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Ludvík Vaculík

Ludvík Vaculík [ˈludviːk ˈvatsuˌliːk] (23 July 1926 – 6 June 2015) was a Czech writer and journalist. He was born in Brumov, Moravian Wallachia. A prominent samizdat writer, he was best known as the author of the "Two Thousand Words" manifesto of June 1968.[1]

Ludvík Vaculík
Vaculík in 2010
Born23 July 1926
Brumov-Bylnice, Czechoslovakia
Died6 June 2015(2015-06-06) (aged 88)
Dobřichovice, Czech Republic
OccupationWriter
Author
Journalist
NationalityCzech
Notable works

Pre-1968 edit

President of Czechoslovakia and Communist Party leader Antonín Novotný and his fellow conservatives had begun taking a more repressive approach toward intellectuals and writers after the Six-Day War[2] of June 1967. The following month, Vaculík, then still a member of the Communist Party, attended the Fourth Congress of the Union of Writers. Others in attendance included communist party members Pavel Kohout, Ivan Klíma, and Milan Kundera, as well as non-Party member Václav Havel.[3] Vaculík made an inflammatory speech in which he rejected the leading role of the party as unnecessary and criticized it for its restrictive cultural policies and failure to address social issues.[4] Havel recalled the mixed response of the fellow writers to Vaculík's remarks: on the one hand, they were "delighted that someone had spoken the truth… but [their] delight was tempered by doubts about whether direct confrontation on the political level would lead anywhere, and by fears that it could stimulate a counterattack by the power center."[5] Novotný and his supporters did indeed try to bring the writers' union under their control after the congress, but failed.[4] Vaculík's and other writers' speeches at the conference, with their anti-Novotný sentiments, increased the gap between the conservative Novotný supporters and more moderate members of the party leadership,[6] a division that would contribute to Novotný's eventual fall.

The Prague Spring and the "Two Thousand Words" edit

Vaculík was among the most progressive members of the Communist Party and thereby more radical than Alexander Dubček, who had become Party leader in January 1968. Hence, Vaculík and others generally felt that the reforms of the April Action Programme were the minimum necessary and that they should be quickly and firmly enforced.[7] In hopes of influencing voters in upcoming party congress elections, Vaculík released the manifesto "Two Thousand Words to Workers, Farmers, Scientists, Artists, and Everyone" in several major Prague newspapers, complete with signatures of other public figures. The date was 27 June 1968, the day after preliminary censorship was abolished by the national assembly.

In the "Two Thousand Words," Vaculík asked that the public "demand the resignation of people who have misused their power" by criticism, demonstrations, and strikes.[8] He also expressed concern over the "recent apprehension" regarding the reforms due to "the possibility that foreign forces"—those of the Warsaw Treaty Organization—"may intervene in Czechoslovakia's internal development."[9] If this were to happen, Vaculík argued:

…the only thing we can do is to hold our own and not indulge in any provocation. We can assure our government—with weapons if need be—as long as it does what we give it a mandate to do.[9]

Impact of the "Two Thousand Words" edit

Despite the overall moderate tone and Marxist–Leninist orthodoxy,[10] the "Two Thousand Words" called for action on the part of the public in case of military intervention and therefore denied the leading role of the party, as Vaculík's 1967 speech had. It was popular throughout Czechoslovakia with both intellectuals and workers, and its popularity only increased after the party officially condemned it.[10] It also significantly increased the concerns of the Soviet Union. Following the "Two Thousand Words," Leonid Brezhnev's party leadership, seeing a situation similar to that in 1956 Hungary developing,[11] used the term "counterrevolution" to describe the Prague Spring for the first time.[12] If a counterrevolution was taking place (and the Soviet Union was increasingly disposed to categorising the events in Czechoslovakia as such, as other radicals continued to act and Dubček failed to gain their confidence), socialism as the Soviet Union saw it was threatened and invasion by Warsaw Treaty Organisation troops, as occurred 20–21 August 1968, was deemed justified. This policy of the acceptability of using force wherever socialism was thought to be threatened would become known as the Brezhnev Doctrine, and Vaculík's "Two Thousand Words" was an integral step toward this early application of it.[13]

Vaculík as a dissident edit

After Gustáv Husák came to power in 1969 and censorship increased, Vaculík (now no longer a party member) was part of the circle of dissident writers in Czechoslovakia. In 1973, he started Edice Petlice (Edition Padlock), a samizdat series that he ran until 1979. Others followed with their own series, despite harassment from the party's secret police.[14] Some samizdat authors, including Vaculík, were also published in the west.[15]

