Tomáš
Masaryk, Founder and first President of Czechoslovakia
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It
is never a good sign when your national
legislature cannot agree on the name
of your country—or the punctuation of
the name. It is a worse sign when the
argument gets so nasty that the world
press begins to mock it as the Hyphen
War. It was certainly not a good
omen for, as Prince might have
constructed it, the Nation Formerly
Known as the Czechoslovak Socialist
Republic.
The
nation came into existence in the tumultuous aftermath of World War I. Its boundaries,
as established by the Treaty of Versailles,
included the largely ethnic Czech
lands of former Bohemia and Moravia in the west, and Slovakia which also encompassed
significant areas ethnic Poles to
the north and Ruthenia to the south
east. All of these were within the
border of the former Austro-Hungarian
Empire. Czechs land included a crescent
along its western rim which included a German
speaking majority which included much of the new country’s heavy industry.
Historically
the Czechs had been administered by the Austrians who had not interfered with
their ethnic identity. Slovakia and
Ruthenia, however, came to the Empire as part of the Kingdom of Hungary and continued to be administered by Hungarians
who pursued a vigorous policy of forced Magyarization
on their ethnic minorities. Those
regions were also more agricultural, far less industrialized and urban than
Czech lands. These differences
contributed to strains from the beginning.
But
the common cause of independence allowed the philosophy professor and Czech
nationalist democrat Tomáš Masaryk to cobble together the Czechoslovak National Council during
the war which eventually was recognized as a government in exile in recognition of the contributions of volunteer Czechoslovak Legion units
raised to fight the Central Powers in
France, Russia, and Italy.
With his enormous prestige Masaryk was elected president of the new
nation, originally named Czecho-Slovakia,
and helped create a constitutional, parliamentary
democracy. An opponent of both German nationalism and Soviet Marxism, Masaryk became the
beau ideal in the west of a Central
European democrat. Like many Czech
he had been raised a Catholic but
had left the faith behind to become a Humanist
heavily influenced by his American Unitarian
wife.
Masaryk
reflected the sophisticated, cosmopolitan nature of Czech society,
especially in the capital of Prague,
considered the Paris of Slav lands and the most westernized capital in Eastern Europe. Moreover it was prosperous—at the creation
of the nation it encompassed more than 80% of the total industrial capacity of
the old Hapsburg Empire. And most of this industrial capacity being
far from the front lines of the war was intact.
So the new nation came into existence as one of the top industrial
nations in the world. Unfortunately,
most of the heaviest industry, including steel
production, was located in that
majority German crescent and owned largely by German banks and corporations. The Slovak lagged far behind in development
and tended to look culturally to the east.
A
new constitution, crafted with Masaryk’s blessing, renamed the nation Czechoslovakia in 1920. Under its term he was re-elected three times
in 1920, ’27and ’34. His nation thrived through the 1920’s as
neighboring German was ravaged by hyperinflation
and unemployment and the Soviet Union to the east struggled to
recover from a long Civil War and
not always successful experiments in rapid
industrialization and a command
economy. Moreover, it fared better than most industrialized nations during
the world-wide Depression of the ‘30’s. He managed to keep the sometimes fractious nation together through 10 changes of ministries before retiring
due to old age and infirmity on December 14, 1935 as Hitler was ominously consolidating his power in Germany. Less than two years later he was dead.
Meanwhile
Nazi agents in the German majority areas
were agitating there to destabilize the Czechoslovakian government. In September 1938 the former Western allies
led by Neville Chamberlain signed
the Munich Agreement with Germany in
hopes of mollifying its expansionist ambitions.
This appeasement policy handed
over the Bohemian, Moravian and Czech Silesian
borderlands called the Sudetenland by
Hitler to Germany and allowed for the Czech minorities there to be forcefully
expelled. With no allies to support it
the Czechoslovakian government was forced to agree to the annexation, but
Masaryk’s hand-picked successor President Edvard
Beneš resigned and fled to London.
Czechoslovakia
and its dismemberment during World War II.
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A
weakened Second Republic, re-named Czecho-Slovakia was declared, which was soon
forced to cede much of southern Slovakia to Hungary and areas of the north to
Poland. The nation continued to unravel.
