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Three candidates shortlisted for the 2023 Václav Havel Prize  05/09/23

The selection panel of the Václav Havel Human Rights Prize, which rewards outstanding civil society action in defence of human rights in Europe and beyond, has today announced the shortlist for the 2023 Award. Meeting in Prague today, the panel – made up of independent figures from the world of human rights and chaired by the President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) Tiny Kox – decided to shortlist the following three nominees, in alphabetical order: More

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Three candidates shortlisted for the 2022 Václav Havel Human Rights Prize  06/09/22

The discussion among the seven-member jury helmed by the president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe centred on the importance of the issue of human rights during this tense period. The finalists include Vladimir Kara-Murza, a political prisoner and leading Russian democracy campaigner; Ukraine’s 5 AM Coalition, which gathers evidence of human rights abuses stemming from Russia’s invasion of the country; and Hungary’s Rainbow Coalition defending LGBTQIA+ rights. “This year’s selection reflects the central role that human rights play in the current European crisis,” says Michael Žantovský, jury member and executive director of the Václav Havel Library, which bestows the prize in cooperation with the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and Nadace Charty 77.

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The Other Europe  27/04/22

Dear Friends, After three years we have completed the international project The Other Europe, during which, in cooperation with partner institutions, we have processed and made public recordings of interviews shot in 1987 and 1988 behind the Iron Curtain, and in exile, with important representatives of the opposition and the arts, as well as random citizens. Over those three years we have prepared video, audio and text of 106 interviews in speakers’ native languages and English translation. Despite public health restrictions in the Covid period, we have jointly prepared 16 international conferences and public presentations in six Central and Eastern European states. More

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From Schuman to Havel – what next?  16/02/22

The Václav Havel Library is a proud partner of the project Beyond Robert Schuman’s Europe More

Program for September 2015<>

entry-free

Michael Žantovský: Havel, My Fate

Michael Žantovský: Havel, My Fate

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 8, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

Meeting with the new director of the Václav Havel Library.

Michael Žantovský – diplomat, translator, interpreter, psychologist, journalist, writer, lyricist politician and last but not least close friend and associate of Václav Havel – launches the VHL’s 2015/2016 “clubhouse” season with a reading from his successful biography Havel.

The author will discuss the book, Havel and all manner of subjects in a conversation with psychiatrist Cyril Höschl.

Vladimír Merta will perform a musical commentary on the era.

J. G. Mendel – a Genius Known Everywhere but Here

J. G. Mendel – a Genius Known Everywhere but Here

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 9, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

Another lecture in a series by Marek Orko Vácha.

Modern biology is founded on two names, Darwin and Mendel, or perhaps that should be Mendel and Darwin. This year marks the 150th anniversary of Johann Gregor Mendel’s lectures in Brno.

However, it remains a mystery as to why this priest, monk, abbot, botanist and mathematician known as a genius of genetics is famous throughout the world with the exception of the Czech Republic.

Piotr  Macierzyński – Concentration Camp Poetry

Piotr Macierzyński – Concentration Camp Poetry

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 10, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

Presentation of a Czech translation and author’s reading from the collection Antologie esesáckých básní (Anthology of SS Poems). The Polish poet Piotr Macierzyński trod very thin ice but did not drown. In doing so, he answered the question of whether there are subjects that do not belong in poetry.

Modern language, old theme, modern poetry, old pain. Even after 60 years the Holocaust must not be forgotten and Macierzyński’s poetry serves as a pertinent reminder.

Petr Čulík will present the poems in Czech.

The poems, translated by Ondřej Zajac, have been issued by the publishing house Nakladatelství Petr Štengl.

Pre-Election Burma and the Challenges of Transition

Pre-Election Burma and the Challenges of Transition

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 14, 2015, 14:00 – 15:30

Do the upcoming elections in Burma present a true chance for the opposition to grasp power, or are they to be yet another travesty of democracy?

