Prague, U Zpěváčků restaurant
Na struze 1740/7, 110 00 Prague-Prague 1, Czech Republic
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Czech Children Manifest

Available in: English | Česky

Czech Children Manifest was written by Petr Placák in the restaurant U Zpěváčků in spring 1988. “I wanted to proclaim something that would by the most unfamiliar and ununderstandable to the communists. So we demanded the restoration of the Czech Kingdom. But in fact it was something that was traditional in here, unlike the governing communism. We also wanted to differentiate from the older generation of dissidents whose ideological basis were not close to our thinking, thus we understood them.” The first one who signed the manifest on the line under Petr was a writer, Jáchym Topol. “Besides classical requiremenets, such as returning the stolen properties or restoration of religious orders, the manifest was focused also on ecology. It seemed to us that the Bolsheviks treated not only people, but also nature in a horrible and unbelievable way. It was such an outcry against it.” The association of Czech Children focused on leaflets, publis street activities and protests. The first big demonstration they called through leaflets on August 21, 1988.

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Petr Placák

Petr Placák

Petr Placák (son of the Charter 77 spokesman Bedřich Placák) was a member of the youngest generation of anticommunist opposition; in the late 1980s he was one of organizers of public events against the regime. In 1982-1986 he played the clarinet in the band The Plastic People of the Universe. Under incessant bullying from State Security he worked in various manual professions, he published in samizdat (the novel Medorek and a collection of poems Obrovský zasněžený hřbitov (Huge Snow-covered Graveyard), among others). In May 1988 he participated in establishing the independent initiative Czech Children, and he wrote its monarchist manifesto: "At that time we came up with something which was totally ungraspable for the Bolsheviks. Obviously, State Security jumped at it and they had the manifesto published in the Rudé právo newspaper. In order to let people see for themselves what we were like. And thus among proclamations from brigades of milkers and socialist shock-workers, suddenly there appeared our manifesto, stating that we, Czech Children, declared that the Czech kingdom still lasted, and that we were preparing for the coming of the Czech king, which was our ultimate goal..." Petr Placák says that from 1988 he was living from one anticommunist demonstration to another, and that it was clear to him that the regime could collapse only under persistent pressure from the public. In June 1988 together with his friends they organized a pamphlet campaign against the demolition of the old Žižkov neighbourhood. Two months later, Czech Children used cyclostyled pamphlets to invite their fellow citizens to participate in a demonstration on the twentieth anniversary of August 21, 1968, a gathering to which thousands of people came. Protests on the day of the foundation of the Czechoslovak Republic on October 28, 1988, followed. In January 1989, when he attempted to commemorate the memory of Jan Palach and lay flowers at the monument of St Wenceslas, Petr Placák was arrested (not for the first time): "They arrested me on January 15th before I even managed to get to the monument on Wenceslas Square. While we waited together with other people from the opposition movement at the police station in Benedikt Street, I wrote a note on a piece of paper that we would meet again the following day. It all happened due to a ribbon, which I hid in the lining of my coat, and on which was written: ´Czech Children to Jan Palach.´ I felt sorry I was not able to place it on the St Wenceslas monument. But we managed to organize a demonstration for the following day, and this unleashed a chain reaction of protests..." Placák was released in the evening of the same day, the following day State Security arrested him again and held him in detention for two weeks. He was then given a suspended sentence. Today he believes that the demonstrations on Wenceslas Square during Palach Week marked a turning point on the Czech society's road to freedom: among other things by influencing or even changing the mentality of those who till that time had been active in the so-called grey zone. After 1989 Petr Placák completed studies of history at the Faculty of Arts at Charles University. He published several books, the most recent one being the prose work Fízl (Cop), for which he was awarded the Magnesia Litera Prize in 2008. He writes for various Czech dailies and is in charge of the cultural-social student newspaper Babylon.

Prague, U Zpěváčků restaurant

Available in: English | Česky

Originally a church dating back to the 16th century, the building later turned into a coaching inn. The restaurant with the beerhouse was founded in 1865. Noted guests included Antonín Dvořák and Bedřich Smetana. Given the proximity of the National Theatre, singers from the country’s leading troupe visited the place as well, resulting in the name “U Zpěváčků” (Singers). In the 1970s and 1980s the pub was a place where dissidents used to meet, including Václav Havel, Charter 77 spokesman and later the first President of the Czech Republic who lived nearby.

Prague, U Zpěváčků restaurant

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Czech Children Manifest

Czech Children Manifest

Petr Placák
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