Bust of Ferenc Nehéz
Statue, monument, memorial plaque
The bust of Ferenc Nehéz was inaugurated on November 22, 2008 in the garden of the Catholic church. ; Ferenc Nehéz (Dunamocs, October 16, 1912 – Los Angeles, January 29, 1979) was a writer and journalist. He began his journalistic career as a staff member and then editor of Komáromi Lapok. In the early 1940s, he worked as the general secretary of the Jókai Public Culture and Museum Association, then as the central secretary of the Slovak Hungarian Cultural Association. At the same time, he also managed the museum collections in Komáromi. ; After the war, he fled to the West, settling in the United States in 1951. From 1966, he was a member of the Árpád Academy. ; Between the two world wars, his articles were published in the Prague Hungarian Hírlap, the Magyar Család and the Magyar Minerva. His later writings were published in émigré newspapers, Új Világ, Magyar Hírlap (Buenos Aires), Nemzetőr, Katolikus Magyaroks Vasárnapja, Krónika, Magyar Élet and Itt-Ott. His novels and collections of short stories were published. ; His main works: ; - Kis lak áll a nagy Duna menteb. Short stories, Unió Ny., Komárom, 1942 ; - Sorsok a viharban, Központi Sajtóválattal, Bp., 1943 (Új Élet nogenátár 314.) ; - A központi elmarad, Központi Sajtóválattal, Bp., 1943 (Új Élet nogenátár 329.) ; - Csak a nóta a miénk. Novel, Hungarian Society of Cultural Artists, Bp., 1944 (Interesting novels Flying around the world) ; - Ne sírjál, Rozika! Novel (Youngstown, 1962); - Love Each Other (Los Angeles, 1966); - Homeless Rosemary. Stories (Los Angeles, 1968, 1971); - Csabagyöngye. Stories (Cleveland, 1970); - Golden Dió (Los Angeles, 1975); - Silver Tear. Autobiographical Novel (Los Angeles, 1977); - Two Bells Embraced... Stories, ed. Ágnes Szutor, Kráter, Pomáz, 2008; - Silver Tear, Kráter, Pomáz, 2010