István Fekete

From the Hungarian Wikipedia page

István Fekete ( Ajka, February 28, 1932) writer, lecturer, physical therapist, son of Fekete István.

He studied for a year at the Agricultural University, at the University of Economics at the Catholic University of Science. They were dismissed from all places because of class divinity. In 1956, he fought against the Széna Square insurgents as the leader of the armor-breaking unit. After November 4, he moved to Canada via Vienna and Munich. During the first six years he was a waiter, a factory worker, a French interpreter and a woodcutter. In 1963, he was invited to visit his friends in Chicago and settled permanently there. He graduated from the University and obtained three degrees: in 1965 he was physicotherapist, in 1967 he was a physician, and in 1972 metaphysical doctorate. From that same year he was head of a private sports club until 2004.

He began to deal with literature at the age of thirty five, initially writing political writings in the Chicago Tribune, where he began writing narratives. From 1975 to 1985, co-owner and editor-in-chief of the Chicago and the Neighborhood magazine. His writings appeared in the following pages: Chronicle, Here and there, National Guard, Rainbow, Magyar Kéve. There is a permanent line in the Hungarians of Canada and the American Republic.

In 2008, a cartoon was made by Vuk and his coat-of-arms novel Kis Vuk.