Ferenc Rózsa (4 December 1906 – 13 June 1942) was a Hungarian Communist leader, anti-fascist resistance fighter and journalist.
From 1940, he was member of the Central Committee and the Secretariat of the Central Committee of the MKP and led the work on the creation of an anti-fascist popular front with the Social Democratic Party to coordinate the struggle against the pro-fascist Horthy regime.
From June 1941, after Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union he went into hiding and became one of the leaders of the movement of fighters against fascism.
[2] Rózsa was the first editor of the illegal central organ of the Hungarian Communist Party, Szabad Nép (Free People).
[2] In 1959, the "Pantheon of the Labor Movement" was built at the Kerepesi cemetery in Budapest, where Ferenc Rózsa is buried.