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The Czech National Day: celebrating a state that no longer exists
ICE ^ | 27.10.2006 | David Vaughan

Posted on 10/28/2006 2:14:46 PM PDT by lizol

The Czech National Day: celebrating a state that no longer exists

27.10.2006 - David Vaughan

The 28th October is an unlikely date for Czechs to be celebrating their national holiday. After all, it commemorates the founding of a state that no longer exists. Czechoslovakia was established in 1918 with the collapse of the Habsburg monarchy at the end of World War I, and was relegated to the history books 74 years later, when Czechs and Slovaks - or rather their political leaders - decided to go their separate ways at the end of 1992. While Slovaks quickly forgot their old national day, Czechs went on as if nothing had happened. To this day wreathes are laid, the national anthem is played, and except when the holiday falls on a weekend everybody enjoys a day off work.

To talk about this paradox, I'm joined by the award-winning novelist and journalist, Martin Simecka. Until recently he was editor-in-chief of the Slovak daily SME, and he is now just taking over at the helm of the Czech political weekly Respekt. He is the son of Milan Simecka, one the most influential dissident philosophers of communist Czechoslovakia, and with an upbringing that spanned both parts of the former Czechoslovakia, Martin has very personal insights into the complexities of the Czech and Slovak national identities.

"My parents were Czechs but they moved to Bratislava - to Slovakia - in 1953 and I was born in 1957 in Bratislava. So I'm by birth Slovak, but I'm bilingual, we spoke at home Czech and Slovak, but I have lived all my life in Bratislava. But my whole family are in the Czech Republic. So from my education in my family I feel more like Czech, from Czech literature and so on, but my schools were Slovak. So I'm divided in my heart. My father used to say that he was divided one half Czech, one half Slovak. I feel the same."

To what extent was the division of Czechoslovakia at the end of 1992 a trauma for you?

"Yes. It was traumatic, but I was not the only one. My brother lives in Prague, for example, so it was a division directly in my family. But the biggest trauma wasn't actually from the split itself, but from what I was afraid - and it was fulfilled - would happen with Slovakia after the split. It happened that Vladimir Meciar and his regime ruled the country for six years. It was obvious that after the split this would happen."

This is a programme to mark the Czech national holiday on 28th October. Isn't it a strange paradox that we are marking a holiday that commemorates the foundation of a state that no longer exists?

"Well, for me it is a little bit confusing that Czechs have this day as a holiday and they celebrate it actually as the founding of the Czech Republic! They don't speak so much about Czechoslovakia, but about the Czech Republic. So they celebrate their own state now in memory of 1918. This is understandable, of course, as they can't celebrate Czechoslovakia, that's clear, but Slovaks have no holiday on that day and except for a couple of people who will probably organize a kind of very small meeting where maybe a few dozen people will come, nobody probably will commemorate it in Slovakia."

Doesn't it, in a sense, confirm what some Slovaks have complained all along, that Czechoslovakia was essentially a Czech state and therefore many Czechs have no problem taking on Czechoslovakia and the legacy of Czechoslovakia as there own?

"This is a feeling, and quite a general feeling in Slovakia, but I think it is not true. Historically it is not true, because for Slovaks it was the first state they had, where they had felt at home, so this is a confusion again. I would say that for Slovaks it would be much more important to celebrate this day than for Czechs. But they don't. This is about how Slovaks see their own history and it's about an irrational feeling that Slovaks were not quite recognized as a nation in that state. Again I don't think it's true, although, of course, there are some historical facts: Edvard Benes [the second president of Czechoslovakia] especially didn't feel the Slovaks to be a nation, but this shouldn't be the reason for Slovaks not to celebrate that day. But you can't help it. In Slovakia you wouldn't now find many people who would commemorate that day as something very important - except historians, who would say that this is certainly the biggest day for the Slovak nation in the last hundred years."

And just to return to the paradox that we're marking the holiday of a state that doesn't exist - doesn't it in a way reflect the very strange nature of Czechs' and Slovaks' relationship to their national identity? For Poles, for example, it is much more straightforward.

"Yes. If you compare it to other nations you are right. Both the Czechs and Slovaks are now more oriented to the present day than the past, because it's so difficult to identify yourself with this anniversary, as you have to understand many things. Because this state doesn't exist any more it's a complicated situation. So for people it's easier not to talk about that so much, and they try to occupy themselves just with the history of the last few decades, rather than with something that is so far away in history. But you are right. I don't feel very much, either in the Czech Republic or in Slovakia, an interest in the deeper past of these nations. That's something very unusual, compared to Poland or even Hungary."

