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One for the Ages...

(9 posts)
  1. spatny
    Member

    "PRAGUE — The end of Czechoslovakia's totalitarian regime was called the Velvet Revolution because of how smooth the transition seemed: Communism dead in a matter of weeks, without a shot fired. But for Vaclav Havel, it was a moment he helped pay for with decades of suffering and struggle.

    The dissident playwright spent years in jail but never lost his defiance, or his eloquence, and the government's attempts to crush his will ended up expanding his influence. He became a source of inspiration to Czechs, and to all of Eastern Europe. He went from prisoner to president in 1989, the year the Berlin Wall fell and communism crumbled across the region.

    Havel died Sunday morning at his weekend home in the northern Czech Republic. The 75-year-old former chain-smoker had a history of chronic respiratory problems dating back to his time in prison.

    Shy and bookish, with a wispy mustache and unkempt hair, Havel helped draw the world's attention to the anger and frustration spilling over behind the Iron Curtain. While he was president, the Czech Republic split from Slovakia, but it also made dramatic gains in economic might.

    "His peaceful resistance shook the foundations of an empire, exposed the emptiness of a repressive ideology, and proved that moral leadership is more powerful than any weapon," said President Barack Obama. "He also embodied the aspirations of half a continent that had been cut off by the Iron Curtain, and helped unleash tides of history that led to a united and democratic Europe."

    Mourners laid flowers and lit candles at Havel's villa in Prague. A black flag of mourning flew over Prague Castle, the presidential seat, and Havel was also remembered at a monument to the revolution in the capital's downtown. "Mr. President, thank you for democracy," one note read.

    Lech Walesa, former Polish president and the Nobel Peace Prize-winning founder of the country's anti-communist Solidarity movement, called Havel "a great fighter for the freedom of nations and for democracy."

    "Amid the turbulence of modern Europe, his voice was the most consistent and compelling – endlessly searching for the best in himself and in each of us," said former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright, who is of Czech origin.

    Havel was his country's first democratically elected president, leading it through the early challenges of democracy and its peaceful 1993 breakup into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, though his image suffered as his people discovered the difficulties of transforming their society.

    He was an avowed peacenik who was close friends with members of the Plastic People of the Universe, a nonconformist rock band banned by the communist regime, and whose heroes included rockers such as Frank Zappa. He never quite shed his flower-child past and often signed his name with a small heart as a flourish.

    "Truth and love must prevail over lies and hatred," Havel famously said. It became his revolutionary motto, which he said he always strove to live by.

    "It's interesting that I had an adventurous life, even though I am not an adventurer by nature. It was fate and history that caused my life to be adventurous rather than me as someone who seeks adventure," he once told Czech radio.

    Havel first made a name for himself after the 1968 Soviet-led invasion that crushed the Prague Spring reforms of Alexander Dubcek and other liberally minded communists in what was then Czechoslovakia.

    Havel's plays were banned as hard-liners installed by Moscow snuffed out every whiff of rebellion. But he continued to write, producing a series of underground essays that stand with the work of Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov as the most incisive and eloquent analyses of what communism did to society and the individual.

    One of his best-known essays, "The Power of the Powerless," was written in 1978. It borrowed slyly from the opening line of the mid-19th century Communist Manifesto, writing: "A specter is haunting eastern Europe: the specter of what in the West is called 'dissent.'"

    In the essay, he dissected what he called the "dictatorship of ritual" – the ossified Soviet bloc system under Leonid Brezhnev – and imagined what happens when an ordinary greengrocer stops displaying communist slogans and begins "living in truth," rediscovering "his suppressed identity and dignity."

    Havel knew that suppression firsthand.

    He was born Oct. 5, 1936, in Prague, the child of a wealthy family that lost extensive property to communist nationalization in 1948. Havel was denied a formal education, eventually earning a degree at night school and starting out in theater as a stagehand.

    His political activism began in earnest in January 1977, when he co-authored the human rights manifesto Charter 77, and the cause drew widening attention in the West.

