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Julius Fučík (journalist)

Julius Fučík (Czech: [ˈjulɪjus ˈfutʃiːk]) (23 February 1903 – 8 September 1943) was a Czech journalist, critic, writer, and active member of Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. For his part at the forefront of the anti-Nazi resistance during the Second World War, he was imprisoned and tortured by the Gestapo in Prague, and executed in Berlin. While in prison, Fučík recorded his interrogation experiences on small pieces of paper, which were smuggled out and published after the war as Notes from the Gallows. The book established Fučík as a symbol of resistance to oppression, as well as an icon of communist propaganda.

Julius Fučík
Julius Fučík
BornJulius Jaroslav Fučik
(1903-02-23)23 February 1903
Prague, Austria-Hungary
Died8 September 1943(1943-09-08) (aged 40)
Plötzensee Prison, Berlin, Nazi Germany
OccupationJournalist and literary critic
CitizenshipAustrian, Czechoslovak
Alma materFaculty of Arts, Charles University
Notable worksNotes from the Gallows
Notable awardsHonorary International Peace Prize (1950)
SpouseGusta Fučíková
House in Pilsen where Fučík lived in 1913-1937

Early life edit

Julius Fučík was born into a working-class family in Prague. His father was a steelworker, and his uncle and namesake was the composer Julius Fučík. In 1913, Fučík moved with his family from Prague to Plzeň (Pilsen) where he attended the state vocational high school. Already as a twelve-year-old boy he was planning to establish a newspaper named Slovan (The Slav). He showed himself to be interested in both politics and literature. As a teenager he frequently acted in local amateur theatre.

Journalism and politics edit

In 1920 he took up study in Prague and joined the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers' Party, through which he was later to find himself swept up in the left-wing current. In May 1921 this wing founded the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (CPC). Fučík then first wrote cultural contributions for the local Plzeň CPC newspaper.

After completing his studies, Fučík found a position as an editor with the literary newspaper Kmen ("Stem"). Within the CPC he became responsible for cultural work. He was a member of the literary and artistic group Devětsil from 1926 and in 1929 helped the creation of its more politically motivated successor, Left Front. In the year 1929 he went to literary critic František Xaver Šalda's magazine Tvorba ("Creation"). Moreover, he constantly worked on the CPC newspaper Rudé právo ("Red Right") and several other journals. In this time Fučík was arrested repeatedly by the Czechoslovak Secret Police, managing to avoid an eight-month prison sentence in 1934.

In 1930, he visited the Soviet Union for four months, including the Czechoslovak collectivist colony Interhelpo in Central Asia, and painted a very positive picture of the situation there in the book V zemi, kde zítra již znamená včera ("In a Land, Where Tomorrow is Already Yesterday", published in 1932). Fučík supported collectivization, and dekulakization; praised the successes of industrialization, and emphasized the temporary nature of all difficulties. In particular, having visited the USSR on the eve of the Holodomor of 1932-1933, he categorically supported the policy of the Soviet regime. In July 1934, just after Adolf Hitler had suppressed the SA, he visited Bavaria and described his experiences in Cesta do Mnichova ("The Road to Munich"). He went to the Soviet Union again in 1934, this time for two years, and wrote various reports, which again worked to support the Party's strength. After his return, there were heated arguments with authors such as Jiří Weil and Jan Slavík, who criticized developments under Joseph Stalin. Fučík took the Stalinist side and criticized such statements critical of Stalin as fatal to the CPC.

In 1938 Fučík married Augusta Kodeřičová, later known as Gusta Fučíková.

In the wake of the Munich Conference, the Prague government disbanded the CPC from September 1938 and the CPC went underground. After Nazi Germany's troops invaded Czechoslovakia in March 1939, Fučík moved to his parents' house in Chotiměř (Litoměřice District) and published in civilian newspapers, especially about historical and literary topics. He also started to work for the now underground CPC. In 1940 the Gestapo started to search for him in Chotiměř because of his cooperation with the CPC, and so he decided to move back to Prague.

