Hungary’s greatest event comes soon: masked revellers to scare off winter

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These are the last days of winter. More than 1200 busós, wearing terrifying wooden masks and woolly cloaks, are going to scare away winter in Mohács, in the small town, situated at the right side of river Danube, in the south part of Hungary. Scaring off winter is based on a Šokci tradition. This is called “Busójárás”, pecsma.hu summarizes.

[box type=”info”] Šokci people are an ethnographic group of South Slavs. In Croatia, they are completely assimilated, but in Serbia, they are considered as a separate ethnic group. They live along the Danube and Sava rivers. They settled in the 18th century in Mohács, and most of them live in Baranya County. 10% of the inhabitants of the town have Šokci ancestors. [/box]

The reason of why the “Busójárás” festival takes place in Mohács has two explanations, pecsma.hu notes. According to the legend, it was the Šokci people who stopped the Turkish rule lasting for 150 years in Hungary. Being fed up with the bondage, they put on frightening wooden masks, and, at night, they invaded the streets making loud and scary noises, and scared away the Turkish army. The second explanation is related to the Šokci people, according to which it was a Croatian Catholic group that brought this tradition to Hungary. The historic resources also support the second version: Mohács had been liberated from the Turkish in 1687, and the settlement of the Šokci started only ten years after the Turkish were driven away from Hungary.