    Havel was detained countless times and spent four years in communist jails. His letters from prison to his wife were among his best-known works. "Letters to Olga" blended deep philosophy with a stream of stern advice to the spouse he saw as his mentor and best friend, and who tolerated his reputed philandering and other foibles.

    The events of August 1988 – the 20th anniversary of the Warsaw Pact invasion – first suggested that Havel and his friends might one day replace the apparatchiks who jailed them.

    Thousands of mostly young people marched through central Prague, yelling Havel's name and that of the playwright's hero, Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, the philosopher who was Czechoslovakia's first president after it was founded in 1918.

    Havel's arrest in January 1989 at another street protest and his subsequent trial generated anger at home and abroad. Pressure for change was so strong that the communists released him in May.

    That fall, communism began to collapse across Eastern Europe, and in November the Berlin Wall fell. Eight days later, police brutally broke up a demonstration by thousands of Prague students.

    It was the signal that Havel and his countrymen had awaited. Within 48 hours, a broad new opposition movement was founded, and a day later, hundreds of thousands of Czechs and Slovaks took to the streets.

    In three heady weeks, communist rule was broken. Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones arrived just as the Soviet army was leaving. Posters in Prague proclaimed: "The tanks are rolling out – the Stones are rolling in."

    On Dec. 29, 1989, Havel was elected Czechoslovakia's president by the country's still-communist parliament. Three days later, he told the nation in a televised New Year's address: "Out of gifted and sovereign people, the regime made us little screws in a monstrously big, rattling and stinking machine."

    He continued to be regarded a moral voice as he decried the shortcomings of his society under democracy, but eventually bent to the dictates of convention and power. His watchwords – "what the heart thinks, the tongue speaks" – had to be modified for day-to-day politics.

    In July 1992, it became clear that the Czechoslovak federation was heading for a split. He considered the breakup a personal failure, though years later he would conclude that it was for the best. Havel resigned as president, but he remained popular and was elected president of the new Czech Republic uncontested.

    The job held great immense prestige but little power. The Czech Republic underwent major promarket reforms while Havel was president, but those have been credited mainly to his political archrival Vaclav Klaus, who was prime minister at the time and is the current president.

    Havel's attempts to reconcile rival politicians were considered by many as unconstitutional intrusions, and his pleas for political leaders to build a "civic society" based on respect, tolerance and individual responsibility went largely unanswered.

    Media criticism, once unthinkable, became unrelenting. Serious newspapers questioned his political visions; tabloids focused mainly on his private life.

    Havel left office in 2003, months before the Czech Republic and Slovakia joined the European Union. He was credited with laying the groundwork that brought his country into the 27-nation bloc in 2004, and was president when it joined NATO in 1999 – a moment of pride for him.

    "I can't stop rejoicing that I live in this time and can participate in it," Havel exulted.

    Havel was small, but his presence and wit could fill a room. Even late in life, he retained a certain impishness and boyish grin, shifting easily from philosophy to jokes or plain old Prague gossip.

    In December 1996, just 11 months after his first wife, Olga Havlova, died of cancer, he lost a third of his right lung during surgery to remove a malignant tumor.

    He gave up smoking and married Dagmar Veskrnova, a dashing actress almost 20 years his junior. She, and a nun who had been caring for him the last few months of his life, were by his side when he died, his assistant Sabina Tancevova said.

    Even out of office, Havel remained a world figure. Among his many honors were Sweden's prestigious Olof Palme Prize and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian award, bestowed on him by President George W. Bush for being "one of liberty's great heroes."

    Havel was nominated several times for the Nobel Peace Prize, and collected dozens of other accolades worldwide for his efforts as a global ambassador of conscience, defending the downtrodden from Darfur to Myanmar.

    In recent years, Havel saw the global economic crisis as a warning not to abandon basic human values in the scramble to prosper.

    "It's a warning against the idea that we understand the world, that we know how everything works," he told The Associated Press in his office in Prague in 2008. The cramped work space was packed with his books, plays and rock memorabilia.

