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Czech hero dies

December 19, 2011

Mourners have gathered at Prague Castle to pay homage to the late Vaclav Havel. The Czech dissident playwright was his country's first democratically elected president and oversaw the transition to democracy.

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flowers and candle
Czechs honored the late Vaclav Havel in Prague on MondayImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Long lines formed Monday as Czechs streamed to Prague Castle to sign condolence books and light candles in memory of former Czech President Vaclav Havel.

Mourners have also begun to file past Havel's closed coffin at the St. Anna Church cultural center in Prague.

In Brussels and elsewhere, meetings of the European Union began with silent tributes for Havel. The Czech government is scheduled to meet to discuss plans for a state funeral likely to draw leaders and elder statesmen from across Europe and the world.

Vaclav Havel
Havel was a playwright, revolutionary and former head of stateImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Havel, the dissident playwright who became Czechoslovakia's first post-communist president after leading a "Velvet Revolution" to topple communist rule, died on Sunday morning at his weekend house in northern Czech Republic.

The soul of the Czech revolution

The 75-year-old had long battled poor health, partly caused by the time he spent in communist jails and years of chain smoking.

Havel was born in Prague in 1936 to a family that owned film studios and prime real estate in the city. After the communists took control after World War II, Havel was labeled a bourgeois capitalist and banned from studying. Despite this setback, he would work his way up in the theater world to become a writer and director.

When the regime cracked down on the Prague Spring in 1968 he was also banned from the theater but continued writing and became more involved in the dissident movement. His political activism began in earnest in January 1977 when he helped draw up Charter 77, a manifesto calling on the communist authorities to live up to the international commitments they had made on human rights.

When the wave of revolutions sweeping across central and eastern Europe in 1989 reached Czechoslovakia, Havel was, as he put it, "catapulted" into the presidency overnight, just months after being released from jail. On December 29, 1989 he was elected Czechoslovakia's president by the country's still-communist parliament.

As president of Czechoslovakia and then, after the country's peaceful division into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, as president of the Czech Republic, Havel would guide the country through democratic and economic transition. He presided over the Czech Republic's entry into NATO in 1999 and was largely credited with laying the groundwork for the country's accession into the European Union in 2004.

Vaclav Havel (left) speaks from the balcony of the Melantrich publishing house which served as the Civic Forum headquarters during demonstrations in Wenceslas Square in 1989
Havel (left) came to personify the revolution against the communist government in CzechoslovakiaImage: picture alliance/CTK




'Symbol of 1989'

On Sunday, Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas called him a "symbol of 1989" and said Havel did a "great job for this country."

In Poland, former president and founder of the Solidarity movement Lech Walesa said Havel was "a great fighter for the freedom of nations and for democracy."

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle honored him as "a great champion for democracy and freedom," and "the soul of the Czech revolution."

Merkel and Havel
Merkel mourns the "loss of a great European"Image: picture-alliance/dpa

"Without him and his courageous words, the democratic awakening in Central and Eastern Europe would have been unthinkable," Westerwelle said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel called him "a great European," adding that "we Germans in particular have much to thank him for."

Former chancellor Helmut Kohl, who was in office during the political changes in 1989 and 1990, said Havel was "a great man without whom freedom would have been unthinkable."

A busy retirement

After serving the maximum two consecutive terms in office, Havel left the presidency in 2003. He devoted his time to fighting for human rights internationally, supporting Cuban and Chinese dissidents, the democratic opposition in Belarus, the fight against the military junta in Myanmar and Vladimir Putin's tenacious grip on power in Russia.

"The post-presidential life resembles the life of a president," he said. "But it's harder because you can be president for several years, but you are an ex-president until you die. Which brings numerous obligations."

Havel also continued to work in the arts. He published a new play, "Leaving," about the struggles of a leader on his way out of office in 2008 and also directed the film version, which debuted earlier this year.

Author: Holly Fox (AFP, AP, Reuters)
Editor: Martin Kuebler