Background
Mária Filep was born in Debrecen in 1953.
Mária Filep was born in Debrecen in 1953.
She completed her degree in architecture at the University of Debrecen.
She worked at the Hajdú County State Construction Company as an architectural engineer The members gathered in pubs and restaurants at weekends. The idea of a came up at one of these gatherings on 30 June 1989 in the garden of Old Vigadó Restaurant.
Subsequently Filep started organizing it with a few colleagues.
She risked her job and her freedom. Even though her employers suspected something was going on they did not ask questions.
At first she found little support. The Roundtable Talks of Debrecen and the Hungarian Democratic Forum (Magyar Demokrata Forum (Hungarian Democratic Forum)) rejected her overtures as unprofessional.
However, the idea reached fruition took place with the support of individual Magyar Demokrata Forum (Hungarian Democratic Forum) volunteers from Debrecen and Sopron.
Hundreds of East-German citizens broke through the border-closure and set off to neutral Austria while the event was taking place. By doing so, they launched the destruction of the Iron Curtain (wall) separating the two countries. The pressure from East German refugees flooding Hungary has eventually led to the opening of the borders on 11 September 1989.
Filep went on cooperating with the Magyar Demokrata Forum (Hungarian Democratic Forum), but in 1994 she decided to leave the party and end her political activity.
She returned to her job but she still finds civil activity important in public life. She places special emphasis on preserving the heritage of the In 2000 she organized a conference in Debrecen about cyanide contamination and the consequent ecological disaster.
She organized several exhibitions titled Changes in Central Europe to familiarize people with the ideas of the Picnic. In 2004 she was awarded the Aphelandra prize for her contribution to the regime change.
She was the founding member of the Hungarian Democratic Forum in Debrecen, the first opposition organization in the town. She is the president of Hajdúság–Partium Preservation Society, which is committed to urban protection, architectural and natural heritage conservation and a member of the Board of Governors of the Hungarian Urban and Village Preservation Association. She remains a member of the Board of Trustees.