    By then Havel had returned to his first love: the stage. He published a new play, "Leaving," about the struggles of a leader on his way out of office, and the work gained critical acclaim."

    Masaryk & Havel - that says it all. I doubt we shall see their like again. RIP

    Posted Sunday Dec 18, 2011 15:32 #
  2. spatny
    Member

    Take a moment on Friday to remember a great man.

    "
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Copyright (c) 2011 Radio Prague (Cesky Rozhlas 7 - Radio Praha)

    News Monday, December 19th, 2011

    By: Jan Velinger

    * The Czech Republic will hold three days of national mourning for
    former president and former dissident leader Vaclav Havel who died on
    Sunday.

    * Mr Havel will be given a state funeral on Friday, December 23, at
    Prague's St Vitus Cathedral.

    * Hundreds of people have been paying their last respects to Mr Havel,
    bowing in silence before his closed coffin at the former church of St.
    Anna.

    * The last leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, has praised
    Mr Havel as a statesman who was committed to the highest humanistic
    values.

    * Czech Prime Minster Petr Necas has met with his Ukrainian counterpart
    Mykola Azarov in Prague.

    ========================================================================
    Czech Republic to hold three days of national mourning for Havel
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Czech Republic will hold three days of national mourning for former
    dissident and leader Vaclav Havel, who died on Sunday. Mr Havel paved
    the way for democracy in Czechoslovakia in 1989 and was the leading
    figure of the Velvet Revolution. Speaking at a press conference after
    an extra-ordinary government meeting on Monday, Prime Minister Petr
    Necas said the cabinet wanted to honour Mr Havel not only as the first
    post-Communist president, but also as a symbol of all-encompassing
    change in society. During the mourning period, flags on public
    buildings will be lowered to half-mast and a minute of silence will
    held at 12 pm on Friday in Mr Havel's memory.

    A moral icon and symbol of the modern Czech state, former president
    Havel died on Sunday morning at the age of 75 after a protracted
    illness. The former dissident, playwright and politician passed away in
    his sleep at his country house Hradecek, in northern Bohemia, tended to
    by his wife Dagmar. Mr Havel's health had deteriorated in recent
    months, forcing him to limit his public appearances. The last time he
    appeared in public was last week, when he received the Dalai Lama
    during his Prague visit.

    During the national days of mourning, all casinos and betting agencies
    will remain closed; there is a possibility also that sports events may
    be cancelled. In addition, organisers have been asked to gauge the
    appropriateness of planned public events and the media have been asked
    to carefully consider broadcast content. The cabinet is also preparing
    a special bill in the name of the former president, recognising his
    merit in leading the country out of totalitarianism to freedom and
    democracy. "

    Posted Monday Dec 19, 2011 16:36 #
  3. spatny
    Member

    Each in his own way...

    Posted Monday Dec 19, 2011 20:06 #
  4. spatny
    Member

    ========================================================================
    Details released of Vaclav Havel's funeral procession
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The authorities on Tuesday released details about Vaclav Havel's
    funeral procession. The casket with the remains of the late Czech
    president will leave the Prague Crossroads centre in Prague's Old Town,
    where it has lain in state since Monday, at 8 AM on Wednesday. The
    casket will be placed on the same gun carriage that was used in the
    funeral procession of Czechoslovakia's first president, T. G. Masaryk,
    in 1937, and will be drawn by three pairs of horses. The procession
    will cross Charles Bridge and move up to the Prague Castle area where
    it should arrive by 10 AM. After a brief ceremony at the Castle Guards
    barracks, the coffin will be transported to the Vladislav Hall of
    Prague Castle where it will remain until Friday's funeral ceremony.
    Vaclav Havel's widow, Dagmar Havlova, has invited the public to join
    the procession.