Beginning early in 1941, he belonged to the CPC's Central Committee. He provided handbills and tried to publish the Communist Party newspaper Rudé Právo regularly. On 24 April 1942 he and six others were arrested in Prague by the Gestapo, probably rather coincidentally during a police raid. Although Fučík had two guns at the time, he did not use them. The only survivor of the incident, Riva Friedová-Krieglová, claimed in the 1990s that Fučík had orders to shoot himself to avoid capture.[1]

Notes from the Gallows edit

 
Julius Fučík's Notes from the Gallows (first uncensored Czech edition, 1995)

Fučík was initially detained in Pankrác Prison in Prague, where he was interrogated and tortured. In this time he composed Notes from the Gallows (Czech: Reportáž psaná na oprátce, literally Reports Written Under the Noose), by writing on pieces of cigarette paper and smuggling them out with the help of sympathetic prison warders named Kolínský and Hora.

The book describes events in the prison and is filled with hope for a communist future. He also details mental resistance techniques to help withstand torture, which have since been used by activists around the world.[2]

In the original edition, certain passages that jarred with common notions of heroic resistance were omitted. A later edition, published in 1995, restored the missing text.[3]

Although the work's authenticity has been contested, a forensic analysis by the Prague Institute of Criminalistics found the manuscript to be genuine.[4]

Trial and death edit

In May 1943 Fučík was brought to Germany. He was first detained in Bautzen for somewhat more than two months, and afterwards in Berlin. On 25 August 1943 in Berlin, he was accused of high treason in connection with his political activities by the Volksgerichtshof, which was presided over by the notorious Roland Freisler. Fučík was found guilty and was sentenced to death along with Jaroslav Klecan, who had been arrested with Fučík. Fučík was hanged two weeks later on 8 September 1943 in Plötzensee Prison in Berlin (not beheaded as is often stated).

After the war, his wife, Gusta Fučíková, who had also been in a Nazi concentration camp, researched and retrieved all of his prison writings. She edited them with help of CPC and published them as Notes from the Gallows in 1947. The book was successful, and its influence increased after the Stalinist takeover of Czechoslovakia in 1948. It has been translated into at least 90 languages.

Fučík as an ideological symbol edit

 
Memorial to Julius Fučík in Bautzen II

The Party found Julius Fučík and his book convenient for use as propaganda and turned them into one of the most visible symbols of the Party. The book was required reading in schools and by the age of 10 every pupil growing up in communist Czechoslovakia was familiar with Fučík's work and life. Fučík became a hero whose portrait was displayed at political meetings. Gusta Fučíková was given a high position in the Party hierarchy (the chairmanship of a women's organization), holding it for decades.

 
Image of Fučík on a 1966 GDR stamp

Many places were named after Fučík, among them a large entertainment park in Prague (Park kultury a oddechu Julia Fučíka), the city theatre in Jablonec nad Nisou (1945–98), a factory in Brno (Elektrotechnické závody Julia Fučíka), a military unit, and countless streets and squares. In December 2022 the Julius Fučík street in Kyiv, Ukraine was renamed to Karel Čapek street.[5]

In 1955, Milan Kundera published a poetic tale entitled Poslední máj (The Last May) that depicts an encounter between Fučík and his Nazi interrogators.

The Julius Fučík (Юлиус Фучик) was a Soviet and later Russian barge carrier. In Tom Clancy's 1986 novel Red Storm Rising, about a hypothetical war between the Warsaw Pact and NATO, this ship was given the role of being used for the Soviet invasion of Iceland.

The composer Luigi Nono wrote a musical piece titled Julius Fučík based on Notes from the Gallows.[6]

References in popular culture edit

 
Last Meeting, Julius Fučík triptych by Felix Lembersky, Aleksandr Dashkevich, Nikolay Brandt

The position and reverence of Fučík during Communist Czechoslovakia is depicted by Milan Kundera in his book The Joke from 1967. There he describes how the portrait of Fučík hangs in public buildings where public expulsions from the Communist Party took place, and how Fučík's book is recited and used as propaganda by the Communist party.