The core of the samizdat authors eventually developed and signed the foundation document of Charter 77;[16] Vaculík attended the second of the planning meetings in December 1976.[17] On 6 January 1977, Vaculík, along with Havel and Pavel Landovský, an actor, attempted to take a copy of the charter to the post office to mail to the Czechoslovak government. Their car was pulled over by the Party secret police, and all three were taken in for interrogation. Other signatories were subsequently subjected to interrogations and searches of their homes, as well.[18]

In late 1978, however, Vaculík published the article "Remarks on Courage", a piece that helped set the tone for criticism of charterists.[19] Of the original signatories, most were from the intelligentsia in Prague and Brno,[20] and Vaculík and others warned against them becoming so isolated that average citizens could no longer relate to Charter 77. His criticism worked against a mythologisation of the Charter and ensured a continued discussion of its position and role.[19]

After communism edit

Vaculík continued to write; the official ban on his works was lifted in late 1989. He had a weekly column in Lidové noviny that featured feuilletons addressing various Czech political and cultural issues, just as much of his underground work during Communism had.[21]

Death edit

Vaculík died of natural causes at the age of 88 on 6 June 2015 in Dobřichovice, where he lived by his son.[22][23]

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

  • Rušný dům (1963), autobiographical novel about the author's work as a tutor at a boys' boarding school
  • Sekyra (1966). The Axe, trans. Marian Sling (Harper & Row, 1973)[24]
  • Morčata (1970). The Guinea Pigs, trans. Kača Poláčková (The Third Press, 1973; Open Letter, 2011)[25][26]
  • Český snář (1980). A Czech Dreambook, trans. Gerald Turner and Jonathan Bolton (Karolinum Press, 2020)[27]
  • Milí spolužáci (1995)

Compilations in English edit

  • A Cup of Coffee with My Interrogator: The Prague Chronicles of Ludvík Vaculík, trans. George Theiner (Readers International, 1987)[28][29]

Essays edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Czech Writer, Anti-Communist Dissident Ludvik Vaculik Dies". The New York Times. 6 June 2015.
  2. ^ R.J. Crampton, Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century – and After, 2nd ed. (New York: Routledge, 1997), 323.
  3. ^ Hans Renner, A History of Czechoslovakia since 1945, trans. Evelien Hurst-Buist (New York: Routledge, 1989), 39.
  4. ^ a b Crampton, Eastern Europe, 323.
  5. ^ Václav Havel, Disturbing the Peace: A Conversation with Karel Hvížďala, trans. Paul Wilson (New York:Knopf, 1990), 85.
  6. ^ Renner, History of Czechoslovakia, 39.
  7. ^ Renner, History of Czechoslovakia, 59.
  8. ^ Ludvík Vaculík, "Two Thousand Words to Workers, Farmers, Scientists, Artists, and Everyone," in From Stalinism to Pluralism: A Documentary History of Eastern Europe since 1945, ed. Gale Stokes (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 130.
  9. ^ a b Vaculík, "Two Thousand Words," 130.
  10. ^ a b Crampton, Eastern Europe, 334.
  11. ^ Renner, History of Czechoslovakia, 67.
  12. ^ Alan Levy, So Many Heroes, (Sagaponack, NY: Second Chance Press, 1980), 166.
