Everything about Jan Palach totally explained
Jan Palach (
August 11,
1948 –
January 19,
1969) was a
Czech student who committed
suicide by
self-immolation as a political protest.
Death
The
Soviet-led invasion of
Czechoslovakia in
August 1968 was designed to crush the
liberalising reforms of
Alexander Dubček's government during the
Prague Spring. Palach died after setting himself on fire in
Wenceslas Square in
Prague, Czechoslovakia on
16 January 1969 in protest.
The funeral of Palach turned into a major protest against the occupation, and a month later (on
February 25,
1969) another student,
Jan Zajíc, burned himself to death in the same place, followed in April of the same year by Evžen Plocek in
Jihlava.
Posthumous recognition
Palach was initially interred in
Olšany Cemetery. As his gravesite was growing into a national shrine, the Czechoslovak secret police (
StB) set out to destroy any memory of Palach's deed and exhumed his remains at night of
October 25,
1973. His body was then cremated and sent to his mother in Palach's native town of Všetaty while an anonymous old woman from a rest home was laid in the grave. Palach's mother wasn't allowed to deposit the urn in the local cemetery until 1974. On
October 25,
1990 the urn was officially returned to its initial site in Prague.
The so-called "Palach Week" took place on the 20th anniversary of Palach's death. It was a series of anticommunist demonstrations in Prague between 15 and 21 January
1989, suppressed by the police, which preceded the fall of communism in Czechoslovakia 11 months later.
After the
Velvet Revolution, Palach (along with Zajíc) was commemorated in Prague by a bronze cross embedded at the spot where he fell outside the
National Museum, as well as a square named in his honour. The Czech astronomer
Luboš Kohoutek, who left Czechoslovakia the following year, named an
asteroid which had been discovered on August 22, 1969, after Jan Palach (
1834 Palach). There are several other memorials to Palach in cities throughout Europe, including a small memorial inside the glacier tunnels beneath the Jungfraujoch in Switzerland.
Several later incidents of self-immolation may have been influenced by the example of Palach and his media popularity. In the spring of 2003, a total of six young
Czechs burned themselves to death, notably the secondary school student Zdeněk Adamec. He burned himself on
6 March 2003 on almost the same spot in front of the National Museum, leaving a suicide note explicitly referring to Palach and the others who had committed suicide in 1969. Reasons for the spate of suicides are unclear.
Just walking distance from the site of Palach's self-immolation, a statuary in Prague's
Old Town Square honors iconic Bohemian religious thinker
Jan Hus, who was burned at the stake for his beliefs in 1415. Himself celebrated as a national hero for many centuries, much commentary has linked Palach's self-immolation to the Roman Catholic Church's burning of Hus.
References in the arts
The
music video for the song "Club Foot" by the band
Kasabian is dedicated to Palach.
Palach is mentioned in
The Stranglers' bassist,
Jean-Jacques Burnel's solo album of 1979,
Euroman Cometh. In the track "Euromess", a song about the liberalization of Czechoslovakia in the 1960s and then its subsequent normalization, Burnel pleads: "Don't forget young Jan Palach, he burnt a torch against the Warsaw pact".
In their song "Nuuj Helde" the Janse Bagge Bend (from the Netherlands) asks if people know why Jan Palach burned.
Palach was mentioned in the play
Wenceslas Square by
Larry Shue.
After seeking political asylum in the United States, Polish artist
Wiktor Szostalo commemorated Jan Palach in his
"Performance for Freedom" proclaiming
"I am Jan Palach. I'm a Czech, I'm a Pole, a Lithuanian, a Vietnamese, an Afghani, a betrayed You. After I've burnt myself a thousand times, perhaps we'll win".
Place Names
There is a bus station in the town of Curepipe (Mauritius) named after Jan Palach.
A Rock club in Rijeka, Croatia, is named Palach, since 1969 to this day
A student hall in Venice (Italy) on the Giudecca island has also been given the name of Jan Palach
Further Information
Get more info on 'Jan Palach'.
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