Vaclav Havel
From behind the Iron Curtain to the Velvet Revolution, a genuine leader...
From behind the walls of a totalitarian state, his words, his writings, his
very life helped fan the flames of a cultural revolution. For half a century
the people of Czechoslovakia languished beneath the thumb of Nazi
Germany and then behind the Iron Curtain of the Soviet Union. When
the light of freedom finally broke through in 1989, the people chose
Václav Havel -- dissident playwrite and human rights leader -- to carry
them into their new dawn.
"I assume you did not propose me for this
office so that I, too, would lie to you," President Havel told his
countrymen on January 1, 1990. The time had come, he said, to take
responsibility. As a world leader speaking from a burgeoning Czech
Republic, Havel has set his modernist eyes on his global community.
Concerned with such crisis as cultural divides, environmental
degradation and nuclear proliferation, this one-time stagehand hopes to
direct a healing of the human spirit. "It cannot suffice to invent new
machines, new regulations, new institutions," he told world leaders
assembled in Prague Castle for the FORUM 2000 conference. "It is
necessary to understand differently and more perfectly the true purpose
of our existence on this Earth and of our deeds.... In short: it appears to
me that it would be better to start from the head rather than the tail," he
explained. A tall order indeed. For Václav Havel, it seems, convincing
communist rulers to step aside may have only been his opening act.
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