- Source: Sandor Berger
- Géza von Radványi
- Kejuaraan Eropa UEFA 1996
- 2021
- Renang pada Olimpiade Musim Panas 1980
- SC Cambuur
- Renang pada Olimpiade Musim Panas 1976
- Yamato (anime)
- Babak gugur Kejuaraan Eropa UEFA 1996
- Osteogenesis imperfecta
- Babak grup Liga Champions UEFA 1996–1997
- Sandor Berger
- 1990 Formula One World Championship
- Béla Berger
- Robot Dreams (film)
- 1993 Formula One World Championship
- 1987 Formula One World Championship
- Eugene Ormandy
- 1988 Formula One World Championship
- Australopithecus sediba
- Sandworm (Dune)
Sandor Berger (1925-2006) was an outsider writer and poet born in Csenger, Hungary on 7 July, 1925.
Biography
Berger was born in Csenger, Hungary on 7 July, 1925 to Simon Berger and Jozefa Pepi Berger (née Schoner). He had two brothers, Elemer and Miksa, who had moved to Argentina before the arrival of the Nazis in Hungary. He also had two sisters, Olga and Rosa Muenz. Berger was taken to Auschwitz concentration camp with his family in 1944, and later to Ohrdruf concentration camp, a subcamp of Buchenwald concentration camp. Olga, their parents, and grandparents were murdered at Auschwitz. Rosa survived the Auschwitz and Mauthausen concentration camps and later emigrated to Canada in 1949.
Berger was liberated in 1946 and returned to Hungary before moving to Germany. In 1949 he moved to Australia.
In the early 1950s Berger moved to Sydney. He worked at many jobs, but was driven to self-publish numbers books and booklets of poetry, as well as his letters to newspaper editors.
In 1964 Berger was featured in a television documentary The Glittering Mile.
Berger had lifelong battles with the authorities and served time in prison. It is uncertain what medical diagnoses were made, but he appears to have suffered from a persecution complex for much of his life in Australia. He was a well-known sight on Sydney streets, wearing a placards and handing out leaflets with the message "Psychiatry is Evil".
Sandor Berger died in 2006 and was buried in a public grave at Rookwood Cemetery.
Bibliography
Poems 1950-1955, Sandor Berger, Bondi Junction, 1956
Poems of Sandor Berger, 1950-1955, Sandor Berger, Bondi Junction, 1956
The Second Book of Poems (1955-1958) Sandor Berger, Sydney, 1958
I Protest: A Complete Collection of Letters & Articles which the Author Penned and Sent to the Press... in the City of Sydney,... Under the Name Sandor Berger, Alexander Mountain, Sydney, 1962
Poems of a Decade: Australia, 1952-1962, Sandor Berger, Sydney, 1962
An Appendix of Prose: Supplement to I Protest, Some More Letters and Articles, Printlike Duplicating Service, Kings Cross, Sydney), 1964
An Appendix to an Appendix of Prose; a Supplement to a Supplement of I Protest, Interstellar Publications, Sydney, [1968]
A Fore-runner to the Full-length Book on the Subject of the Great Psychoatrick Fraeud, Interstellar (Sydney), 1970 (criticism)
Sandor Berger to the Rest of Australia, in the City of Sydney N.S.W, Sandor Berger, Sydney, 1971 (correspondence)
An Appeal to the High Court of Australia, Sandor Berger, Sydney, 1971 (diary)
Sandor Berger in the Prison of Long Bay Jail, Sydney, NSW, 1968-1969, Interstellar Publications, Sydney, 1971
Springtime in May : An Erotic Musical Play of Love, Interstellar Publications, Sydney, 1971
Family Life : A Film Review, Interstellar Publications, Sydney, 1972
Christmas, 1975: A Prose Poem, Sandor Berger, Sydney, [1975]
A Scratchment of Poems in Free Verse: Australia 1955-75, Sandor Berger, Sydney, [1976]