"I recognized Fučík's Notes from the Gallows...That text, written clandestinely in prison, then published after the war in a million copies, broadcast over the radio, studied in schools as required reading, was the sacred book of the era."[7]

Reassessment edit

After the Party lost its power in 1989, the legend of Fučík became a target of scrutiny. It was made public that some parts of the book Notes from the Gallows (around 2%) had been omitted and that the text had been "sanitized" by Gusta Fučíková. There were speculations as to how much information he gave his torturers, and whether he had turned traitor. In 1995 the complete text of the book was published. The part in which Fučík describes how he succumbed to torture was published for the first time. In it, one learns that Fučík gave false information to his captors, saving countless lives among the Czech resistance to the Nazis. The historian Alena Hájková coedited the critical edition of Fučík's memoir.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Èeská redakce | BBC World Service at www.bbc.co.uk
  2. ^ Meari, Lena (2014). "Sumud: A Palestinian Philosophy of Confrontation in Colonial Prisons". South Atlantic Quarterly. 113 (3): 547–578. doi:10.1215/00382876-2692182.
  3. ^ Fučík, Julius (1995). Reportáž, psaná na oprátce (in Czech). Prague, Czech Republic: Torst. ISBN 9788085639469.
  4. ^ . 2008-05-18. Archived from the original on 2008-05-18. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  5. ^ Oleksandr Shumilin (8 December 2022). "n Kyiv, 32 more streets were de-Russified, including Druzhby Narodiv Boulevard". Ukrayinska Pravda (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  6. ^ Marta, Nono's life, p.32
  7. ^ Kundera, Milan (1992). The Joke (First ed.). New York: Harper Collins Publisher INC. p. 189. ISBN 978-0-571-16693-0.

Selected works edit

Reports edit

  • Reportáže z buržoazní republiky, published in journals, collected in 1948
  • V zemi, kde zítra již znamená včera, about the Soviet Union, 1932
  • V zemi milované, about the Soviet Union, published posthumously in 1949
  • Reportáž psaná na oprátce (Notes from the Gallows), 1947, complete text in 1995, many editions and translations

Theatrical critiques and literary essays edit

  • Milujeme svoji zem, 1948
  • Stati o literatuře, 1951
  • Božena Němcová bojující, O Sabinově zradě, Chůva published in Tři studie, 1947.

Other edit

  • Pokolení před Petrem, an autobiographical novel, unfinished, 1939

See also edit

References edit

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Julius Fučík (journalist) at Wikiquote
  • Howard Fast: Review of Notes from the Gallows, 1948
  • Biography (in Czech)