  13. ^ "Ludvík Vaculík, Czech journalist and author, dies aged 88". The Guardian. 6 June 2015. Retrieved 7 June 2015. ...Two Thousand Words manifesto became a key document of the 1968 Prague spring reform movement that contributed to the Kremlin's decision to invade Czechoslovakia...
  14. ^ Igor Hájek, "Traditions of Czech Literature: Curses and Blessings," in Czechoslovakia 1918–88: Seventy Years of Independence, ed. H. Gordon Skilling (Oxford: Macmillan, 1991), 188.
  15. ^ Hájek, "Traditions of Czech Literature," 189.
  16. ^ Renner, History of Czechoslovakia, 126.
  17. ^ Havel, Disturbing the Peace, 132.
  18. ^ Renner, History of Czechoslovakia, 138.
  19. ^ a b Renner, History of Czechoslovakia, 135.
  20. ^ Crampton, Eastern Europe, 348.
  21. ^ Linda Mastalir, Ludvík Vaculík: a Czechoslovak man of letters, Radio.cz
  22. ^ "Zemřel spisovatel a fejetonista Ludvík Vaculík. Bylo mu 89 let" (in Czech). Hospodářské noviny. 6 June 2015. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  23. ^ Ludvik Vaculik: Writer and dissident whose 'Two Thousand Words' tract led to the Prague Spring and the Soviet invasion
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 September 2015. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
  25. ^ Vaculík, Ludvík (1974). The guinea pigs (in English and Czech). Internet Archive. London : London Magazine. ISBN 978-0-89388-060-6.
  26. ^ Shaun Randol. "Ludvik Vaculik's "The Guinea Pigs"". Words Without Borders. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
  27. ^ "Český snář". Retrieved 9 June 2015.
  28. ^ Vaculík, Ludvík (1987). A cup of coffee with my interrogator : the Prague chronicles of Ludvík Vaculík. Internet Archive. London : Readers International. ISBN 978-0-930523-34-3.
  29. ^ "BOOKS OF THE TIMES; A CUP OF COFFEE WITH MY INTERROGATOR: The Prague Chronicles of Ludvik Vaculik. Translated by George Theiner. Introduction by Vaclav Havel. 127 pages. Readers International. $14.95. (Published 1987)". The New York Times. from the original on 18 July 2021.
  30. ^ Stokes, Gale (1996). From Stalinism to Pluralism: A Documentary History of Eastern Europe Since 1945. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-509447-3.
  31. ^ MacArthur, John R.; Vaculík, Ludvík (1 January 2018). "The Human Factor". Harper's Magazine. Vol. January 2018. ISSN 0017-789X. Retrieved 31 October 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Crampton, R. J. Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century—and After. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, 1997.
  • Hájek, Igor. "Traditions of Czech Literature: Curses and Blessings." In Czechoslovakia 1918–88: Seventy Years of Independence, edited by H. Gordon Skilling, 177–95. Oxford: Macmillan, 1991.
  • Havel, Václav. Disturbing the Peace: A Conversation with Karel Hvížďala. Translated by Paul Wilson. New York: Knopf, 1990.
  • Levy, Alan. So Many Heroes. Sagaponack, NY: Second Chance Press, 1980.
  • Mastalir, Linda. Ludvík Vaculík: a Czechoslovak man of letters. 25 July 2006. Radio Praha. 26 April 2007. Radio.cz
  • Renner, Hans. A History of Czechoslovakia since 1945. Translated by Evelien Hurst-Buist. New York: Routledge, 1989.