For a modern, forward-looking Europe where there is a lot of talk about integration, it sounds, in a way, like a very healthy attitude towards your nationhood.

"It may look like an advantage these days, but the problem is that it's not something natural and healthy. I think that people rather don't want to know about history very much, which is not good. If Czechs and Slovaks will be those Europeans who don't care very much about their own identity and past, I don't think that it's something Europe should be happy about."

You grew up during the period of "normalization" when, after the Soviet invasion of 1968, there was a gradual re-imposition of hard-line Brezhnevite rule in Czechoslovakia. How was the 28th October celebrated then as the national day?

"The 28th October was actually a day that was not very much celebrated. It was difficult to talk about it because for the communists it was a date that marked the founding of the first, capitalist Czechoslovakia. So for them it was very difficult to find a way of celebrating that day and saying on the other hand that actually it was not good because the [pre-war] republic was bourgeois-democratic. It was so confusing for people that the regime itself rather preferred not to celebrate it at all."

Does it make any sense to be celebrating the 28th October as the national holiday in the Czech Republic in 2006?

"Definitely yes. What I would prefer, on the other hand, would be for Czechs to celebrate not only our own state, but also the state which is our closest neighbour, that means the Slovaks. That would be fair. What disturbs me is that this is not mentioned at all."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: czech; czechoslovakia; czechrepublic; slovakia
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1 posted on 10/28/2006 2:14:48 PM PDT by lizol
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To: MelonFarmerJ; Jan Hus; Little Bill; floridavoter2; PoParma; goarmy; G8 Diplomat; mick; PaulJ; ...
Eastern European ping list


FRmail me to be added or removed from this Eastern European ping list

2 posted on 10/28/2006 2:15:09 PM PDT by lizol (Liberal - a man with his mind open ... at both ends)
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To: lizol
This is a programme to mark the Czech national holiday on 28th October. Isn't it a strange paradox that we are marking a holiday that commemorates the foundation of a state that no longer exists?

But doesn't it still signify their separation for the Austro-Hungarian empire? Prior to WWI, what are now the Czech Republic and Slovakia were provinces of the Austro-Hungarian empire ruled by the Hapsburgs.

3 posted on 10/28/2006 3:07:55 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative
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To: lizol

Mmm.... Czech dark beer....


4 posted on 10/28/2006 3:09:23 PM PDT by GSlob
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To: lizol
My grandmother, who was an immigrant from Slovakia, used to complain to my mother about how the Czechs forced Slovakia into union with them. The Slovaks had been trying to get out of that "forced marriage" for decades. The "velvet divorce" finally gave them the opportunity. No wonder they don't celebrate the Czech national day, while the Czechs still do.
5 posted on 10/28/2006 3:59:51 PM PDT by JoeFromSidney (My book is out. Read excerpts at www.thejusticecooperative.com)
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To: lizol

Bump for later reading.


6 posted on 10/28/2006 4:03:51 PM PDT by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity'. It's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: GSlob
Roast pork, sauerkraut and dumplings!

Svickova! Did I spell that right? ;^)

7 posted on 10/28/2006 4:12:40 PM PDT by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity'. It's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: 4Freedom
" Svickova! Did I spell that right? ;^)"

Yup!

8 posted on 10/28/2006 4:36:18 PM PDT by Think free or die
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To: Paleo Conservative
"But doesn't it still signify their separation for the Austro-Hungarian empire? Prior to WWI, what are now the Czech Republic and Slovakia were provinces of the Austro-Hungarian empire ruled by the Hapsburgs."

Indeed it does. Quite a few Czech-Americans observe it. I wouldn't be surprised to see it drop off in the Czech Republic now, and even more in Slovakia. I find in talking to my cousins that the study of history was greatly diluted during the years they were growing up under socialism. They knew that the stuff they were being taught was heavy on B.S., but they didn't have the full scope of what was missing. Many of the history texts were revised or destroyed in these years, resulting in some gaps in what is commonly studied and known. Even well educated people will sometimes admit to rather a limited knowledge of their national history (by European standards). They are busy earning a living and raising kids, like adults all over the world. There's limited time available for going back and learning that which was missed in formal studies. I've seen other weakening in cultural and folk traditions as the Czech Republic becomes increasingly re-integrated into the European mainstream and the pace becomes more hectic.