    ========================================================================
    French President Sarkozy to attend Vaclav Havel's funeral
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy will attend the funeral of Vaclav
    Havel in Prague on Friday, his office said on Tuesday. Mr Sarzkozy will
    be one of many world leaders attending the funeral of the late Czech
    president and playwright, along with US Secretary of State Hillary
    Clinton and the former US president Bill Clinton, as well as the
    presidents of Slovakia, Germany, Austria, Poland, and other countries.
    The funeral of Vaclav Havel, who died on Sunday aged 75, will be held
    in Prague's St Vitus Cathedral on Friday; the ceremony will begin at
    noon.

    Posted Tuesday Dec 20, 2011 14:02 #
  5. spatny
    Member

    Posted Tuesday Dec 20, 2011 14:07 #
  6. mrt
    Member

    We in the west probably don't know a whole lot of Havel. I know that he was a playright, poet and a statesman and that he called the regime that he helped oust 'Absurdistan' - now that's a nice word! We can probably find regimes like that all around us - we all get to keep this word now.

    He guided this ousting as well as the separating of the states of czech and slovakia without any (significant) bloodshed - talk about rational economy and a respect to humanity!

    We need more poet-playwright statesmen!

    The excerpts from Havel's speeches found in the piece below show a very enlightened point of view. By minimizing univeralist systems that wrongheadedly try to solve everything reminds me of the practical 'bohemian' ethos of doing 'just' what needs to be done to satisfy the requirements of the challenge at hand - no crazy deferance and attention to something more than that. But all the while keeping sight that humanity is to be respected.

    Crazy deferance to something more than the challenge at hand is also unnecesarily expensive, the abhorrence to which is another bohemian trait.

    http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/12/vaclav-havels-critique-of-the-west/250277/

    Posted Wednesday Dec 21, 2011 13:17 #
  7. spatny
    Member

    Too busy with "Dancing with the Stars" I guess. Nevertheless...

    From Radio Prague:

    Country begins three days of mourning
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Czech Republic has begun three days of mourning in honour of its
    late president Vaclav Havel. State institutions are flying black flags
    with others at half-mast. Concerts, exhibitions and theatrical
    performances have been largely cancelled, and casinos and gambling bars
    are closed. Prime Minister Petr Necas has asked businesses and all
    citizens to reconsider celebratory events that could be inappropriate.
    A day of mourning was last declared in 2001 to honour the victims of
    the attacks of September 11. Slovakia will hold a day of mourning for
    the passing of its former president on Friday.

    The first president of the Czech Republic, the last president of
    Czechoslovakia, and foremost a humanist of world renown, Vaclav Havel
    died in his sleep on Sunday at his cottage in Northern Bohemia. He was
    75 years old.

    ========================================================================
    Thousands join Vaclav Havel's procession
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some 10,000 people on Wednesday joined the procession with the casket
    of the late ex-president. The procession, which included 600 soldiers,
    left the Prague Crossroads spiritual centre in Old Town and crossed
    Charles Bridge on its way to Prague Castle. There, in the Castle Guards
    garrison, the former-president's casket was placed on a gun carriage,
    the same that was used during the funeral of Czechoslovakia's first
    president, T. G. Masaryk. Drawn by three pair of horses, the casket was
    taken to the Vladislav Hall of Prague Castle where it will lay in state
    until Friday's funeral.

    ========================================================================
    Klaus praises Havel for contributions to the country's international
    position prestige and authority
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Speaking at the ceremony, President Vaclav Klaus praised his
    predecessor for contributing to the Czech Republic's international
    position, prestige and authority more than anyone else. He commemorated
    Vaclav Havel as a man who courageously and consistently sacrificed
    himself for his opinions, and called upon people to seek guidance and
    inspiration in his legacy and his example, stressing that the era that
    began with the fall of communism should not end with the former
    president death. The president described Mr Havel as a distinct and
    complex personality that defied "superficial assessment."