External links edit

  • Ludvík Vaculík at IMDb
  • Website about Vaculík and his work (in Czech)
  • columne, October 2008

ludvík, vaculík, ˈludviːk, ˈvatsuˌliːk, july, 1926, june, 2015, czech, writer, journalist, born, brumov, moravian, wallachia, prominent, samizdat, writer, best, known, author, thousand, words, manifesto, june, 1968, vaculík, 2010born23, july, 1926brumov, bylni. Ludvik Vaculik ˈludviːk ˈvatsuˌliːk 23 July 1926 6 June 2015 was a Czech writer and journalist He was born in Brumov Moravian Wallachia A prominent samizdat writer he was best known as the author of the Two Thousand Words manifesto of June 1968 1 Ludvik VaculikVaculik in 2010Born23 July 1926Brumov Bylnice CzechoslovakiaDied6 June 2015 2015 06 06 aged 88 Dobrichovice Czech RepublicOccupationWriterAuthorJournalistNationalityCzechNotable worksTwo Thousand WordsThe Guinea Pigs Contents 1 Pre 1968 2 The Prague Spring and the Two Thousand Words 2 1 Impact of the Two Thousand Words 3 Vaculik as a dissident 4 After communism 5 Death 6 Bibliography 6 1 Novels 6 2 Compilations in English 6 3 Essays 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPre 1968 editPresident of Czechoslovakia and Communist Party leader Antonin Novotny and his fellow conservatives had begun taking a more repressive approach toward intellectuals and writers after the Six Day War 2 of June 1967 The following month Vaculik then still a member of the Communist Party attended the Fourth Congress of the Union of Writers Others in attendance included communist party members Pavel Kohout Ivan Klima and Milan Kundera as well as non Party member Vaclav Havel 3 Vaculik made an inflammatory speech in which he rejected the leading role of the party as unnecessary and criticized it for its restrictive cultural policies and failure to address social issues 4 Havel recalled the mixed response of the fellow writers to Vaculik s remarks on the one hand they were delighted that someone had spoken the truth but their delight was tempered by doubts about whether direct confrontation on the political level would lead anywhere and by fears that it could stimulate a counterattack by the power center 5 Novotny and his supporters did indeed try to bring the writers union under their control after the congress but failed 4 Vaculik s and other writers speeches at the conference with their anti Novotny sentiments increased the gap between the conservative Novotny supporters and more moderate members of the party leadership 6 a division that would contribute to Novotny s eventual fall The Prague Spring and the Two Thousand Words editVaculik was among the most progressive members of the Communist Party and thereby more radical than Alexander Dubcek who had become Party leader in January 1968 Hence Vaculik and others generally felt that the reforms of the April Action Programme were the minimum necessary and that they should be quickly and firmly enforced 7 In hopes of influencing voters in upcoming party congress elections Vaculik released the manifesto Two Thousand Words to Workers Farmers Scientists Artists and Everyone in several major Prague newspapers complete with signatures of other public figures The date was 27 June 1968 the day after preliminary censorship was abolished by the national assembly In the Two Thousand Words Vaculik asked that the public demand the resignation of people who have misused their power by criticism demonstrations and strikes 8 He also expressed concern over the recent apprehension regarding the reforms due to the possibility that foreign forces those of the Warsaw Treaty Organization may intervene in Czechoslovakia s internal development 9 If this were to happen Vaculik argued the only thing we can do is to hold our own and not indulge in any provocation We can assure our government with weapons if need be as long as it does what we give it a mandate to do 9 Impact of the Two Thousand Words edit Despite the overall moderate tone and Marxist Leninist orthodoxy 10 the Two Thousand Words called for action on the part of the public in case of military intervention and therefore denied the leading role of the party as Vaculik s 1967 speech had It was popular throughout Czechoslovakia with both intellectuals and workers and its popularity only increased after the party officially condemned it 10 It also significantly increased the concerns of the Soviet Union Following the Two Thousand Words Leonid Brezhnev s party leadership seeing a situation similar to that in 1956 Hungary developing 11 used the term counterrevolution to describe the Prague Spring for the first time 12 If a counterrevolution was taking place and the Soviet Union was increasingly disposed to categorising the events in Czechoslovakia as such as other radicals continued to act and Dubcek failed to gain their confidence socialism as the Soviet Union saw it was threatened and invasion by Warsaw Treaty Organisation troops as occurred 20 21 August 1968 was deemed justified This policy of the acceptability of using force wherever socialism was thought to be threatened would become known as the Brezhnev Doctrine and Vaculik s Two Thousand Words was an integral step toward this early application of it 13 Vaculik as a dissident editAfter Gustav Husak came to power in 1969 and censorship increased Vaculik now no longer a party member was part of the circle of dissident writers in Czechoslovakia In 1973 he started Edice Petlice Edition Padlock a samizdat series that he ran until 1979 Others followed with their own series despite harassment from the party s secret police 14 Some samizdat authors including Vaculik were also published in the west 15 The core of the samizdat authors eventually developed and signed the foundation document of Charter 77 16 Vaculik attended the second of the planning meetings in December 1976 17 On 6 January 1977 Vaculik along with Havel and Pavel Landovsky an actor attempted to take a copy of the charter to the post office to mail to the Czechoslovak government Their car was pulled over by the