, broke his leg and they were forced to return
home. However, when they were on a boat travelling from the Black Sea up the
Danube, they both fell ill and had to stop in Budapest.
Archduchess Maria Dorothea, one of the few Protestant members of the
Habsburg royal family, looked after them. She told the missionaries about
her deep concern about the state of the Hungarian Reformed and Lutheran
churches and sent them back to Scotland with a request for help.
From 1840 to 1849 Budapest’s first
bridge across the Danube, the Chain Bridge, was being built and Scottish
chief engineer Adam Clark asked for English language church services to be
held for his workers and their families. The two requests arrived in
Scotland at roughly the same time. In 1841 the Church of Scotland sent its
first three ministers to Budapest with a commission to establish an
English-speaking church, to reach out to the city’s Jewish population, to
work with local protestant churches and to help the poor. A school was
started in 1846, funded by Jewish Christians.
Under right-wing and left-wing
dictatorship:
WW II and communism
Jane Haining, the most famous person
associated with the church, became matron of the school’s girls’ home in
1932 in times of rising anti-Semitism throughout Central Europe. She
returned from holiday to Hungary after the start of war in 1939 and remained
throughout, to look after the welfare of the mainly Jewish girls.
The church and school were brought under
the protection of the Swedish embassy by Raoul Wallenberg, a diplomat who
sought to save Jewish lives. Many Jewish families survived by hiding in the
church and school. Yet like Wallenberg – who died at the hands of the
Soviets – Miss Haining was to pay a high price for her bravery. She was
arrested by the Gestapo in early April 1944, shortly after German troops
occupied Hungary. She died of disease, according to the German authorities,
on July 17 after two months in Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. There
are memorials to Miss Haining from both the Church of Scotland and
Budapest’s Jewish community in our church hall.
Red Army soldiers stabled horses in the
church during the 1944-45 siege of Budapest. Then the Communist authorities
nationalised the school and church in 1950.
Hungarian and English-language worship
was kept going on a monthly basis, however, by Hungarian Reformed Church
ministers.
Recent history:
A home for 99 years
After the collapse of communism, weekly
English language services started again and the congregation was given the
name St. Columba’s. Since 1990 the Church of Scotland has sent three
ministers to Budapest: Alison MacDonald, Susan Cowell and Ken MacKenzie.
Aaron Stevens became the minister of St. Columba’s in December 2006.
In October 2002, on behalf of the Church
of Scotland Trust, representatives of the congregation signed a 99-year
lease with the district council of Budapest’s district VI to use the church,
in return for a nominal annual rent. The agreement has given the
congregation greater security in its use of the building, the status of
which had been uncertain ever since 1950. This has enabled the congregation
to press ahead with extensive renovations, believing that God will continue
to use the church as well in the future as he has in the past.
Several
Scottish cultural events, such as ceilidhs (informal evenings of music and
Scottish country dancing) and a Burns Supper, take place in our building. If
you are longing for kilts and bagpipes, this is where you’re most
likely to see them!
Evolution of the Scottish
Mission in Budapest
The RCH and the Church of Scotland have a longstanding relationship and
unique history. The following article is an interview with Rev. Aaron
Stevens, current minister of St. Columba's Church of Scotland, discussing
the evolution of the Scottish Mission in Budapest and the ties that bind
both churches together.
Rev. Aaron Stevens, the minister of St. Columba's Church of Scotland, and I
sit in his office on the upper floor of his church building, which in
reality is an offshoot of the Vörösmarty School built by the Scottish
Mission in 1910. He is digging around in the recesses of his bookshelf to
find an old book that will aid him in the telling of his church's history.
Finally, he pulls out a large blue book with a worn, cracked binding and
yellowed pages. It is a baptismal registry with what appears to be a
handwritten entry for every baptism the church has performed since 1843.
He points out some of the later entries where there is a column that
indicates the member's church. "Baross tér, Baross tér, Fasor, Kálvin tér"
he says going down the list. I of course, see nothing interesting in this
revelation, but he continues and explains how odd it is to see that baptisms
were regularly conducted in this church even though ministers recorded that
those being baptized would, according to their address, belong in another
parish. The reason being that this place was where Jews would come to be
baptized – that the Scottish Mission was a place with a history of tolerance
and cooperation. After being baptized here, they would go on to active
membership elsewhere, in a Reformed church within their own neighborhood. "I
think it's the only church around that has information like this in its
records," he stated.
