OSA was renamed Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives

OSA was renamed Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives

The Central European University (CEU)'s Open Society Archives (OSA) was renamed the Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives in honor of the couple, who have provided a major bequest to sustain the institution. Their gift will create a permanent endowed fund, which will allow the Archives to expand its critical work in preserving one of the world's most valuable archival collections related to the Cold War, human rights movements and grave international human rights violations. The gift and renaming was celebrated at a dedication event held at the Archives on November 3, 2015.

This the Blinkens’ second major donation to the archive in a decade, underscoring their commitment to Hungary and to the institution and its mission to secure a record of our collective history, truthfully capturing some of humanity’s brightest and bleakest periods. The latter is most recently manifesting in the tragedy of the ongoing refugee crisis brought on by continuing conflict in Syria and was the topic of a keynote speech at the OSA dedication by Bernard Kouchner, co-founder of Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres/MSF) and former French minister of foreign and European affairs.

 “Donald and I are very proud to renew our commitment to CEU. With students from more than 100 countries and researchers and human rights activists from all over the world, we are so pleased to support the 25-year legacy CEU has established in educating the next generation of global leaders, as well as the legacy OSA has established in preserving and making available important historical sources and developing important public history programs to activate public memory and engagement,” Mrs. Blinken said. “Given the current global refugee crisis and the dialing back on democracy in the region and elsewhere, we can think of no better way to help preserve public memory and help a new crop of global leaders move into the future with greater understanding of the past. As two people deeply committed to Hungary and the region, as well as to providing access to education and important historical documents, it is both an honor and a privilege to be associated in this way with the vital institution that is CEU.”

 The Blinken's naming gift also sets a precedent in post-communist Hungary, where, generally, institutions are named for people only posthumously. The Blinkens hope their example will serve as inspiration for others in Hungary to create living legacies in line with their principles, harkening back to Hungary's pre-communist tradition of cultural and educational philanthropy. Other naming opportunities will be available as CEU redevelops its campus, the design of which achieved another “first,” as the inaugural institution of higher education in Central/Eastern Europe to be BREEAM certified in line with strict green-building principles.

Established in 1995 and opened in 1996, OSA's repository contains 9.5 linear kilometers of paper records and 12 terabytes of digital records related to communist-era political, social, economic, and cultural life. That is equivalent to over 100 football (soccer) fields of paper records and nearly 3,000 DVDs of digital records. It is also one of the world’s largest repositories of Radio Free Europe and underground media holdings. OSA is the official archive of the Open Society Foundations and, importantly, offers open-access facilities to researchers and the wider public free of charge. The Archive also oversees numerous exhibitions, conferences, film festivals and public programs of major historical significance.

 Ambassador Blinken, a CEU trustee emeritus, chaired the board of trustees of the State University of New York (SUNY) from 1978-1990. He currently serves on the boards of the Council of American Ambassadors, the National Committee on American Foreign Policy, the Rockefeller Institute of Government, and the New York Philharmonic. His son Antony Blinken is the United States Deputy Secretary of State. Vera founded her own interior design firm in the U.S. She served on the board of the International Rescue Committee for more than 30 years, starting in 1978, and is now an overseer. She is on the board of the FAPE – Foundation for Art and Preservation in Embassies.