History Daily - Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution Begins
Episode Date: November 17, 2025November 17, 1989. A student demonstration in Prague is violently shut down by the police, sparking the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! J...oin Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's November 17, 1989, in the streets of Prague, Czechoslovakia.
Hundreds of thousands of students gather for a demonstration.
They carry signs and chant together,
marching through the country's capital as a single mass.
The reason for this protest is as a memorial.
Exactly 50 years ago, a similar demonstration took place
to rally against the Nazi occupation of Prague.
That protest turned bloody and brutal, and several demonstrators were killed.
And when organizers asked for formal permission to stage this march,
they framed it as a way of commemorating that horrible event.
But that's not the only reason these students are gathering.
For these protesters, Czechoslovakia is still not free from a controlling global superpower.
For over 40 years, the Soviet Union has run the country with an iron fist,
tamping down on personal freedoms, the freedom of the press,
and any dissension to Soviet control.
Resistance has been growing, though, through underground channels for death.
decades, but today's protest marks a sea change. This march is the largest public demonstration
against the government in 20 years, and it's only getting bigger. The march heads towards
Vensaslaus Square, where the anti-Nazi protests took place all those years ago. As they get closer
to the city center, more and more people join in. Television crews descend on the area, broadcasting
the demonstration to homes around the country and bringing even more protesters to the streets. With
chance of freedom and 40 years or enough, the Czech people make their message loud and clear.
They want an end to the Soviet regime and for the country of Czechoslovakia to be governed by its own
people. They're determined to do it peacefully, but soon they're met with violence. As the group
approaches Venselslaas Square, the Soviet-run police decide the demonstration must be stopped.
Arms law enforcement rush into the crown, beating protesters and rounding them up to be arrested.
People who try to flee are met with blasts from water cannons and the snapping jaws of unmuzzled police dogs.
In a matter of seconds, a peaceful protest descends into chaos.
But this demonstration is just the first step in the journey to freedom.
The violent end of tonight's march only proves their point that Czech people can and must liberate their country.
Since the end of World War II, the Czechoslovakian people have fought against the Soviet occupation of their country.
time and time again their efforts were met with violence.
But the more the communist government suppresses these acts of resistance,
the stronger the opposition becomes.
Whether the leadership knows it or not, the nation is nearing a breaking point,
and the end of Czechoslovakia's communist rule will come in the form of a student's protest
on November 17, 1989.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is November 17, 1989, Czechoslovakia's Velvet Revolution begins.
It's January 5, 1968, in Prague, almost two years before a student protest will spark revolution in Czechoslovakia.
The country's communist leader, Antonin Novotny, stands before Czechoslovakia's central committee, armed with a difficult task.
Today he needs to identify and announce his successor.
Since becoming president in 1957, Novotny has faced opposition from virtually all sides.
In the post-war age, many people feel that Novotny hasn't done enough to bolster the country's economy.
Over the years, he's refused to implement practically any reform, despite recommendations made by trusted economists.
And with little change, the nation's industries have continued to flounder.
There's also the matter of the slowbacks, who have been demanding more,
autonomy from the nation of Czechoslovakia for years. Novotny hasn't satisfied these calls for
sovereignty either, which has lost him even more support. Nor does Novotny have much hope with
building a base with the country's young adults. In 1968, college students across the country
have only known Czechoslovakia as a Soviet-controlled communist nation. They've grown up facing
the restriction of personal freedoms, censorship of the press, and many other roadblocks to free expression.
Despite knowing much else, it's clear to them that something needs to change,
and to young people, Novotny's leadership and the Soviet-controlled government in general
have failed and continued to fail the people of Czechoslovakia.
Without the prospect of a new generation's support, things don't look good for Novotny.
Unable to regain any of the trust he's lost over his decade of presidency,
Novotny has little choice but to step down.
But unfortunately, finding a successor proves a difficult task.
Novotny and the Central Committee can't seem to agree on the person who should take his place.
Every time the President suggests a name, it's rejected, and the process begins again.
Frustrated and exhausted, Novotny finally offers up the name of his Slovak opponent, Alexander Dubchek.
After hours locked in a stalemate, this familiar name seems as good a choice as any,
and Dubchek is voted in unanimously by the Central Committee.
Technically, Dubchek isn't the President. He's the first Secretary of the President. He's the first Secretary of
of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.