    ========================================================================
    Czech Press Agency confirms funeral attendance
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Czech Press Agency has confirmed that the following international
    leaders will be attending Friday's state funeral: French President
    Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister David Cameron, German President
    Christian Wulff, Hungarian President Pal Schmitt, Crown Prince
    Willem-Alexander of Holland, Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski
    accompanied by former presidents Aleksander Kwasniewski and Lech
    Walesa, the president and prime minister of Slovakia, and the
    presidents of Estonia, Georgia, Austria and Slovenia. Most Other
    European countries are sending their ministers of foreign affairs;
    Russia is sending ombudsman Vladimir Lukin. From the United States,
    either President Barack Obama or Vice President Joe Biden is expected
    to arrive, accompanied by former president Bill Clinton, Secretary of
    State Hillary Clinton, and former secretary of state and Prague native
    Madeleine Albright.

    Posted Wednesday Dec 21, 2011 23:04 #
  8. spatny
    Member

    PRAGUE — Czechs and world leaders paid emotional tribute to Vaclav Havel on Friday at a pomp-filled funeral ceremony, ending a week of public grief and nostalgia over the death of the dissident playwright who led the 1989 revolution that toppled four decades of communist rule.

    Bells tolled from churches while a wailing siren brought the country to a standstill in a minute of silence for the nation's first democratically-elected president after the nonviolent "Velvet Revolution."

    Havel's wife Dagmar, family members, friends and leaders from dozens of countries gathered Friday at the towering, gothic St. Vitus Cathedral which overlooks Prague. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron were among some 1,000 mourners who bowed their heads in front of the coffin draped in the Czech colors.

    Czech President Vaclav Klaus, who was Havel's political archrival, and two friends – Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg and former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright – paid tribute to Havel at the cathedral, which dates to the 10th century and has not witnessed a state funeral since 1875.

    "We will terribly miss him but we will never, ever forget him," said Albright, who is of Czech origin, in Czech.

    In a message read at the funeral by the Vatican's former diplomatic representative in Prague, Pope Benedict XVI praised Havel. "Remembering how courageously Mr. Havel defended human rights at a time when these were systematically denied to the people of your country, and paying tribute to his visionary leadership in forging a new democratic polity after the fall of the previous regime, I give thanks to God for the freedom that the people of the Czech Republic now enjoy," he said.

    At the end of the ceremony, 21 cannon salvos were fired when the Czech national anthem was played.

    People were applauding when Havel's coffin was then carried by a military honor guard through the cathedral's Golden Gate to Prague's Strasnice crematorium for a private family funeral. The urn with Havel's ashes will be buried at his family's plot at the city's Vinohrady cemetery alongside his first wife, Olga, who died in 1996.

    Havel, whose final term in office ended in 2003, died Sunday morning in his sleep at his weekend home in the country's north. The 75-year-old former chain-smoker had a history of chronic respiratory problems dating back to his time in prison.

    Since his death, Czechs have gathered spontaneously to lay flowers and light candles at key historic sites such as the monument to the 1989 Velvet Revolution in downtown Prague, and at Wenceslas Square, where Havel once spoke before hundreds of thousands of people to express outrage at the repressive communist regime.

    Similar scenes of remembrance played out across the country – in a show of emotion not seen since the 1937 funeral of Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, Czechoslovakia's first president after the nation was founded in 1918.

    "Europe owes Vaclav Havel a profound debt," Cameron said before departing from London. "Havel led the Czech people out of tyranny ... and he helped bring freedom and democracy to our entire continent."

    Czechs packed a nearby courtyard at Prague Castle and an adjacent square to watch the funeral ceremony on giant screens.

    "He was our star, he gave us democracy," said Iva Buckova, 51, who had traveled from the western city of Plzen. "He led us through revolution. We came to see him for the last time."

    Prague Archbishop Dominik Duka, who spent time in jail with Havel under Communism, was leading the funeral mass. He was joined by Vatican envoy Giovanni Coppa and bishop Vaclav Maly, Havel's friend and fellow dissident. Poland's former President Lech Walesa – who led the anti-communist Solidarity movement – also attended.

    The Czech Philharmonic Orchestra performed parts of Requiem by Czech composer Antonin Dvorak throughout the ceremony.

