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A daily in-depth look at current events in the Czech Republic.
Stalin survives village poll[14-05-2008 14:01 UTC]
By Jan Richter
The inhabitants of Studenec, a small Moravian village near Brno, have voted
to keep a bronze relief depicting Soviet dictator Josef Stalin on their
community’s monument to the victims of the First and Second World Wars.
Just over a half of the village’s adult inhabitants turned up to cast
their ballots in the local referendum, while a majority of them said they
wanted to keep the controversial portrait in its place.
The world’s largest monument to Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin was built
in Prague in 1955. The huge, 17,000-ton statue did not survive the period
of de-Stalinisation and the authorities had it blown up seven years later.
Another memorial to the Soviet generalissimus, a small bronze piece on a
monument honouring the victims of the two world wars, can still be seen in
Studenec, a small village some 40 kilometres west of Brno. Josef
Zahradníček, of the Communist Party, is the village mayor.
“The monument was erected in the summer of 1920 to honour the local
inhabitants who were killed in the First World War. The original monument
featured a relief of President Masaryk. In 1939, during the occupation,
Masaryk’s portrait was destroyed and after the end of the war, people
wanted to restore it. This happened in 1947 when the monument was decorated
with reliefs of President Masaryk, President Beneš and Soviet leader
Stalin.”
The portraits of all three politicians survived four decades of communism
intact, despite the communist regime’s aversion to the two democratic
presidents of Czechoslovakia, as well as its ultimate reluctance to endorse
Joseph Stalin’s legacy. After the fall of communism, some locals
suggested that Stalin’s portrait be removed but the real problems started
in 2007 when Studenec won the title Village of the Year in the Vysočina
Region. The region’s governor Miloš Vystrčil recommended that some of
the prize money should be used to remove the relief of the dictator.
Instead of that, the village council hall decided to hold a referendum and
let the people determine whether Stalin should remain in Studenec. The poll
took place on May 1 and the majority of votes were for keeping the
controversial portrait on the monument. František Komárek, independent,
is the community’s deputy mayor.
“We just needed a decision. Unfortunately we can’t do anything about
the result but I think it shows that people believe the monument is part of
our history. Many of them also feel resentment because our village has
often been presented in the media as if all we did was worship Stalin. This
really annoys them.”
The governor of the Vysočina region Miloš Vystrčil says that there’s
nothing his office can do about the monument at the moment.
““We will respect the decision of the inhabitants – that’s all we can
do anyway. On the other hand, I personally believe that reliefs of mass
murderers – and Stalin was certainly one of them – don’t belong on
village squares.”
The portrait of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin will therefore remain in the
Moravian village of Studenec, together with the reliefs of Presidents
Masaryk and Beneš – with one addition. The council is planning to place
a plaque next to the monument that will explain its curious history.
Also in this edition:
On Tuesday at 11am, anti-radar activist and chairman of the Czech Humanist
Party Jan Tamáš began a hunger strike in protest at the Czech
Republic’s impending acceptance of a US missile-defence radar base in the
country. Dominik Jůn met with Jan Tamáš at his base of operations - a
rented shop space in the centre of Prague, to discuss his motivations for
taking such a drastic step:
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A newly created internet page www.chceteje.cz, has attracted the attention
of Czech police for its xenophobic and potentially illegal content. The
website, which roughly translates as "Do you want them?", and
refers to immigrants in the Czech Republic, attacks people from foreign
backgrounds through coarse stereotyping and racial slurs. Its creators have
clearly set it up as a counter-attack against, and a parody of, a website
run by the Czech NGO People in Need as part of their ongoing campaign to
highlight and explain the problem of neo-Nazism. Jamie Brindley has the
story.
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