Wednesday, October 22, 2014


Private  guide in Prague


Communism in Czechoslovakia











In 1948 Czechoslovakia, until then the last democracy in Eastern Europe, became a Communist country, started more than 40 years of totalitarian rule. Under Communism workers were worshipped as heroes and exploited as propaganda for the régime. Communist ideology permeated citizens’ lives and dominated all aspects of society. Czechoslovakia’s political decisions were dictated by the Soviet Union. Those who did not comply with socialism were not only interrogated, intimidated and put under surveillance but also subject to house searches.


The Communist Coup of 1948

After World War II, Czechoslovakia looked favorably on the Russians, who had liberated them. By 1946, Communists were well-represented in the Czechoslovak government. In 1947, however, Czechoslovakia wanted to obtain Marshall Aid from the USA, but it was not possible due to USSR intervention. The 12 non-Communist ministers resigned, predicting that democratic President Edvard Benes would be able to form a new government that would exclude the Communist Party.  Violent Communist-led demonstrations erupted. The Army was the only force that could stop the Communists, but it was run by Communist General Ludvik Svoboda. President Benes was afraid the Soviets would intervene or that a civil war would start, so he did not try to convince non-Communists to take action. Benes signed a new totalitarian government.

General Ludvik Svoboda
Edvard Benes
                                                            

The Stalinist 1950s and the show trials

During the beginning of the brutal and nightmarish 1950s, Soviet Union Premier Joseph Stalin directed the Czechoslovak Communists to carry out purges, and the nation held the largest show trials in Eastern Europe. Over a six-year period, from 1949 to 1954, the victims included military leaders, Catholics, Jews, democratic politicians, those with wartime connections with the West as well as high-ranking Communists. Almost 180 people were executed. There was no such thing as a fair trial as judges cooperated with the country’s leadership.

1968 and the Prague Spring

First Secretary of the Communist Party Alexander Dubcek wanted Czechoslovakia to embark on its own individual path while maintaining a socialist government. The country experienced liberal reforms that allowed writers to demand that the purge victims of the 1950s be rehabilitated and allowed social and political organizations to be free of Communist Party control. The April 5 Action Program described what came to be referred to as “socialism with a human face.” It demanded full equality in economic relations between Czechoslovakia and the USSR and urged the Soviets to take their advisors out of the country. Dubcek and his followers wanted real elections for party officials with secret ballots. National minorities were represented in institutions, and strikes were legalized. Censorship was abolished June 26, 1968.


The Soviet Invasion

The USSR was less than pleased with the Dubcek-directed developments in Czechoslovakia. Negotiations between the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia failed. On the night of August 20-21 of 1968, 500,000 troops from the Warsaw Pact countries of the USSR, Poland, East Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria entered the territory of their defenseless ally, as tanks crushed the liberal reforms of the Prague Spring in the largest military operation in Europe since World War II.














Jan Palach

As the rigid Communist policy of normalization set in, 20-year old Charles University student Jan Palach was dissatisfied with the resigned attitudes of citizens toward the regime’s harsh policies. On January 16, 1969 at 4 pm, Palach set fire to himself on Prague’s Wenceslas Square, protesting the lack of freedoms and the passivity of the citizens. With 85 percent of his body covered in third degree burns, he passed away three days later.

                                


Jan Palach Week in 1989

On the 20th anniversary of Palach’s sacrifice, during the so-called Jan Palach Week lasting from January 15 to January 22, 1989, there were many demonstrations against the totalitarian regime. Protestors were beaten by police, who also used water cannons to keep them at bay. On January 15, 1989, a citizen named Vaclav Havel was arrested at the statue of Saint Wenceslas and sent to prison.

The Velvet Revolution




Czech and Slovak students were honoring students killed during the Nazi Occupation on November 17, 1939 International Students Day, by marching through Prague in a peaceful demonstration. When they came to National Avenue, the police beat the students. This police brutality triggered what is today called The Velvet Revolution – the period from November 17 to December 29, during which dissidents and students protested against the Communist regime. Theatres went on strike, and from November 19 to late December demonstrations took place in Prague and other cities. Dissident playwright Vaclav Havel organized the Civic Forum, which openly challenged the Czechoslovak political system and demanded that all political prisoners in the country be released. On December 10, the first largely non-Communist government since 1948 was sworn in. Dubcek was named speaker of the federal parliament on December 28, and Havel was elected president of the country on December 29.

Havel with Dubcek in 1989

Visit the Museum of Communism: http://www.muzeumkomunismu.cz/en/
Visit Prague with our private guide: www.visita-praga.eu

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