    Braving the freezing cold, thousands of mourners have waited in long lines every day since Monday to file past Havel's coffin.

    Several thousand people joined Havel's widow, relatives and friends in a somber procession through the capital Wednesday as Havel's body was transported to the Prague Castle.

    In his final years, Havel made only occasional public appearances, and would often say that he had insufficient time to resume his literary work.

    The director of the theater where he began as a stagehand in 1958 before becoming a playwright – and where he said he spent the best 8 years of his life – told AP he'd started work on one last play this year. It was to be called "Sanatorium."

    "He may be able to finish it in heaven," said the director of Na Zabradli, Doubravka Svobodova."

    RIP.

    Posted Friday Dec 23, 2011 14:07 #
  9. spatny
    Member

    News Saturday, December 24th, 2011

    By: Daniela Lazarova

    * Christmas celebrations in the Czech Republic are muted in the wake of
    Vaclav Havel's death.

    * Close to four thousand people attended a memorial concert for the
    late ex-president Vaclav Havel at Prague's Lucerna Palace on Friday
    evening.

    * Nearly 30,000 people have signed a petition to rename Prague's
    international airport after the late president Vaclav Havel.

    * Thousands of people have paid their last respects to Vaclav Havel at
    Prague Castle.

    * According to a poll carried out by the SC&C agency, nine out of ten
    Czechs beleive Vaclav Havel was a good president.

    ========================================================================
    Christmas celebrations muted in wake of Havel's death
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Christmas celebrations in the Czech Republic are muted in the wake of
    Vaclav Havel's death. Many firms and institutions scrapped their
    Christmas parties and outdoor Christmas markets toned-down their events
    in a show of respect for the late president. Millions of Czechs will be
    sitting down to their traditional dinner of fried carp and potato salad
    on Saturday evening and for many people the events of the past few days
    will highlight the spiritual aspects of the holiday.

    ========================================================================
    Memorial concert for Havel at Lucerna
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Close to four thousand people attended a memorial concert for the late
    ex-president Vaclav Havel at Prague's Lucerna Palace on Friday evening.
    The concert, organized by his brother Ivan, featured the rock group The
    Plastic People of the Universe, which was closely associated with
    Vaclav Havel, US singer Suzanne Vega, Garage, Hudba Praha and the
    Velvet Underground Revival.

    The crowd enthusiastically joined in most of the songs, singing the
    well-known hits of the Plastics and joining Suzanne Vegas in a
    rendition of Tom's Diner which she played for Vaclav Havel when they
    first met in the US years ago.

    Performances were interspersed with clips from documentary films about
    the former president and tributes from friends and celebrities. The
    memorial concert was shown on a big screen on Wenceslas Square and
    carried live on Czech TV.

    ========================================================================
    "Vaclav Havel Airport" initiative gaining support
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Nearly 30,000 people have signed a petition to rename Prague's
    international airport after the late president Vaclav Havel. The
    initiative, started by film producer Fero Fenic on Monday, has already
    received the support of numerous Czech celebrities, among them Jiri
    Bartoska, Marek Eben and Zdenek Sverak, and singers Marta Kubisova and
    Hany Hegerova. The petition was also signed by Mr. Havel's brother
    Ivan. Prague Mayor Bohuslav Svoboda said this week that the City
    Council would certainly support the proposal, but he noted that the
    Ruzyne Airport was not city but state property.

    The northern Polish city of Gdansk this week announced that it was
    naming one of its streets after the late Czech president Vaclav Havel.
    City mayor Pawel Adamowicz said Mr. Havel was the "Czech Lech Walesa"
    and was greatly loved and honoured in Poland.

    ========================================================================
    Dozens of foreign dignitaries attend Vaclav Havel's funeral
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Heads of state and government from around the world gathered in
    Prague's St Vitus Cathedral on Friday to attend the state funeral of
    the late Czech ex-president Vaclav Havel. The funeral mass served by
    Prague Archbishop Dominik Duka started at noon with a minute of silence
    which was also observed throughout the country. The Czech national
    anthem was played and 21 gun salutes were fired to conclude the
    ceremony which lasted for over an hour. Some 40 countries had sent
    representatives to the funeral, among them French President Nicolas
    Sarkozy, German President Christian Wulff, US Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton, British Prime Minister David Cameron and others.

