Sunday, November 19th, 2017 November 17th, 1989 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two days ago, we had a national holiday, one of the most important in our country - commemorating November 17, 1989, when communist regime in then Czechoslovakia wrote the last chapter of its existence. Peaceful student demonstration was brutally stopped by police forces, people beaten to blood. Communist media were silent about the violence, but in just few days quite everybody knew, protests started in every larger city and in the beginning of December it was all over - after 41 years. S ince the end of WWII all right-wing parties were banned in Czechoslovakia as they supposedly collaborated with Nazi regime, so even in the period between 1945 and 1948, which is now considered as being more-or-less democratic, we had only four legal political parties and all of them had "people's", "social" or "communist" in the name. Most of industry was nationalized without compensation. More than 2.5 million of Germans, who lived here for half a millennium and were the second largest nationality in pre-war Czechoslovakia (after Czechs and before Slovaks), were permanently expelled, their citizenship was revoked and property confiscated. Not a very good era to live, but the worst was yet to start. In February 1948, communists used constitutional crisis to get rid of two of the other parties and absorbed the third, creating a single-party government. Soon constitution was amended and Communist party of Czechoslovakia was constituted as "the only leading force in the state". Political trials begun, more than two hundred people were executed, thousands sentenced to decades in prison or forced to work in uranium mines (almost all of our uranium was exported to USSR, to be used in atomic bombs). Farmers were forced to give all their property to collective farms, private entrepreneurs were at first not allowed to have employees (only state-owned companies could employ people) and then completely banned within few years. Borders were closed and on the west side of the country "enhanced" with electric fences, mine fields and men with dogs and sub-machine guns. Nothing could be done without consent of the Communist party. People were forced to cooperate or brainwashed by state propaganda to do so voluntarily. You couldn't hope for a good job or for your kids to study, if you weren't loyal citizen of your socialist motherland or even better - member of the party. That's why there were one and half million party members in a ten million nation. The only reform movement - in 1968 - was suppressed by five armies of fellow socialist countries and after that yet another round of purges started. This time nobody was executed, people even didn't go to prison, but they lost their jobs or were thrown out of universities. And since everybody was supposed to work, both usually meant much worse job. In the November days, 28 years ago, I was six years old. I remember just few things from the era before, like calling kindergarten teachers "comrade teacher" or being frequently told not to say things I heard at home to anyone outside the family. I know most of the stuff from my family members or from history books. And I'm quite happy the world today is the way it is - without November 17, 1989 it would be much different and certainly not better.