julius, fučík, journalist, other, uses, julius, fučík, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2012, learn, whe. For other uses see Julius Fucik This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Julius Fucik Czech ˈjulɪjus ˈfutʃiːk 23 February 1903 8 September 1943 was a Czech journalist critic writer and active member of Communist Party of Czechoslovakia For his part at the forefront of the anti Nazi resistance during the Second World War he was imprisoned and tortured by the Gestapo in Prague and executed in Berlin While in prison Fucik recorded his interrogation experiences on small pieces of paper which were smuggled out and published after the war as Notes from the Gallows The book established Fucik as a symbol of resistance to oppression as well as an icon of communist propaganda Julius FucikJulius FucikBornJulius Jaroslav Fucik 1903 02 23 23 February 1903Prague Austria HungaryDied8 September 1943 1943 09 08 aged 40 Plotzensee Prison Berlin Nazi GermanyOccupationJournalist and literary criticCitizenshipAustrian CzechoslovakAlma materFaculty of Arts Charles UniversityNotable worksNotes from the GallowsNotable awardsHonorary International Peace Prize 1950 SpouseGusta Fucikova House in Pilsen where Fucik lived in 1913 1937 Contents 1 Early life 2 Journalism and politics 3 Notes from the Gallows 4 Trial and death 5 Fucik as an ideological symbol 6 References in popular culture 7 Reassessment 8 Notes 9 Selected works 9 1 Reports 9 2 Theatrical critiques and literary essays 9 3 Other 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editJulius Fucik was born into a working class family in Prague His father was a steelworker and his uncle and namesake was the composer Julius Fucik In 1913 Fucik moved with his family from Prague to Plzen Pilsen where he attended the state vocational high school Already as a twelve year old boy he was planning to establish a newspaper named Slovan The Slav He showed himself to be interested in both politics and literature As a teenager he frequently acted in local amateur theatre Journalism and politics editIn 1920 he took up study in Prague and joined the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party through which he was later to find himself swept up in the left wing current In May 1921 this wing founded the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia CPC Fucik then first wrote cultural contributions for the local Plzen CPC newspaper After completing his studies Fucik found a position as an editor with the literary newspaper Kmen Stem Within the CPC he became responsible for cultural work He was a member of the literary and artistic group Devetsil from 1926 and in 1929 helped the creation of its more politically motivated successor Left Front In the year 1929 he went to literary critic Frantisek Xaver Salda s magazine Tvorba Creation Moreover he constantly worked on the CPC newspaper Rude pravo Red Right and several other journals In this time Fucik was arrested repeatedly by the Czechoslovak Secret Police managing to avoid an eight month prison sentence in 1934 In 1930 he visited the Soviet Union for four months including the Czechoslovak collectivist colony Interhelpo in Central Asia and painted a very positive picture of the situation there in the book V zemi kde zitra jiz znamena vcera In a Land Where Tomorrow is Already Yesterday published in 1932 Fucik supported collectivization and dekulakization praised the successes of industrialization and emphasized the temporary nature of all difficulties In particular having visited the USSR on the eve of the Holodomor of 1932 1933 he categorically supported the policy of the Soviet regime In July 1934 just after Adolf Hitler had suppressed the SA he visited Bavaria and described his experiences in Cesta do Mnichova The Road to Munich He went to the Soviet Union again in 1934 this time for two years and wrote various reports which again worked to support the Party s strength After his return there were heated arguments with authors such as Jiri Weil and Jan Slavik who criticized developments under Joseph Stalin Fucik took the Stalinist side and criticized such statements critical of Stalin as fatal to the CPC In 1938 Fucik married Augusta Kodericova later known as Gusta Fucikova In the wake of the Munich Conference the Prague government disbanded the CPC from September 1938 and the CPC went underground After Nazi Germany s troops invaded Czechoslovakia in March 1939 Fucik moved to his parents house in Chotimer Litomerice District and published in civilian newspapers especially about historical and literary topics He also started to work for the now underground CPC In 1940 the Gestapo started to search for him in Chotimer because of his cooperation with the CPC and so he decided to move back to Prague Beginning early in 1941 he belonged to the CPC s Central Committee He provided handbills and tried to publish the Communist Party newspaper Rude Pravo regularly On 24 April 1942 he and six others were arrested in Prague by the Gestapo probably rather coincidentally during a police raid Although Fucik had two guns at the time he did not use them The only survivor of the incident Riva Friedova Krieglova claimed in the 1990s that Fucik had orders to shoot himself to avoid capture 1 Notes from the Gallows edit nbsp Julius Fucik s Notes from the Gallows first uncensored Czech edition 1995 Main article Notes from the Gallows Fucik was initially detained in Pankrac Prison in Prague where he was interrogated and tortured In this time he composed Notes from the Gallows Czech Reportaz psana na opratce literally Reports Written Under the Noose by writing on pieces of cigarette paper and smuggling them out with the help of sympathetic prison warders named Kolinsky and Hora The book describes events in the prison and is filled with hope for a communist future He also details mental resistance techniques to help withstand torture which have since been used by activists around the world 2 In the original edition certain passages