Slovakia declared its independence in March 1938 and Hitler assumed
control of Czech lands on March 15, 1939 claiming them as the German Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. The same day the Carpatho-Ukraine—the former Ruthenia, declared its independence
from Slovakia and was immediately invaded by Hungary which went on to gobble up
adjacent areas of Slovakia. After 21
years in existence and as the only Eastern European nation to maintain itself
as a functioning and stable democracy for the whole period, Masaryk’s cherished
republic ceased to exist.
There
were notable and highly effective resistance
movements in both the Czech and Slovak regions. But the Czech resistance looked to London for
support and to a Government in Exile headed by Beneš and operated mostly in
small, urban cells. The Slovaks looked
to the Soviets and organized partisan irregulars
who operated in larger units in the rural countryside taking advantage of
the cover of the rugged Carpathians.
The
Third Czechoslovakian Republic was
declared in April of 1945 following the collapse of Germany. Beneš returned as President and issued
decrees ordering the forced removal of 2.9 million ethnic Germans. A National
Front government was installed dominated by three socialist or Marxist parties
which had dominated the Resistance movements—the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Party, and the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party with minority representation from
non-socialist parties.
By agreement at Yalta, the country had been liberated by the Red Army which was greeted as heroes in all parts of the nation. The Soviets were soon able to exert practical control over the country. In spring elections in 1946 the Communists won a plurality in Czech regions and the anti-communist won and absolute majority in Slovakia. But the Communists were able to form a coalition government. Beneš, who had backed anti-communist slates in both half of the country, remained as president.
By agreement at Yalta, the country had been liberated by the Red Army which was greeted as heroes in all parts of the nation. The Soviets were soon able to exert practical control over the country. In spring elections in 1946 the Communists won a plurality in Czech regions and the anti-communist won and absolute majority in Slovakia. But the Communists were able to form a coalition government. Beneš, who had backed anti-communist slates in both half of the country, remained as president.
In
a controversy over whether or not Czechoslovakia should participate in the Marshall Plan, which Moscow opposed, in March 1947 the
Communists staged a coup d’état forcing Beneš to dismiss the government and
accept one completely dominated by the Communists. Days later the Jan Masaryk Foreign
Minister, likely leader of a democratic movement, and son of the nation’s
founder was found dead in his pajamas in the courtyard of the Foreign
Ministry. His death was ruled a suicide,
which almost no one believes.
The
new Communist dominated National
Assembly approved the Ninth-of-May
Constitution declaring Czechoslovakia a People’s Democracy modeled on the Soviet Union. Beneš refused to sign the document, resigned
on June 7, 1948. Already in poor health
following two strokes, he died at his home, under close watch by the
Communists, on September 3 the same year.
Czechoslovakia
was soon under the complete domination of the Soviet Union. In the 50’s when some leading local Communist
figures were suspected of being too culturally close to the west—including those
who had served in the International
Brigades during the Spanish Civil
War and who had contact with the British during the Resistance, scores were
arrested and many leaders were put on Stalinist
show trials. 15 former top leaders
were tried, all convicted and 11 sentenced to death. Stalinism exerted and iron grasp on the Czechoslovakian
Communists which would last longer and remain stronger than elsewhere in
Eastern Europe.
In
1960 yet another constitution re-named the country once again to the Czechoslovak
Socialist Republic. Stalinist command
economy policies proved disastrous from one of the top ten industrial nations
in the world, production plunged to among the lowest levels in Europe. Extremely oppressive monitoring of universities and cultural institutions crushed what had once been a flower in
Europe.
Students battle tanks during the 1968 Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. |
In
1968 a Slovak reformer, Alexander Dubček
was elected First Secretary Communist
Party on a program of de-Stalinization. His liberalization policies were wildly
popular and set off a near orgy of suppressed political and self-expression,
most of it hostile to the Soviet Union and Warsaw
Pact. Dubček refused to retreat from
his position and allowed the Prague
Spring to flourish. It was too much
for Moscow and its partners. Led by the
Soviets, Warsaw Pact troops from every country except Romania invaded Czechoslovakia on August 20. Dubček declared the invasion to be illegal
but was quickly arrested and swooped to Moscow for “deliberations.”
