Andrej Hlinka (born September 27, 1864, Stará Černová, Slovakia, Austrian Empire [now in Slovakia]—died August 16, 1938, Ružomberok, Czechoslovakia [now in Slovakia]) was a Slovak Roman Catholic priest who sought Slovak independence and, as the leader of the Slovak People’s Party, opposed the centralizing efforts of Czechoslovakia’s government during the 1920s and ’30s. His name was adopted by a fascist Slovak militia during World War II.
Hlinka became priest of the small industrial town of Ružomberok in 1905 and eagerly supported the Slovak nationalist candidates there in the Hungarian parliamentary elections of 1906. In November 1906 he was tried for inciting Slovaks to disloyalty to Hungary and was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment, to which an additional year and a half was added the following May for what authorities considered the inflammatory nature of his farewell address to his parishioners. The Roman Catholic priesthood in Slovakia in general supported the Hungarian authorities, who resented what they regarded as Hlinka’s insubordination—the more so because it received much popular support. He was later acquitted by the Roman Curia from a charge of simony brought against him by the Hungarian ecclesiastical authorities.
On May 24, 1918, when the Slovak National Party took a position against Hungary, it was Hlinka, at the head of the Slovak People’s Party, who most emphatically declared for union with the Czechs. By August 1922, however, he had drawn up the Žilina memorandum in which he reproached the Czechs for having deprived the Slovaks of the autonomy that had allegedly been promised to them by Tomáš Masaryk in what Hlinka persisted in calling the “treaty” of Pittsburgh—a document, variously known as the Pittsburgh Convention or Pittsburgh Agreement, that was signed in May 1918 by Masaryk and regarded by him as a statement of policy for which American Czechs and Slovaks were prepared to advocate.
Later, Hlinka’s relations with Prague were patched up to the extent that his lieutenant, Jozef Tiso, accepted a position in a Czechoslovak government in January 1927. When in 1929 Béla Tuka, a Slovak, was condemned as a Hungarian agent, Hlinka did not repudiate him, and Hlinka’s party returned to opposition. Hlinka and his Slovak People’s Party thus became associated in the 1930s with the German and Hungarian opposition to the Czechs, which aimed at the destruction of Czechoslovakia. Hlinka considered himself, and was seen by many of those who supported Slovak independence as, a patriot, but he failed to see that his fanatical hostility to the Czechs was being exploited by Germans and Hungarians whose support for the Slovak cause did not extend beyond their own interests. Hlinka died in 1938 less than two months before a Slovak government became autonomous, in the wake of Adolf Hitler’s annexation of the Sudetenland and the resultant scrambling of Czechoslovak territory (see Munich Agreement).
About the same time that Hitler was advancing his plans against Czechoslovakia, a paramilitary organization emerged in support of the Slovak People’s Party. Known as the Hlinka Guard, it soon aligned itself with the Slovak government, which declared independence in 1939 under Tiso and became one of Nazi Germany’s puppet states during World War II. The Hlinka Guard participated in the deportation of tens of thousands of Slovak Jews and committed other acts of violence against Jews during the war, making it complicit in the Holocaust.