Showing posts with label czech republic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label czech republic. Show all posts

14.3.08

MPs want exiled Carpathian Czechs compensated

Radio Praha [13-03-2008 15:03 UTC] By Dominik Jůn

Czech lawmakers have recommended that people forced to abandon their homes in Carpathian Ruthenia, when this part of Czechoslovakia was ceded to the Soviet Union at the end of WWII, be compensated. Estimates suggest that this may cost the Czech government as much as 1 billion crowns.

In 1945, at the end of WWII, Czechoslovakia regained about a third of its territory. The Sudeten regions, annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938, were formally returned to Czechoslovakia and the country’s original borders were restored. But a lesser known fact is that the country also lost part of its territory, a region known as Carpathian Ruthenia or Sub-Carpathian Rus. This territory stretched from what is the present-day eastern border of Slovakia, eastward along the Carpathian Mountains.

The sub-Carpathian region became part of Czechoslovakia when the country declared its independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918. At that time, the region was populated mostly by Ruthenians, with a small German and Hungarian population also present. In addition, there was also a tiny Czech and Slovak population, numbering less than 10,000 people. During the First Republic, Carpathian Ruthenia received substantial infra-structure investment from Prague, with new roads and railways aiding the economy of this still backward region. After the invasion of the Czech lands in 1939 by Nazi Germany, and only a day after Slovakia declared its own independence from Czechoslovakia and allied itself with Nazi Germany, the region declared independence as the Republic of Carpath-Ukraine. But its independence proved fleeting - 24 hours later, it was invaded and annexed by Hungary, an ally of Nazi Germany.

In 1944, invading Soviet troops, refused to return control of the area to the Czech authorities, and in June 1945, Czechoslovakia was forced to cede the territory to the Soviet Union. It then became part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Around this time, most of the Czech and Slovak inhabitants living in the region fled the territory. At present, the region remains part of Ukraine.

The current proposals put forth collectively by the Civic and Social Democrats along with the Czech Communist party seek to compensate those that were forced to abandon their properties and possessions and flee to Czechoslovakia in 1945. The legislation recommends a maximum compensation of two million crowns to be given to either individual survivors or their families. For compensation to be received, the families must prove the value of lost property, something the government has insisted is still documented in the national archives.

Although the number of survivors directly affected by this proposal is relatively small, it is still viewed by the government as a just attempt to compensate Czechs dispossessed from their country of origin.

23.1.07

Sclavi / The Song of an Emigrant

This past August, Czech-based theatre troupe Farm in the Cave performed its show Sclavi / The Song of an Emigrant at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in the UK, earning a number of awards (check out, for example, the Financial Times review). The show premiered in Prague in March 2005, and will run in Vienna this June.

The show comes straight out of Rusyn culture and history: Putting the show together, the theatre traveled to Eastern Slovakia to collect field research – they gathered songs, testimonies and letters from emigrants from the Rusyn communities who live in that region.

And main plot was drawn from Josef Čapek's Hordubal (read the first chapter here,
in .pdf from Catbird Press), a novella about a Rusyn who leaves the homeland to find his fortune in America. When he returns, he finds he cannot reintegrate into society:

“He will always be an emigrant. The Latin word ‘sclavi’ denotes both Slavs and slaves. Until today, Slavs remain a source of cheap labour. The ‘bare life’ of an emigrant entails more than life with no rights and identity, life reduced to material needs. The ‘bare life’ is a soulless one, without the background of social network” (from the Farm in the Cave press release).

The Farm in the Cave troupe is made up of Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Ukrainains and Serbs. Sclavi was created in cooperation with Prague’s Svandovo Theatre and DAMU, and Wroclaw’s Grotowski Center. The musical director of Sclavi was Marjana Sadowska.
A number of the songs featured in the show can be downloaded here.