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The
Cleveland Hungarian Heritage Society, the
recipient of the 2006 Ohio Heritage Fellowship in Community
Leadership, was established in 1985 to document, preserve
and disseminate Hungarian culture in the Cleveland area.
The non-profit corporation is chartered to serve "as
a repository for Hungarian historical, cultural and
artistic items." The CHHS opened its first museum at
St. Elizabeth Church in Cleveland in 1986. The Society
opened subsequent museums in Richmond Heights and at
the Euclid Square Mall and has also organized exhibits
at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland
Playhouse, the Beck Center and John Carroll University.
In addition to its collection
and archival activities, the CHHS publishes a quarterly
newsletter (The Review: The Second One Hundred Years),
has produced a video on needlework (Flowers in the
Snow) and, in its role as community advocate, vigorously
protested the abrupt removal of all ethnic programming
on Cleveland’s public radio station WCPN, forcing
the station to return many of the programs to the airwaves.
The Cleveland Hungarian Heritage Society, under the
direction of such community-minded individuals as Executive
Director Otto Friedrich, stands today as a successful
model for community organizations serving the cultural
needs of the vast immigrant population of the U.S.
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