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Post n°5 pubblicato il 30 Agosto 2010 da pecs2010


Auth Szilvia (Magyarország)

Szilvia Auth (Hungary)

Szilvia Auth was born in 1979 amongst green hills in the South part of Hungary where she spent her childhood. May be this is the reason why she stands so close to nature. She likes Japanese culture, the clean spirit of Zen Buddhism, the beauty of an ikebana, the purity of a kanji and to feel the zanshin in everyday life. She tries to hear the depth of the sea and the voice of the growing grass and to give these feelings back in her haikus. She tries to find infinity in finite moments.

 

Bakos Ferenc (Magyarország)

Ferenc Bakos (Hungary)

As a “Hungarian haijin” Ferenc Bakos has been writing haiku for thirty years. His first haiku in English Rising moon shadow was published in 1989 in the Mainichi Daily News. Since its foundation, he has been a member of the Haiku International Association. In the year of 2009 histumn dusk won a Honorable Mention in ItoEn-, Old cherry tree did a second prize in the Mainichi-contest. Recently he published a Hungarian haiku book Desert wind. (As an engineer he “visited” four deserts by profession.) He is living with his wife at the lake Balaton, alias “Hungarian Sea”.

 

 

Bárdos Attila (Magyarország)

Attila Bárdos (Hungary)

Attila Bárdos was born in Budapest, 1941. He spent his childhood and school-years in a small town, Baja. Then, five university years in Szeged, in the magic circle of the giants of mathematics. He took his degree in applied mathematics. He started his career in Budapest, and wrote several technical books on maths and computing. He worked as a researcher, teacher and state official in Hungary and in abroad.

Although he go back “home” only as a visitor, he often dream of the remembers of the years spent in Baja. A considerable part of his writings drew inspiration from this charming city. The first selection of these, 135 haiku poems were published in 2009 („The afternoon grows old”). He’s editing a volume of his new poems about the thoughts on the hesitating Hungarian society, and feelings observed in the restless and troubled Hungarian capital Budapest.

 

 

Domonkos Marcell (Magyarország)

Marcell Domonkos (Hungary)

Marcell Domonkos live in Celldömölk, Hungary. He was born in 1982.

He has started to learn Japanese language five years ago. During this time he got acquaintanted with the Japanese poetry, and with the Haiku, the traditional Japanese poem. He has started to write Haiku poems by myself in Hungarian, and he became a member of a Haiku-writer club, which is managed by Dr. Judit Vihar, the president of the Hungarian-Japanese Friendship Society.

In 2008 he completed a literary translation course in english language.

In 2009 he entered for some literary competitions, and he managed to publish poems.


 

Földeáki-Horváth Anna (Magyarország)

Anna Földeáki-Horváth (Hungary)

Anna Földeáki-Horváth was born in a small village Földeák, where she lived with her grandparents (her mother died when she was 10 months). 

She lives in Budapest, published her first book (selected poems) in 2001 and is working on the second one. She mainly writes short poems, haikus as well as prose.


Hollós Roland (Magyarország)

Roland Hollós (Hungary)

Roland Hollós born on October 28, 1990 in Pécs, Hungary.

He was a member of Youth Writers Association of Pécs for many years, so he took part in several local and national festivals, like reading feasts in the Youth House of the Pécs Youth Centre and The National Contemporary-Literary Festival 2008.

He is interested in literature, philosophy and theoretical physics, therefore he would like to enlarge his knowledge in these areas. He has been interested in, and shortly started to enjoy haiku writing for 3 years. He also writes poems and short stories. For him haiku means a natural expression by complex symbols of the eternal beauty of endless secrets in our life.


 

 

Nagy Bandó András (Magyarország)

András Nagy Bandó (Hungary)

 

Born in 1947 in Deszk. Building technician, actor, caricaturist; comedian from 1973. 1982: winner of the Humor Festival. Received the Karinthy Memorial Ring in 1988, the Straw for the Homeless Prize in 1996, and the For the Homeless Prize in 2006. Has been writing since 2000, 20 books published to date. Has published 16 poetry and fairytale-themed children's books since 2004. Owner of Szamárfül Publishing Company.

 

 

Németh Péter Mikola (Magyarország)

Péter Németh Mikola (Hungary)

 

Péter Németh Mikola was born on 15 July 1953, in the northern region of Hungary.

He is a poet-performer, an essayist and an editor-director. According to his qualifications, he is a philosopher-teacher. He graduated in philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities in ELTE in 1991.

At present, he is the author-director of E(x)KSZPANZIÓ International Contemporary Art Association and the artistic director of „FIESTA” Theatre. Member of the Hungarian Writers’ Association. He has been the Hungarian secretary of THE IPOLY EUROREGION Cross-border Co-operation based in Balassagyarmat for more than one decade.

 

 

 

Sánta Hajnalka (Magyarország)

Hajnalka Sánta (Hungary)

 

Hajnalka Sánta was born in 1976, in Budapest. She graduated from University of Pécs (teacher) and University of Eötvös Loránd (sociologist). Nowadays she is an assistant lecturer in the Institute of Pedagogy (University of Pécs). I like literature, her beloved genre is the haiku. Her other favourite from the short genres is the One Minute Stories by István Örkény. Her special fields of interest are in the romology, sociology, sociology of education, sociolinguistics, and literature. She has written haikus for ten years, the first haiku was published in 2003.


 

Szabó Aida (Jampa drolma) (Magyarország)

Aida Szabó (Jampa drolma) (Hungary)

Aida Szabó (Jampa drolma – it is her Tibetan name, meaning: gentle, the defender of gentleness). was born in Budapest (Hungary) on 1951.Her first collection of poems was published by the help of “Holnap Magazin”, titled: Butterfly-dreams. Her second haiku collection was published privately, titled: Pearl garland for Mala. Her poems are continuously published in anthologies and on the net. she is a poet for the Hungarian Literature Radio, member of the Haiku Club, the Literature Lovers Club in the town of Érd and Rhyme-Smiths’ Society in the town of Budaörs. With her haikus she won the first price of the Hungarian Literature Radio SCRIPT DEXTER competition in 2010.

 

 

Vihar Judit (Magyarország)

Judit Vihar (Hungary)

 

Judit Vihar is a translator and a literary historian. Since 1975 she has been teaching at Eötvös Loránd University Budapest and also at the Károli University Budapest since 1996. She has been the president of the Association of Japanese Studies and also of the Hungary-Japan Friendship Society since 2001. In 2002 he won 1st prize of the World Haiku Conference, the English language haiku competition in Japan. She also took part in the 1. and 2. European Haiku conferences. Her significant work are A japán irodalom rövid története (A short history of Japanese Literature), 1994.; The Spirit of haiku, 1996; Ezer magyar haiku (Thousand Hungarian haiku), 2010. She has translated into Hungarian Oe Kenzaburo’s The Silent Cry, a Nobel-prize winning novel and Ban’ya Natsuishi’s MAdarak 50 Haiku (Balassi Kiadó, Hungary, 2007).

 
 
 
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