And since he was elected as a last-minute choice,
not much is expected of him.
But Dubchec doesn't see it that way.
To him, this is an unexpected chance to enact some real change in his country.
Unlike previous leadership,
Dubcich doesn't want to uphold the status quo.
And by April, virtually all major government roles
have been peacefully transferred from more hard-line communists to reformists,
including the prime minister, the president, and several vice-premiers.
That same month, the new government rolls out the crown jewel of their collective efforts,
the action plan.
This program aims to correct the many failings of the previous government.
It includes major reforms to Czechoslovakian industry,
changes to the country's constitution,
explicitly supporting the civil rights of its citizens,
and it grants more autonomy to Slovakia.
Dubchev's administration even starts considering a future
where the Communist Party doesn't control the courts,
a division of power that would be unprecedented.
Dubchek calls this new vision, socialism with a face, and for the people of Czechoslovakia,
it's exactly the progressive change they're looking for. By June, new political parties emerged
that hadn't existed in the country since World War II. Some people even start talking about the
idea of turning Czechoslovakia into a full democracy and shedding communism completely. But this
catches the attention of the Soviets. Up until this point, the Soviet Union has been watching
Czechoslovakia's political changes from afar, but eliminating communism in the country is a step
too far, and all of a sudden, Dubcheque's so-called socialism with a face feels more like a threat
to the Soviets, and it needs to be shut down. On August 20th, Soviet forces invade Czechoslovakia,
abducting Dubchek and several other reformist officials and taking them back to Moscow.
Suddenly, the country that was enjoying a liberal reformation is under the control of the Soviet army.
For the next seven days, Czechoslovakians continue to declare their allegiance to Dubcheck
and resist the occupation in creative, nonviolent ways, like removing street signs so Soviet soldiers
get lost. But it's no use. On August 27th, Alexander Dubchek finally returns to Czechoslovakia
to tell his people that the progressives have lost. And from now on, the country will be run by the
Soviet occupation under the control of hard-line communists. After only eight months, the period of
period of liberalization that will become known as the Prague Spring will have ended,
destroying the progress Dubcheque's government made. In some ways, the country will be back to
where it was before. But for Czechoslovakians, this will mark the beginning of a long fight,
and they won't be ready to give up just yet. It's January 16, 1969, in Prague, Czechoslovak.
20-year-old university student Jan Pollock weaves his way through the bustling crowds in Vensaslaz Square.
He's headed to the National Museum, a huge palatial building at the very end of the promenade.
It's a busy Thursday, and Jan easily blends in with everyone else.
Nobody seems to pay him any mind as he crosses the street and begins walking up the stone steps of the museum.
At the top, Yon has a clear view of the square as it stretches out in front of him.
He sees countless Czechoslovakians going about their day, socializing and strolling down the street.
It's as normal a day as any, but Yon is about to change that.
He quietly removes his coat, setting it aside on a railing.
Then he pulls a bottle of gasoline out of his briefcase.
Quickly, he dowses himself, soaking his clothes from head to toe.
Then he lights a match and sets himself on fire.
Within seconds, those around Yon erupt and panic.
People rushed to him, flinging their jackets onto his body in an effort to put out the flames.
They succeed, but not in time.
Yon's entire body is scorched.
An ambulance arrives and the Yon's.
young man is rushed off to hospital. Nobody knows why Jan would do this or whether he will
survive his injuries. But within the day, Jan regains consciousness, much to the shock of doctors
caring for him. He's sustained burns on over 80% of his body, and it's unlikely that he'll
survive for more than a few days. But from his bed, he has enough energy to speak and explain
why he did what he did. In a voice barely above a whisper, Jan says that he wants the Czechoslovakian
people to wake up to the oppression they are facing. The memory of last year's failed Prague Spring
is still fresh in the minds of young people in the country, including Yon. Experiencing the Soviet
crackdown left him demoralized, and he feels that an apathetic pallor has settled over the people
of Czechoslovakia. To Jan, setting himself on fire, was a way of jolting the public into action.
The police find a note that Yon had written before going to Vensasla Square, which repeats the points he
makes from his hospital bed. And for the next few days, Jan continues talking to anyone who visits
him, declaring the need for the Czechoslovakian people to take action against the Soviet occupation
and fight for their rights. But three days after setting himself ablaze, Jan dies from his injuries.