And this is the way our interview progresses. For every question asked,
Aaron answers directly and then adds in a historical quip or anecdote. He
throws out dates and names with ease, so when I ask him about the
relationship between the RCH and the Church of Scotland, I know the answer
will be if nothing else, thorough.
"It's historic," he says,"Both churches date back to the Reformation, so
there was a connection well before anyone from the Church of Scotland came
to Budapest."
This relationship continued when Scottish missionaries came to Budapest in
1841 to establish a Mission with a main focus on evangelizing to Hungarian
Jews. "One of their aims was to encourage Hungarian Protestants and work in
cooperation with Hungarians," he explains. This Mission became know as the
Scottish Mission, and later St. Columba's, in order to properly identify and
separate itself as a church from the multitude of mission groups that
flocked to Budapest after the fall of Communism.
Through the years, the mission of the Church of Scotland in Budapest has
changed and evolved, but the relationship with the RCH has remained strong.
"Ever since the Mission started, it has organically been a part of the
Hungarian Reformed Church. It's their work and their project too."
There were two important times in the history of the Scottish Mission when
Hungarians from the RCH led every facet of the Mission, after Scottish
missionaries were temporarily expelled from Hungary and during the Communist
era. There was even a time after the Scots were allowed back that they
served beneath a Hungarian pastor. "Hungarian language mission was a part of
the Scottish mission for the bulk of its history, and it was not too long
ago that St. Columba's had both Hungarian and English language worship
services every Sunday."
"St. Columba's is a congregation of the Reformed Church in Hungary. This is
an intentional statement that we are not here to be different, but instead,
to be a part of the Reformed church here." So, I ask him what this
relationship means to his congregation, and he answers me honestly, "Most of
the members don't realize this connection and I doubt that they know how
integrated we actually are."
It is not shocking, especially because St. Columba's current interaction
with the RCH is mostly on a church governmental level. On the other hand,
the congregation feels the connection between themselves and the country in
which they live and serve. Aaron says the relationship with the RCH makes it
less complicated for Hungarian members of St. Columba's. "It is easier for
Hungarians that come to our church, because they don't have to leave their
Hungarian Reformed roots. Hungarians make up the bulk of our members and I
think it is a load off their mind, that even though the service is in
English, it is still true to the way they were raised."
St. Columba's is a diverse group of Christians, and when I ask him to
describe his congregation, he kind of smiles to himself as if he hears this
question quite often. His answer comes as if read off a cue card, "Today, we
are an international congregation worshipping in English in the Reformed
tradition."
However, he follows this by being refreshingly frank. "Many of our members
come not because they are Presbyterian or Reformed but because they don't
speak Hungarian and are looking for an English-speaking, Protestant option,
and many of the people in our congregation are on temporary assignments, so
our congregation is always changing." International students, people working
for multinational companies, language teachers, other volunteers and
refugees make up a large, but transient portion of St. Columba's
congregation.
He goes on to say that the fluidity of the church's members makes the church
unique, calling it an "interesting ecumenical mix." Despite the instability
in membership and the issues that arise from it, the mixture of
nationalities does succeed in highlighting the legacy of the Scottish
Mission as well as following the example left behind by its most well known
missionary, Jane Haining.
The Scottish Mission built the Vörösmarty School as a safe place for young
Jewish and Christian girls to live and learn together. Jane Haining came to
Budapest as the matron of the school, overseeing the girls' day-to-day
lives. When tensions began to rise before World War II, many people in
Scotland urged her to leave Budapest and return home for her own safety.
Haining refused and instead remained in the school with her students. Aaron
quotes her, saying, "If the girls need me in the days of sunshine, how much
more do they need me in the days of darkness?" Haining was arrested by the
Arrow Cross party, taken from the school and ultimately sent to Auschwitz,
where she was killed.
"Jane Haining was the example of tolerance before tolerance was cliché,"
Aaron says, "She was an authentic Christian witness among people of other
faiths without forcing them to convert, and she showed great courage,
because she didn't return home when she could have."
As he concludes, he ties everything back to St. Columba's present mission,
"I think our work with refugees is a way of continuing her legacy - reaching
out to others and loving them the same regardless of our differences." He
continues by saying that the Scottish Mission, no matter which name it is
operating under, has always had a recurring theme of refugee outreach, it
has simply meant different things in different times.
"I'm not really comfortable saying that we 'reach out' to refugees, because
they are members and a part of us," Aaron says, "It's not what we do; it's
who we are. It's not just part of our outreach; it's our identity."
So, while through the years the Scottish Mission has evolved in name and
mission, it really has not changed in the areas that matter most – the areas
that define its identity. |