
Past, Present, and Future: When Legitimate Anticommunism Becomes a Danger for Czech Democracy
12. 8. 2023 / Muriel Blaive
čas čtení
12 minut
In his recent
piece in Britské listy, which was itself a reaction to the
defense of Josef Baxa’s nomination to the Constitutional Court by
Boris Cvek also
in Britské listy, Jan
Čulík kindly
recalled my research in České Velenice. In it I had showed that
even in a localized, extreme version of the communist dictatorship,
the regime found some ways of accommodating the needs of the workers:
the latter were allowed to swim in a biotope pool located in the
middle of the border forbidden zone in an exotic landscape of control
towers and armed border guards, as well as to pick mushrooms and
blueberries amidst the same armed guards while enemies of socialism
were presumably reduced to slaloming between them on their path to
freedom. This shenanigan was justified by the need of the regime to
please its public opinion beyond its usual display of force and
restraint. On the other hand, Jan
Čulík also
underlined that certain professions were discredited beyond repair
under normalization, amongst which those of judge, soldier,
procurator, and policeman, so that a certain tolerance vis-à-vis the
“social contract” is finding its limit here. The behavior of such
professions, he wrote, “shows that they are capable of
collaborating with whatever regime.”
“Reality is always more
complicated”
This is of course true to a
point, and difficult to disagree with. And yet. As often, I would
argue that things might not be so black and white. As the very motto
of Britské listy puts it, “Reality is always more complicated.”
I can think of not a few individuals who, as far as I can judge and
beyond an obvious reconstruction bias (the reality of their past
behavior is not easy to judge from today’s point of view), seem to
have remained decent people no matter their profession and the timing
in which they exercised it. For example in České Velenice’s train
station, a particularly harsh, policed institution since it was the
last stop before the Iron Curtain, the station master who was in
charge before 1989, of course a party member, remained in place well
into the 2010s, not because he was an apparatchik appointed by the
regime, but because he was a genuinely nice person and a boss liked
and respected by his employees. He was put in place by the regime,
yes, but he was freely elected and reelected after 1989 by his
employees. The way he handed me the keys to his office so I could
stay in it alone and study the archives after hours was not exactly
the behavior of someone who had something to be ashamed of. Did he
know at the time of his nomination what the regime had done in the
1950s? He assured me he did not. Is this true? Of course I cannot
say. What I can report is that in 1990, since there were no more May
Day parades in Czechoslovakia he proudly went to the May Day parade
in Vienna, which would seem to indicate that he held genuine
left-wing ideals. As many Communists who had been engaged in the
public sphere before 1989, he remained in the party and pursued his
involvement in the town council after 1989. He stepped down only in
1992, somewhat discouraged by the new capitalist mentality frenzy.
But even the position of station
master was not one of those compromized professions Jan
Čulík mentions.
No matter: I happen to have interviewed also a former policeman,
Vladimír Dzuro. Why did he become an officer of the criminal police
in the 1980s? Because he wanted to catch criminals. This is hardly a
reprehensible aim – even under a dictatorship, a society might wish
not to let murderers run loose in its midst. Let us repeat the cycle
of questions: did he know at the time of his nomination what the
regime had done in the 1950s? He assured me he did not. Is this true?
Of course I cannot say. What I can say is that even though he was a
compulsory party member, had been appointed by the regime, and
belonged to the repressive apparatus (even if repression was not part
of his own professional daily assignment), he made a spectacular and
deserved career after 1989 as one of the most distinguished
representatives of the Czech Republic in international police and
judicial institutions: after serving at Interpol, he became the only
Czech investigator at the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia, then pursued his career at the UN.
Obviously, a newly established
democracy cannot conjure uninvolved policemen and judges out of thin
air. The new, democratic police and justice forces after 1989 had to
be made at first of communist regime policemen and judges. As a side note, Mr
Dzuro was not called for duty to maintain order in the streets of
Prague on the evening of 17 November 1989, nor before or in the days
thereafter, even though his unit was on stand-by. But he could have.
What would he have done? His career could have been very different
after that. Does this make him a potentially bad person? This is the
whole question. My tentative answer is that there probably were
decent people even amongst the police force, just as there probably
were unsavory characters even amongst the dissidents. Humanity does
not always pick sides and chance can genuinely change human destinies
in either direction. I believe it was Václav Havel who claimed one
could become a dissident just by happenstance, as the sheer result of
a given set of circumstances.
One rule which we might derive
from these personal, concrete examples is that overall judgements on
a group of people might be true in general, but they are not always
true for individuals, so that the risk of injustice in this
pre-ordained collective judgement is real. Examples are rife in the
history of dealing with the communist past in post-1989 Czechia. The
most obvious among them is the 1992 Cibulka list, an unofficial list
of former secret police collaborators smuggled out of the Ministry of
Interior’s archives. Yes, it is true that a large part, probably
most, of the persons on the list were former collaborators of the
StB. In many cases, the shame these people experienced when seeing
their name on the now published list was the only retribution they
ever encountered, and they arguably got what they deserved. But there
are two caveats: not all people on the list were “guilty”; and
not all people who were *not* on the list were innocent. And to
finish answering to Jan Čulík,
who amongst us can be absolutely certain they would never collaborate
with any regime?
