First Minority Forum (15-16 December 2008)
Statement by Dr. István Lakatos, Ambassador at Large for Human Rights
Republic of Hungary
Agenda Item IV -Equal Access to Quality Education for Minorities
Madam Chair of the Forum, Madam High Commissioner, Madam Independent Expert on Minority
Issues, Distinguished Delegates, honourable colleagues, dear friends,
We have already mentioned many important elements concerning the core principles and essential
requirements for an effective educational strategy. Allow me to say now a few words with regard to
the main ideas of the draft recommendations. .
The Hungarian Constitution declares that „The Republic of Hungary shall provide the protection of
national and ethnic minorities, their collective participation in public affairs, the fostering of their
cultures, the use of their native languages, the education in their native languages and the use of
names in their native languages.”
Minority education – as part of the Hungarian public education system – is expected not only to
supply all services that are generally provided by public education as a whole, but also to provide the
added value of a stable identity. The task is not simply to offer services in the native language but
also to create the conditions for passing on the understanding of the culture and the history of
minority groups, a heritage of real value for the majority population as well.
In many minority families, the process of passing on language and the related specific culture has
broken and Hungarian has become dominant in everyday communication. As language is arguably
the most important tool to preserve in its genuine form the complexity of a community culture, the
loss of the mother tongue often engenders a process of dramatic cultural fading away. With fast
social changes in an increasingly globalized world the family is gradually losing its primary role in this
cultural process, which makes the role and responsibility of the school in the transmission of the
native language ever more important.
Tailored to the special needs of a given community the Hungarian legal system provides for five
forms of minority education: supplementary minority education, the language teaching form, a
special system for the Roma minority, the bilingual education and the comprehensive instruction in the
mother tongue.
The supplementary minority education is regulated by The Public Education Act. This new
educational form, aiming at supporting dispersed minority communities with low numbers, ensures
that they are given the opportunity to organise their own minority education within the framework of
the Hungarian public education system, respecting the same quality standards as other forms of
minority education would guarantee. Supplementary minority education only covers the instruction of
a specific minority language and culture, thus students carry out their mandatory education in other
institutions of public education. Contrary to Sunday schools, a significant advantage is that a
certificate can be issued, and the acquired credits may be taken into account not only at general
education and secondary school final examinations, but also in the case of continuing studies in higher
education. The law ensures that at the initiative of a national minority self-government,
supplementary minority education shall be organised without restriction to the number of