Hardline
Slovak Gustáv Husák became First
Secretary of the Party and later President.
More than a third of all party members were purged as liberals. The regime became even more repressive and
re-emphasized a command economy that crippled some gains earlier in the decade
that had brought Slovak production and incomes to nearly a par with the Czechs.
When
Mikhail Gorbachev initiated his
reform policy of perestroika in 1987
Husák gave little more than lip service to instituting liberalizing reform. In fact, he defied Kremlin directives. In 1988 long pent-up tensions boiled up in
the first large anti-communist action in years at the March 25 Candle demonstration in Bratislava.
As Gorbachev had feared, the repressive regime was ripe for popular
rebellion and the USSR signaled it was not going to bail out Husák with a
repeat of the 1968 invasion. More
demonstrations broke out in Prague on the 20th anniversary of the Soviet invasion
and continued into the next year.
On
January 16 students in Bratislava launched mass
pro-democracy demonstrations, joined the next day by Prague students. After heavy police repression the loosely
organized reform Czech dissidents of the movement known as Charter 77 united to become the
Civic Forum led by one of the nation’s most noted intellectuals, the playwright Václav Havel. A parallel organization the Public Against Violence arose in Slovakia. Each shunned the use of the word party
because of its tainted association with the Communists. Public support for the two groups swelled to
the millions from all levels of society.
The
Communist Party, without support from the Soviet Union and unable to now even
rely on its own military, collapsed. President Husák and his puppet Party
Secretary were forced to resign and the party was too weakened to even offer
reformed leadership.
Czechoslovakian
President Václav Havel and a cartoon mocking his predicament in the Hyphen War.
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On
December 29, 1989 Havel was elected President by the National Assembly. One of his first actions was to ask to rename
the country the Czechoslovak Republic
simply dropping the word Socialist. He
did not anticipate that this would be in anyway controversial. After all it was the name of the country
through most of its existence, between 1920 and 1939 and again from 1945 to
1950. So of course, it was immediately
controversial.
The
Slovaks now claimed that this was a slight against their co-equal status. They insisted on hyphenating the name to the Czecho-Slovak
Republic or, better yet, the Czecho-Slovak
Federation. They could also point to
the use of this form between 1918 and 1920 and during the German dominated days
of the Second Republic in 1938 and ’39.
In retrospect, perhaps they should not have brought the last example
up. But the amicable Havel was willing
to placate Slovak sensitivities in the name of national unity and quickly
agreed to the Czecho-Slovak Republic.
That
set off the Czech who now felt insulted.
With frequent angry debates covered with ill-disguised glee by the world
press, the issue settled into a stalemate that brought almost all other business
before the Assembly to a halt.
On
March 29, 1990 the stalemate seemed broken with the adoption by the Assembly of
a compromise name--Czechoslovak
Federative Republic. In a nifty
trick, the new name was to be spelled without a hyphen in Czech and with a
hyphen in Slovak.
Yet
even this solution wasn’t permanent. The
Slovaks came to believe that the Czechs were insisting that it was a dash, not
a hyphen, in the Slovak name. That made a difference because in both Czech and
Slovak grammar a hyphen represented
a connection between equals while a
dash meant something else. This
objection is not clear because a dash and hyphen are represented by different
words in Slovakian but by the same word—pomlčka.
Back
to the drawing board. On April 20 the name was changed again to the Czech and Slovak Federative Republic. This time it stuck even though it
violated a strict rule in both languages that only the first word in a multiple
word name be capitalized. With linguistic purists—a strong voice in
both nationalist movements—holding their noses the new name went into effect.
But
it did not last long. The bitter divisions exposed by the Hyphen War continued
to fester over more substantial issues.
Effective government was all but impossible.
In
late 199s the Federal Assembly, divided along national lines, barely cooperated
enough to pass a law officially separating
the two nations. On 1 January 1993,
the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic simultaneously came
into existence.
By
any spelling Czechoslovakia ceased to exist.
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