The hypocrisy of the
anticommunists
This is where hypocrisy enters
the stage as the main character of the story. It is quite amusing to
consider the personal path of the most prominent of our
anticommunists and chief lesson-givers. Take for instance Eduard
Stehlík, the head of the governing board of ÚSTR, who studied
Russian and became an employee of the Military Historical Institute
before the revolution. Take
Naděžda Kavalírová,
long a symbol of anticommunism, also former head of the ÚSTR
board as representative of the Confederation of Political Prisoners,
whose husband was a member of the communist
party. Take the darling of the anticommunist media, Petr Blažek,
who, despite his young age (he was 16 in 1989), was already a member
of the socialist youth. Take the founder and first director of ÚSTR,
Pavel Žáček, as well as current board member and beacon of the
anticommunist movement, Monika
MacDonagh-Pajerová,
who were both journalism students before 1989. It is not difficult to
imagine what career these personalities would have pursued had the
Velvet Revolution not taken place. Pavel Žáček might well have
ended as editor-in-chief of Rudé právo rather than ÚSTR director,
who knows. What is relevant here is that the narrative of these
personalities on their own moral integrity is based not on their
personal courage, but on the fall of communism, for which they had
done little or nothing – while those who had really done much, like
Petr Uhl or Václav Havel, but also small hands who were not
remembered by history but who challenged the regime by their everyday
way of being before 1989, i.e. genuinely brave people, were the least
boastful about it. What our anticommunists all have in common is
their absolute certainty that their personal case is “special”, a
level of self-stylization which can only call for a good measure of
eye-rolling. Other people allegedly irremediably compromised
themselves and can be freely pilloried, but with them it is
unfailingly a “different story.”
It is not a different story. It
is exactly the story of Czech society.
Without knowing anything specific
about Josef Baxa and Robert Fremr, we can generically argue that a
bad person under communism remains a bad person under capitalism.
Surely, we all have made the experience of meeting a personality of
whom we just know they would have been the type to denounce us to the
StB, even if they were small children or weren’t even born in 1989.
There is simply such a personality type. I would argue that with the
benefit of hindsight, rather than professing necessarily murky
judgments on people for what they shortly did or did not do before
1989, unless of course interconvertible documentation is available
and their actions are clearly reprehensible, we now have ample
opportunity to judge what they have done in the 34 years since 1989,
and this is much more relevant – cf. the path of Petr Pavel or of
Vladimír Dzuro. To live in the past incurs the real danger of
endangering the future – and of reproducing the vindictive
communist mentality.
ÚSTR is becoming a public
menace
It is perfectly logical that Petr
Pavel would turn to ÚSTR to provide expertise on the past
involvement of upcoming Constitutional Court judges. This is what
public institutes of memory should be for. But this is also where we
see the gravity of ÚSTR’s development since February 2022. The
insipid disputes amongst ÚSTR supporters in the columns of Echo24 or
on Facebook might be laughable, but in this case those at its helm
exert real influence and can significantly contribute to destroying
Czech democracy, exactly as it is already happening in Poland and
Hungary. The recent controversy about the schoolbook Contemporary
History illustrates
this worrying trend. When I read Michal
Klíma’s denunciation (“History
cannot be the playing field of manipulators who pick and choose what
pleases them or what fits their ideological worldview”) and
ÚSTR’s systemic
critique of the textbook (“The textbook contains fundamental
errors, about which there is no doubt, which may mislead the underage
pupils and students for whom the textbook is intended”), I must
confess I had a moment of doubt. If only a tenth of what they
reported was true, the pedagogical value of the schoolbook was indeed
questionable. I will leave aside the mass of misleading and
irrelevant details ÚSTR invoked and concentrate only on Michal
Klíma’s central point: the textbook allegedly gives the impression
it endorses the communist regime as legitimate and good.
When I did open the schoolbook, I
had to laugh. I should not be surprised, yet I can’t help being
fascinated at the level of historical fabrication involved in ÚSTR’s
and Michal Klíma’s critiques. It is one of the smartest textbooks
I have ever seen, one which indeed absolutely deserves an
international prize. How I would have loved to have it as a high
school student! It is engaging, reflexive, entertaining, it mixes
personal, political, and social sources, the micro- and the
macro-level, it leads the readers to ask themselves questions rather
than provide ready-made answers. It is not remotely supporting
communism, only making an effort at understanding the motivation of
social actors at the time, many of whom were sincere in their support
of the regime – sincerely mistaken, we might add. Michal Klíma’s
uncultured jibes show that we are yet again back at the long-standing
misunderstanding within Czech society of what “revisionist history”
is supposed to mean. The greatest ideological success of the
self-stylized anticommunists after 1989 is to have made the Czech
public believe that to ask questions instead of parroting ready-made
answers amounted to denying the extent of Nazi or communist
repression. Once again: it does not. To be revisionist means to ask
questions, not to deny repression.
Communists and anticommunists
are intellectual twins
Another thing the schoolbook does
*not* do is to give a list of dates and names and a political wisdom
to be learned by rote. No wonder the anticommunists don’t like the
book – it does the opposite of what the communists and their
anticommunist intellectual twins like to do: it makes people think.
To refuse to publish it and demand a ministerial expertise as if this
book represented a public menace is a sinister charade and yet
another intimidation maneuver. It would be a mistake to laugh it out,
though: slowly but surely, ÚSTR is attempting to drag the country
down the authoritarian slide towards a regime in which one is allowed
to think only what is printed on official material.
The antidote, which brings me
back to the question of the judges’ nomination to the
Constitutional Court, is to start seriously debating about the limits
of legitimate anticommunism. I cannot imagine that anyone would want
to bring back the communist regime today in this country. In this
sense, we are all anticommunists. But not everyone is
instrumentalizing a legitimate preference for democracy and freedom
in order to push an authoritarian agenda of a different sort.
Anticommunism is an ideology, too, and one that is ultimately almost
as dangerous for democracy as communism itself.
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