that jarred with common notions of heroic resistance were omitted A later edition published in 1995 restored the missing text 3 Although the work s authenticity has been contested a forensic analysis by the Prague Institute of Criminalistics found the manuscript to be genuine 4 Trial and death editIn May 1943 Fucik was brought to Germany He was first detained in Bautzen for somewhat more than two months and afterwards in Berlin On 25 August 1943 in Berlin he was accused of high treason in connection with his political activities by the Volksgerichtshof which was presided over by the notorious Roland Freisler Fucik was found guilty and was sentenced to death along with Jaroslav Klecan who had been arrested with Fucik Fucik was hanged two weeks later on 8 September 1943 in Plotzensee Prison in Berlin not beheaded as is often stated After the war his wife Gusta Fucikova who had also been in a Nazi concentration camp researched and retrieved all of his prison writings She edited them with help of CPC and published them as Notes from the Gallows in 1947 The book was successful and its influence increased after the Stalinist takeover of Czechoslovakia in 1948 It has been translated into at least 90 languages Fucik as an ideological symbol edit nbsp Memorial to Julius Fucik in Bautzen II The Party found Julius Fucik and his book convenient for use as propaganda and turned them into one of the most visible symbols of the Party The book was required reading in schools and by the age of 10 every pupil growing up in communist Czechoslovakia was familiar with Fucik s work and life Fucik became a hero whose portrait was displayed at political meetings Gusta Fucikova was given a high position in the Party hierarchy the chairmanship of a women s organization holding it for decades nbsp Image of Fucik on a 1966 GDR stamp Many places were named after Fucik among them a large entertainment park in Prague Park kultury a oddechu Julia Fucika the city theatre in Jablonec nad Nisou 1945 98 a factory in Brno Elektrotechnicke zavody Julia Fucika a military unit and countless streets and squares In December 2022 the Julius Fucik street in Kyiv Ukraine was renamed to Karel Capek street 5 In 1955 Milan Kundera published a poetic tale entitled Posledni maj The Last May that depicts an encounter between Fucik and his Nazi interrogators The Julius Fucik Yulius Fuchik was a Soviet and later Russian barge carrier In Tom Clancy s 1986 novel Red Storm Rising about a hypothetical war between the Warsaw Pact and NATO this ship was given the role of being used for the Soviet invasion of Iceland The composer Luigi Nono wrote a musical piece titled Julius Fucik based on Notes from the Gallows 6 References in popular culture edit nbsp Last Meeting Julius Fucik triptych by Felix Lembersky Aleksandr Dashkevich Nikolay BrandtThe position and reverence of Fucik during Communist Czechoslovakia is depicted by Milan Kundera in his book The Joke from 1967 There he describes how the portrait of Fucik hangs in public buildings where public expulsions from the Communist Party took place and how Fucik s book is recited and used as propaganda by the Communist party I recognized Fucik s Notes from the Gallows That text written clandestinely in prison then published after the war in a million copies broadcast over the radio studied in schools as required reading was the sacred book of the era 7 Reassessment editAfter the Party lost its power in 1989 the legend of Fucik became a target of scrutiny It was made public that some parts of the book Notes from the Gallows around 2 had been omitted and that the text had been sanitized by Gusta Fucikova There were speculations as to how much information he gave his torturers and whether he had turned traitor In 1995 the complete text of the book was published The part in which Fucik describes how he succumbed to torture was published for the first time In it one learns that Fucik gave false information to his captors saving countless lives among the Czech resistance to the Nazis The historian Alena Hajkova coedited the critical edition of Fucik s memoir Notes edit Eeska redakce BBC World Service at www bbc co uk Meari Lena 2014 Sumud A Palestinian Philosophy of Confrontation in Colonial Prisons South Atlantic Quarterly 113 3 547 578 doi 10 1215 00382876 2692182 Fucik Julius 1995 Reportaz psana na opratce in Czech Prague Czech Republic Torst ISBN 9788085639469 Spolecnost Julia Fucika 2008 05 18 Archived from the original on 2008 05 18 Retrieved 2022 10 11 Oleksandr Shumilin 8 December 2022 n Kyiv 32 more streets were de Russified including Druzhby Narodiv Boulevard Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian Retrieved 8 December 2022 Marta Nono s life p 32 Kundera Milan 1992 The Joke First ed New York Harper Collins Publisher INC p 189 ISBN 978 0 571 16693 0 Selected works editReports edit Reportaze z burzoazni republiky published in journals collected in 1948 V zemi kde zitra jiz znamena vcera about the Soviet Union 1932 V zemi milovane about the Soviet Union published posthumously in 1949 Reportaz psana na opratce Notes from the Gallows 1947 complete text in 1995 many editions and translations Theatrical critiques and literary essays edit Milujeme svoji zem 1948 Stati o literature 1951 Bozena Nemcova bojujici O Sabinove zrade Chuva published in Tri studie 1947 Other edit Pokoleni pred Petrem an autobiographical novel unfinished 1939See also editJulius Fucik 1872 1916 composer and Fucik s uncle References editNotes from the Gallows ISBN 0 87905 252 X Radko Stastny Cesti spisovatele deseti stoleti Prague 2001 ISBN 80 903071 0 8External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julius Fucik writer nbsp Quotations related to Julius Fucik journalist at Wikiquote Howard Fast Review of Notes from the Gallows 1948 Biography in Czech Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julius Fucik journalist amp oldid 1188500653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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