"I am a Hungarian immigrant, a chemist, living since 1954 in these United
States of America. . . .
The massacre of the Hungarians in 1956, and the total indifference of the
Christian free world in the face of what happened in Hungary, gave a new impulse
in searching for the origin of human madness.
Reading American periodicals in English and in Hungarian, I found a number
of reports about the preachings of Christian priests in which they declared that the
enslaved nations were given by God into slavery, for their sinfulness, and also, that
those enslaved nations can be made free again by repentance and prayers.
These holy teachings were unacceptable to me.
Looking for the causes which could have moved the clergy to such declarations,
I found that the Christian doctrine of Divine Providence led them to the said
conclusions. "
--Foreword