Explore Hungarian businesses and organizations in New York serving your community. Find law firms, medical practices, restaurants, retail stores, nonprofits, cultural organizations, and community services owned by or dedicated to serving the Hungarian community. Connect with establishments that understand your cultural values and provide services in your language.
The Honorary Consuls are not employed by the Hungarian government and they perform their honorary consular duties on a voluntary basis.
Honorary consuls protect the interest of Hungarian citizens in trouble or distress. They are also authorized to authenticate signatures and copies of documents.
Consulate General Of Hungary in New York has a jurisdiction over the states of Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
The Permanent Mission of Hungary to the United Nations is tasked to actively participate in fulfilling the goals and principles of the United Nations, while promoting the national position of Hungary, and to advise national authorities on the developments in the international arena.
The Permanent Mission acts in the spirit of dialogue, openness, inclusivity and bridge-building, with due respect for others’ positions, in search of long term, principled win-win solutions for the universal issues related to peace, security, social and economic development and human rights.
The Hungarian Medical Association of America (HMAA) was established in Cleveland, Ohio in 1968 as a non-profit organization as a means to provide a forum for sharing the Hungarian-American medical heritage and scientific excellence dating back to Semmelweis and recently symbolized by Nobel laurate, Albert Szent-Györgyi, as well as many other Hungarian scholars.
The primary mission of our Association is to promote the science of medicine through participative discussions and lectures among members whose professional traditions are rooted in Hungary. Members share and discuss scholarly and technical advances. The Association also brings Hungarian physicians and scientists into closer contact with friends in the American medical community and acts as a liaison between various American and Hungarian medical societies, foundations and universities. It has developed mutual relations with other Hungarian medical societies outside of Hungary, and places great emphasis on fostering the participation of Hungarian physicians living in Hungary in our activities.
The Hungarian Medical Association of America is a voluntary organization of physicians and scientists of Hungarian heritage formed to preserve, promote, and foster Hungarian medical traditions and ideals.
The Association’s first major goal is to promote and disseminate knowledge of clinical medicine and basic medical sciences by annual scientific meetings, lectures, discussions, publications, and other means. We are dedicated to building friendship and cooperation among our members and providing a forum wherein our members can meet, exchange ideas, and participate in continuing medical education.
Our second major goal is to provide scholarships and exchange programs for advancing the medical education of qualified candidates from North America and Hungary.
Our third major goal is to encourage and assist in the establishment of professional interactions between individual North American and Hungarian physicians and scientists as well as between North American and Hungarian medical societies, universities, and institutions.
The Liszt Institute New York aims to connect artists, academics, arts and culture professionals and the public. The 25 Liszt Institutes abroad are overseen by Hungary's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, but enjoy considerable autonomy to promote awareness of Hungarian and Central European culture, often through collaborations - a principle particularly relevant in venues as full of grand productions as New York and the United States.
As the network's only American representation, the Liszt Institute New York seeks to present the past and present of Hungarian arts and society to American audiences, while encouraging professionals and artists in the United States to engage with their Hungarian counterparts. The more the Institute succeeds in promoting transatlantic cultural dialogue, the more it fulfills its core mission.
The Liszt Institute New York seeks to present the past, present and future of Hungarian scholarship and culture to the widest possible audience. Our doors are open to all, whether American, Hungarian, both, or neither. The Institute's unhidden goal is to bring Hungary to the forefront of the world's attention in cooperation with Hungarians and non-Hungarians alike in New York.
The Széchenyi Society is a not-for-profit organization founded on April 29th, 1958. At its foundation the purpose of the organization was to support Hungarian immigrants arriving in the United States right after the revolution, by providing them tools to succeed and integrate in the workforce and society. Since 2009, the organization has aimed to align its goals with today’s realities, bridging the gap between the existing Hungarian communities of New York and the newcomers.
We put a great emphasis on preserving our cultural values and traditions through presentations, lectures and other cultural events for Hungarian communities in the Tristate Area. The Széchenyi Society also strives to support charitable organizations in the Motherland.
Following the work of Széchenyi, the “greatest Hungarian”, our organization serves Hungarians in the United States, tailoring our work to the local needs. The first presidents of the Széchenyi Society were László Majthényi, Károly Széchenyi, Elemér Balogh, Ferenc Chorin, Tibor Jahoda and András Kováts. Mr. Róbert Harkay served our Society as president for many years, followed by László Széchenyi and László Bihary, who are members of the Society to this day.
We provide a venue for Hungarian scholars, scientists and students to gather for the promotion of science and culture in the NYC area.
The Society commenced its activity as a New York nonprofit corporation organized exclusively for charitable, scientific and educational purposes. Its goals are to provide a distinctive meeting place for active participants of New York's Hungarian scientific and intellectual community in a club-like environment. The Society provides a venue for Hungarian scholars, scientists and students to gather for the promotion of science, culture and the dialog between the Hungarian and New York economic, scientific and public life.
HHRF is a private, independent, 501 (c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. The Foundation operates from its New York headquarters and maintains offices in Budapest and Kolozsvár (Cluj). HHRF’s major activities are documenting and reporting on the human rights conditions of these Hungarian minority communities; providing in-depth analyses for decision makers and expert testimony before U.S. and international forums, including various committees of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, OSCE Review Meetings; facilitating meetings for representatives of Hungarian minority communities in the U.S.; and various youth-focused initiatives such as human rights training and internship opportunities, as well as our ReConnect family of programs.
The Hungarian House was the brainchild of Hungarian immigrants living in New York City in the early 1960s who considered it important that one of the world’s largest metropolises have a community establishment, a stronghold where the Hungarian-American diaspora can experience and maintain its Hungarian identity and cultivate Hungarian culture and language, and also create a bridge between Hungarian, Hungarian-American, and American societies by presenting Hungarian culture, art, and science.
The primary goal of the Hungarian House is to be a community establishment, a stronghold where the Hungarian-American diaspora can experience and maintain its Hungarian identity and cultivate Hungarian culture and language, but also to create a bridge between Hungarian, Hungarian-American, and American societies.
The Hungarian House is owned by three non- profit organizations: the American Hungarian Library and Historical Society, the Hungarian Scout Association in Exteris, and the Széchenyi István Society, and is managed by the American Foundation for Hungarian Literature and Education, Ltd.