Santa Fe New Mexican

Exhibit looks at key traumatic moments in Czechoslov­akia history

- PETR DAVID JOSEK/ASSOCIATED PRESS By Karel Janicek

A couple kisses by an installati­on Oct. 3 which is part of a multimedia exhibition that marks the 100th anniversar­y of the creation of Czechoslov­akia, in Prague, Czech Republic. The Czechs are marking the 100th anniversar­y of the creation of Czechoslov­akia with an exhibition at the site of a former monument to Soviet dictator Josef Stalin. The wall reads the project’s name:

PRAGUE — The voices of the witnesses are quiet. Their heads are projected on screens behind a chain-link fence in complete darkness at the site of a former monument to Soviet dictator Josef Stalin. Their topic: the most painful moments in the history of Czechoslov­akia.

A multimedia exhibition is marking the 100th anniversar­y of the creation of Czechoslov­akia by focusing on the nation’s experience with two totalitari­an regimes in the turbulent 20th century: the Nazi occupation in World War II and Communist rule.

The Memory of the Nation has been created by the Post Bellum nonprofit organizati­on, which has been recording oral histories of those who witnessed key historical moments. It starts in 1939, beginning with the Nazi invasion, and goes until the end of the communist regime in 1989.

“The 20th century is full of traumas,” said Jana Holcova, a Post Bellum spokeswoma­n.

Czechoslov­akia was created as an independen­t state on Oct. 28, 1918, as the AustroHung­arian Empire collapsed at the end of World War I. It ceased to exist in 1993, after the region peacefully split into two nations, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Here’s a look at the exhibit that runs through Dec 9.

Visitors to the exhibit have a rare chance to see the huge, rarelyopen­ed undergroun­d space just under the former Stalin monument site at Prague’s Letna Park.

The almost 52-foot granite statue of Stalin with other figures behind him, once considered the biggest representa­tion of the brutal dictator outside the Soviet Union, was unveiled in 1955 after six years of work. Its creator, Otakar Svec, killed himself shortly before that, following the example of his wife.

After Stalin’s Soviet successor, Nikita Khrushchev, denounced Stalin’s personalit­y cult, the monument that was visible from many parts of Prague became a political problem. It was demolished in 1962.

The space has been closed for decades. City Hall has proposed that the National Gallery turn it into a center for contempora­ry art while Post Bellum has suggested the current exhibition be expanded into a museum to totalitari­anism. No final decision has been made.

In one section, a video map with sound allows visitors to glimpse a bit of what it was like to be an RAF pilot shooting down a Nazi plane in World War II during the Battle of Britain, in which many Czechs participat­ed. Other sections illustrate Nazi cruelty, an interrogat­ion by the feared Communist-era secret police or the 1968 Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslov­akia, which crushed the liberal reforms known as the Prague Spring. A moment from the country’s 1989 anti-Communist Velvet Revolution, which was led by Vaclav Havel, comes at the end as a relief.

Witnesses speaking on the screen include Holocaust survivors, political prisoners and a communist investigat­or. Subtitles are in Czech and English.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States