Jan's death is treated as a horrible tragedy across the country. The side of his self-immolation
becomes a memorial space piled high with flyers and candles lit for his memory. Other student
activists protest the occupation in their own way, conducting a hunger strike for several days
on the steps of the National Museum. And all throughout the country, the resistance movement
continues to grow, though it has to be done secretly. In the years following Jan Pollock's
death, the communist leadership cracks down even harder, not just in Czechoslovakia,
but in many communist-controlled countries. But the harder the Soviets push for control,
the more the underground resistance swells. In January of 1989, demonstrators'
an event called Pollock Week, in which people are encouraged to gather in Vensasla Square to
memorialize Jan and to protest the ongoing occupation. Nearly 5,000 people show up on the first day.
It's the biggest anti-occupation gathering since the Prague Spring. The event is a peaceful
one, but there's a charge to the air. For the first time in 50 years, Czechoslovakians are taking
to the streets to protest the occupation, unafraid of the consequences. There's real energy
behind this movement, and many start to think it's time for something big.
Against the constant threat of violence from the Soviet regime,
the anti-occupation movement has been staunch in its non-violent tactics.
Soon, those beliefs will be put to the test.
In a few months, the fight for a free Czechoslovakia will reach its climax,
as regular citizens face off against the full force of the Soviet regime.
But they will prove that the strength of the people can and will prevail.
It's November 17, 1989, the day the Velvet Revolution will begin.
Fifty-three-year-old resistance leader Votsliv Havel marches toward Vensislav Square,
chanting along with a growing crowd of protesters, many of them students.
He and countless other radicals have been working toward this day for what feels like forever,
and now it's finally here, the moment when Czechoslovakians banned together to rid their country of Soviet occupation.
But Votsliv, like everyone else at the demonstration,
knows that the Soviet Union won't go quietly.
It's just a matter of time before the police show up.
And sure enough, as Votslav approaches the square,
arms law enforcement descend on the crowd.
Police officers grab protesters and beat them senseless.
Other demonstrators are dragged away and tossed into police cars.
Votslav isn't spared.
At some point in the pandemonium, the police arrest him, too.
And for the Soviet occupiers,
the capture of Votslav Havel is a major victory.
Votslav is well.
well known as the leader of the Civic Forum, a coalition of opposition movements in Czechoslovakia.
He's practically the face of the resistance, and now the Soviets have him behind bars.
While Votslav sits in jail, a propagandist newspaper tries to paint his arrest as the death knell of the
protest movement. Their angle is that the resistance will be powerless with its leader under arrest,
but the people of Czechoslovakia quickly proved to the Soviets that their movement is much bigger
than one man. In the days following Votslav's arrest, Demmes'
...demonstrators call for a country-wide worker strike, along with daily demonstrations.
Industry grinds to a halt, and the city streets are overrun with people demanding an end to the Soviet occupation.
Demonstrators make it clear to leadership that they will not return to work until the Soviets step down,
and this tactic eventually works.
On November 28, nearly two weeks after the first mass protest, the Soviet Union cedes power.
The communists agree to a coalition government with the...
newly freed Vostlov Havel serving as interim president. With this, the resistance movement has won,
and the Czechoslovakian people have rested back control of their country and managed to do it without violence.
Voslav Havel will be re-elected in 1990 in the country's first ever open election. He'll maintain his
position until the so-called velvet divorce when Czechoslovakia is separated into Slovakia and the Czech Republic.
But even then, from 1993 until 2003, Voslav Havel would continue to
serving as president of the newly formed Czech Republic.
The Velvet Revolution, so named because of its nonviolent nature,
will become a worldwide symbol of resistance to oppression.
Its spirit will live on in ongoing forms of protest in the region,
and for years to come, young people will still gather in Vensas-Las Square
to call for change in a myriad of forms.
The fight for a better future will continue,
but the current generation has the Velvet Revolution to thank for paving the way
on November 17, 1989.
Next on History Daily, November 18th, 1928.
Walt Disney short film Steamboat Willie hits theaters,
and the world is introduced to Mickey Mouse for the first time.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham,
audio editing by Mohamed Shazee, sound designed by Misha Stanton,
music by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written and research by Georgia Hampton.
Executive producers are Alexander Curry Buckner for Airship,
and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.