Party secret police and all three were taken in for interrogation Other signatories were subsequently subjected to interrogations and searches of their homes as well 18 In late 1978 however Vaculik published the article Remarks on Courage a piece that helped set the tone for criticism of charterists 19 Of the original signatories most were from the intelligentsia in Prague and Brno 20 and Vaculik and others warned against them becoming so isolated that average citizens could no longer relate to Charter 77 His criticism worked against a mythologisation of the Charter and ensured a continued discussion of its position and role 19 After communism editVaculik continued to write the official ban on his works was lifted in late 1989 He had a weekly column in Lidove noviny that featured feuilletons addressing various Czech political and cultural issues just as much of his underground work during Communism had 21 Death editVaculik died of natural causes at the age of 88 on 6 June 2015 in Dobrichovice where he lived by his son 22 23 Bibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2019 Novels edit Rusny dum 1963 autobiographical novel about the author s work as a tutor at a boys boarding school Sekyra 1966 The Axe trans Marian Sling Harper amp Row 1973 24 Morcata 1970 The Guinea Pigs trans Kaca Polackova The Third Press 1973 Open Letter 2011 25 26 Cesky snar 1980 A Czech Dreambook trans Gerald Turner and Jonathan Bolton Karolinum Press 2020 27 Mili spoluzaci 1995 Compilations in English edit A Cup of Coffee with My Interrogator The Prague Chronicles of Ludvik Vaculik trans George Theiner Readers International 1987 28 29 Essays edit 1968 Two Thousand Words to Workers Farmers Scientists Artists and Everyone 30 1983 On a Plane trans Alex Zucker 2018 31 See also editCharter 77 Libri Prohibiti Normalization Czechoslovakia Prague Spring SamizdatReferences edit Czech Writer Anti Communist Dissident Ludvik Vaculik Dies The New York Times 6 June 2015 R J Crampton Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century and After 2nd ed New York Routledge 1997 323 Hans Renner A History of Czechoslovakia since 1945 trans Evelien Hurst Buist New York Routledge 1989 39 a b Crampton Eastern Europe 323 Vaclav Havel Disturbing the Peace A Conversation with Karel Hvizdala trans Paul Wilson New York Knopf 1990 85 Renner History of Czechoslovakia 39 Renner History of Czechoslovakia 59 Ludvik Vaculik Two Thousand Words to Workers Farmers Scientists Artists and Everyone in From Stalinism to Pluralism A Documentary History of Eastern Europe since 1945 ed Gale Stokes New York Oxford University Press 1996 130 a b Vaculik Two Thousand Words 130 a b Crampton Eastern Europe 334 Renner History of Czechoslovakia 67 Alan Levy So Many Heroes Sagaponack NY Second Chance Press 1980 166 Ludvik Vaculik Czech journalist and author dies aged 88 The Guardian 6 June 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2015 Two Thousand Words manifesto became a key document of the 1968 Prague spring reform movement that contributed to the Kremlin s decision to invade Czechoslovakia Igor Hajek Traditions of Czech Literature Curses and Blessings in Czechoslovakia 1918 88 Seventy Years of Independence ed H Gordon Skilling Oxford Macmillan 1991 188 Hajek Traditions of Czech Literature 189 Renner History of Czechoslovakia 126 Havel Disturbing the Peace 132 Renner History of Czechoslovakia 138 a b Renner History of Czechoslovakia 135 Crampton Eastern Europe 348 Linda Mastalir Ludvik Vaculik a Czechoslovak man of letters Radio cz Zemrel spisovatel a fejetonista Ludvik Vaculik Bylo mu 89 let in Czech Hospodarske noviny 6 June 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2015 Ludvik Vaculik Writer and dissident whose Two Thousand Words tract led to the Prague Spring and the Soviet invasion The Axe Archived from the original on 29 September 2015 Retrieved 9 June 2015 Vaculik Ludvik 1974 The guinea pigs in English and Czech Internet Archive London London Magazine ISBN 978 0 89388 060 6 Shaun Randol Ludvik Vaculik s The Guinea Pigs Words Without Borders Retrieved 9 June 2015 Cesky snar Retrieved 9 June 2015 Vaculik Ludvik 1987 A cup of coffee with my interrogator the Prague chronicles of Ludvik Vaculik Internet Archive London Readers International ISBN 978 0 930523 34 3 BOOKS OF THE TIMES A CUP OF COFFEE WITH MY INTERROGATOR The Prague Chronicles of Ludvik Vaculik Translated by George Theiner Introduction by Vaclav Havel 127 pages Readers International 14 95 Published 1987 The New York Times Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Stokes Gale 1996 From Stalinism to Pluralism A Documentary History of Eastern Europe Since 1945 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509447 3 MacArthur John R Vaculik Ludvik 1 January 2018 The Human Factor Harper s Magazine Vol January 2018 ISSN 0017 789X Retrieved 31 October 2022 Further reading editCrampton R J Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century and After 2nd ed New York Routledge 1997 Hajek Igor Traditions of Czech Literature Curses and Blessings In Czechoslovakia 1918 88 Seventy Years of Independence edited by H Gordon Skilling 177 95 Oxford Macmillan 1991 Havel Vaclav Disturbing the Peace A Conversation with Karel Hvizdala Translated by Paul Wilson New York Knopf 1990 Levy Alan So Many Heroes Sagaponack NY Second Chance Press 1980 Mastalir Linda Ludvik Vaculik a Czechoslovak man of letters 25 July 2006 Radio Praha 26 April 2007 Radio cz Renner Hans A History of Czechoslovakia since 1945 Translated by Evelien Hurst Buist New York Routledge 1989 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ludvik Vaculik Ludvik Vaculik at IMDb Website about Vaculik and his work in Czech How to Make a Boy an example Our Success Story columne October 2008 Ludvik Vaculik at Czechoslovak book network Baila net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ludvik Vaculik amp oldid 1167622213, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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