    ========================================================================
    Officials and friends pay tribute to deceased president in speeches
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Officials and friends paid tribute to the deceased president in their
    speeches following the mass. In a sermon, Archbishop Dominik Duka said
    Vaclav Havel was a person able to raise hope among Czechs and thus
    unite them. In his speech, Czech President Vaclav Klaus said that
    although many things came to an end with the departure of Vaclav Havel,
    his message that freedom was worth sacrifices would live on. Czech
    Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg vowed to strive for truth and love
    the way Mr Havel had done. The former US secretary of state Madeleine
    Albright, who is of Czech descent and was a close friend of Mr.
    Havel's, spoke in her native Czech. She said for Mr Havel conscience
    was like a muscle which needed to be worked and exercised in the face
    of adversity. A condolence letter from Pope Benedict XVI was read out
    before the mass by the former Apostolic Nuncio to the Czech Republic
    Cardinal Giovanni Coppa. In his letter the Pope paid tribute to Mr.
    Havel's visionary leadership after the fall of the communist regime.

    ========================================================================
    Havel to be buried at Vinohrady cemetery
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The family and friends of the deceased ex-president attended a private
    ceremony at Prague's Strasnice crematorium on Friday afternoon. The
    remains of the late Czech leader will be laid to rest in the family
    tomb at the nearby Vinohrady cemetery in Prague which is the final
    resting place of Vaclav Havel's first wife Olga and the late
    president's parents.

    ========================================================================
    Thousands pay last respects to Vaclav Havel
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Crowds of people gathered around the Prague Castle compound on Friday
    morning to watch the live television broadcast from St. Vitus Cathedral
    on large screens. An estimated 35,000 people queued for hours during
    the past couple of days to pay their last respects to the late
    statesman whose coffin lay in state in Prague Castle's Vladislav Hall.
    Some ten thousand also joined the funeral procession through Prague on
    Wednesday morning.

    ========================================================================
    Slovakia observes day of mourning
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Czech Republic's former federal partner Slovakia likewise observed
    a day of mourning on Friday. Slovakia's President Ivan Gasparovic and
    Prime Minister Iveta Radicova, along with former President Rudolf
    Schuster and ex-Prime Minister Mikulas Dzurinda, attended the funeral
    ceremony in Prague. Flags were flown at half mast in Slovakia and a
    special mass was held in St. Martin's cathedral in the capital
    Bratislava on Friday evening in honour of the last president of
    Czechoslovakia.

    ========================================================================
    Suu Kyi expresses sadness at death Vaclav Havel
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Burmese opposition politician and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung
    San Suu Kyi has expressed deep sadness at the death of Vaclav Havel and
    thanked him for the long-lasting support he had provided to her in her
    fight against the military regime in her country. Ms Suu Kyi's message
    was related by the Burma Center in Prague. In a statement the centre
    said that Mr Havel had been a long-term supporter of Suu Kyi and the
    pro-democracy movement in Burma and that using his influence he had
    helped to raise awareness of the human rights situation in Burma in
    Europe and the whole world.

    ========================================================================
    Poll: Most Czechs regard Havel as good president
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    According to a poll carried out by the SC&C agency, nine out of ten
    Czechs regard Vaclav Havel's terms in office positively. Twenty-three
    percent of those polled said Mr. Havel had been a good president;
    twelve percent described him as excellent. Ten percent hold a negative
    view of his presidency. The poll suggests thirty-six percent of Czechs
    believe that without Mr. Havel the Czech Republic would have never
    joined NATO. Almost 70 percent of those surveyed said they believed the
    first Czech President should have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

    Best wishes of the season to all who blog here.

    Posted Saturday Dec 24, 2011 16:48 #

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