9 posted on 10/28/2006 4:44:08 PM PDT by Think free or die
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To: 4Freedom

You spelled it OK, but I'm racking my brain at the following problem: how come that the people with enough taste buds to create the best beer in the world somehow fell woefully short in other parts of their cuisine? This belongs to the more fundamental mysteries.


10 posted on 10/28/2006 5:04:44 PM PDT by GSlob
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To: lizol
How quickly we forget. There was another piece to the old Checkoslovakia. I think it was and may still be called Ruthenia. It was detached as a part of the SOVIET's assumption of eastern Poland and maybe some parts of Romania. I am not sure of the Romanian part.
11 posted on 10/28/2006 6:24:41 PM PDT by Whispering Smith
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To: Paleo Conservative
Yes, Austro Hungary included Bosnia, Bohemia, Moravia, parts of Poland, and Hungary up to Bukovina which became part of Romania after 1918. It was a multinational empire in which the Germans, the dominant ruling group, where already a minority.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus

12 posted on 10/28/2006 6:32:00 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: lizol
>>>>>>"My parents were Czechs but they moved to Bratislava - to Slovakia - in 1953 and I was born in 1957 in Bratislava. So I'm by birth Slovak, but I'm bilingual, we spoke at home Czech and Slovak, but I have lived all my life in Bratislava.<<<<

Nope, he is Slovakian-born Czech."Slovak" is ethnicity, Slovakian is citizenship. Being born in one country does not make you member of people living in that country, but make you citizen.

13 posted on 10/28/2006 8:09:46 PM PDT by DTA (Mr. President, Condy is asleep at the wheel !)
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To: GSlob
"...how come that the people with enough taste buds to create the best beer in the world somehow fell woefully short in other parts of their cuisine?

I enjoyed Czech cooking, myself. Wholesome, hardy, flavorful and satisfying are the words that come to mind not frilly like French cuisine. More functional than decorative.

Food for folks that work hard, play hard and drink hard in all kinds of weather. ;^)

14 posted on 10/29/2006 2:59:33 PM PST by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity'. It's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: lizol

I know this is a serious article, but I am seriously craving kolaches right now...


15 posted on 10/29/2006 3:09:36 PM PST by Maeve
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To: 4Freedom

Well, when I was there I found it too heavy and incipid. But de gustibus non disputandum est.


16 posted on 10/29/2006 4:03:21 PM PST by GSlob
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To: DTA
My parents were Czechs but they moved to Bratislava - to Slovakia - in 1953 and I was born in 1957 in Bratislava.

snip...

Nope, he is Slovakian-born Czech."Slovak" is ethnicity, Slovakian is citizenship. Being born in one country does not make you member of people living in that country, but make you citizen.

My parents were Czechs but they moved to Los Angeles- to America- in 1958 and I was born in 1960 in Los Angeles.


So you are saying I am not an American? True I am an American born Czech but I am American.

If what you say is true, when does anyone become American?

17 posted on 10/29/2006 4:29:18 PM PST by It's me
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To: GSlob
Try Czech restaurants here in the states. I believe you'll find their preparation benefits from the ready availability of reasonably priced high quality ingredients.

Things may have improved dramatically in Eastern Europe, but it will be a while before their marketplace is on a par with ours.

18 posted on 10/29/2006 7:03:32 PM PST by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity'. It's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: 4Freedom

If you want authentic cuisine, then check a "hospoda" in Prague, or still better in a non-touristy provincial town. Yes, "u Maliru" on Mala Strana in Prague is a good restaurant, but it is atypical and not representative of national cuisine. Ditto for the Czech restaurants in the States.


19 posted on 10/29/2006 7:15:34 PM PST by GSlob
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To: It's me
"when does anyone become American?"
Depends on what the meaning of "is" is. There is genetics, there is nationality/citizenship, and then there is a civilizational [sociological] affiliation. Genetics one cannot assume, nationality/citizenship is afforded by the others, civilizational affiliation one could assume [or discard and change, with some effort] all by oneself. So which one do you mean by an "American"?
20 posted on 10/29/2006 9:00:47 PM PST by GSlob
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