In October 1944, the
Government of National Unity was established as a Nazi puppet state. According to the Hungarian historian
George Deák, the Order of Vitéz was a "'tainted' but ambiguous symbol" during the war years:
antisemitism was a shared sentiment among the order membership, though the Order itself was not explicitly antisemitic. For example, Hungarian Interior Minister
László Endre, a noted
anti-semite, member of various incarnations of the
Hungarian National Socialist Party, and
Nazi collaborator during the war, eagerly helped
Adolf Eichmann collect and deport more than 400,000 Hungarian Jews between May and July 1944, and was a "proud members of the order" according to Deák. Like Endre, Ferenczy was a "proud member of the order" according to Deák. However, Hungarian historian
Róbert Kerepeszki stresses that there were ruptures in the organization of the Order of Vitéz on the question of Nazism during the war, and many of them died fighting against
Hungarian Nazis. The most famous of them was
Vilmos Nagy de Nagybaczon, who was awarded the title of
Righteous among the Nations for saving Jews. Vitéz Colonel Ferenc Koszorus deployed his troops to stop Jewish deportations, allowing the escape of perhaps as many as 250,000 Jews concentrated in Budapest.
Miklós Horthy Jr. was also an anti-fascist "Vitéz" who conducted negotiations with the Allies, and was deported to a concentration camp. Colonel-General Vitéz
Gábor Faragho and Colonel-General Vitéz
Béla Miklós of Dálnok joined the Soviet forces after the failed attempt of Horthy to make an armistice with the Allies. Lieutenant colonel Vitéz
Oszkár Variházy fought against the Nazis during the
Siege of Budapest. Lieutenant-General Vitéz
Szilárd Bakay was deported to a Nazi concentration camp for his activity during Horthy's armistice attempt on 16 October. Vitéz
Lajos Keresztes-Fischer and his brother Vitéz
Ferenc Keresztes-Fischer were also deported to concentration camps by the Szálasi-regime, due to their Anglo-Saxon orientation and anti-fascist stance. After the Nazi coup d'état, the second highest-ranking officer of the Order of Vitéz next to Miklós Horthy, Vitéz
Igmándy-Hegyessy Géza suspended the activity of the Order of Vitéz, to demonstrate that the Order would not cooperate with the
Arrow Cross Party – he was also
deported to a concentration camp. In fact "a small number of wealthy Jews allied themselves with the Order as well" – though without being members of the Order themselves, The Order's governing National Council of Vitéz was listed as such an organization by Prime Ministerial Edict no. 1945/529. Paragraph 1, §(1) of the
Statute IV of 1947 regarding the abolition of certain titles and ranks declares annulment of the Hungarian aristocratic and noble ranks, and paragraph 3 §(1) specifically forbids the use of the "Vitéz" title. The
United States Department of State included this Order of Vitéz as an institution "under the direction of the Nazi Government of Germany," along with the ruling Arrow Cross Party and other contemporaneous organizations, such as the French Police, showing the broad category of groups included at that time. ==The continuity of Vitézi Rend in the postwar era==