With the sudden change of leadership in the party in power and apparent division between the two most prominent elements of the opposition, the NLD and the 88 Generation; with bitter criticism of Aung San Suu Kyi’s controversial stance towards the Rohingyas and her inability to run for president of the country, can we expect the Burmese elections to be truly democratic and legitimate? And even if the current regime permits a fair election, can the divided opposition prove powerful enough to bring the changes Burma desperately needs? Moderated by Surendra Munshi (sociologist, India). Speakers: Sein Di Da (Monk, Burma), Anders Ostergaard (film director, Denmark), Šimon Pánek (co-founder and director, People in Need, Czech Republic).

The debate will be held in English. It is organized within the forthcoming 19th annual Forum 2000 Conference (http://www.forum2000.cz/).

Roger Scruton: Notes from Underground

Roger Scruton: Notes from Underground

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 14, 2015, 17:30 – 18:45

Evening with the British philosopher and writer Roger Scruton who, until his arrest by the StB and expulsion from Czechoslovakia in 1985, played a major role in the organisation of the era’s “underground university”. He later helped the Czechoslovak dissent via the Jan Hus Foundation in particular.

Partly set in communist Prague in the mid-1980s, his novel Notes from the Underground is about love, nostalgia, the dissent and the search for the sacred and meaning in human life, religious faith, betrayal and disappointment.

Michael Žantovský and Pavel Bratinka will present the book.

The event is organized within the forthcoming 19th annual Forum 2000 Conference (http://www.forum2000.cz/).

Josef Rauvolf: Jirous and Fuchs – A Cross-border Affinity

Josef Rauvolf: Jirous and Fuchs – A Cross-border Affinity

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 16, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

Though it seems impossible at first glance, the two poets, one Czech, the other (East) German, had much more in common than might be expected. Not only in their unwillingness to accept any kind of compromise, whether in the totalitarian period or after its fall, or in issues of moral integrity; Ivan M. Jirous and Jürgen Fuchs also shared a similar poetics.

Living Torches in Tibet

Living Torches in Tibet

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 17, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

The historical context of the longest wave of self-immolations

In the last six years, 142 people have set themselves on fire in Tibet in protest against the Chinese occupation and the suppression of religious freedom. In a discussion evening we will present the book Sebeupalování v Tibetu (Self-immolation in Tibet) by the Tibetan poet Özer, which was published this year by the Czech PEN Club.

Historian Petr Blažek and poet Vít Kremlička will serve as hosts.

Libor Fára 90

Libor Fára 90

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 21, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

A close friend of Václav Havel’s, the painter, graphic artist, scenographer and costume designer Libor Fára (1925–1988) would have celebrated his 90th birthday on 12 September 2015.

His graphic designs for books and magazines were an essential part of the Czech cultural milieu in the second half of the 20th century, while as the author of its logo, theatre posters and programmes he was alongside Václav Havel and Jan Grossman one of the creators of the golden era at Divadlo Na zábradlí (Theatre on the Balustrade).

The rich personality of this distinctive artist, whose work affected and influenced a broad spectrum of Czech culture, will be celebrated through the memories of close friends and associates, an expert analysis, video screenings and photographs.

Conference: Reflections on the Underground

Conference: Reflections on the Underground

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 22, 2015, 10:00 – 17:00

They say the underground movement had as many forms as members. Despite persecution by the normalisation regime, the underground displayed unprecedented viability, bringing together disparate cultural and political activities.

This specialist conference is focused on those activities, concrete figures and everyday life in the underground and the advent of younger generations.

In cooperation with the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes.


For a detailed programme visit this site.

Debate with Respekt: How Czechs are (Not) Born

Debate with Respekt: How Czechs are (Not) Born

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 22, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

What led to a de facto ban on home births? And how is the position of women as mothers changing in the Czech Republic?

Confirmed guests: Ivana Königsmarková, Alena Gajdůšková, Petra Sovová and Bohuslav Svoboda. Chairman: journalist Tomáš Sacher.

Voices of Belarusian Freedom

Voices of Belarusian Freedom

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 23, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

The Belarusian station of Radio Free Europe (Radio Liberty) has been based in Prague since 1995. The station, one of the most important Belarusian independent media outlets, has become a second home for many distinctive intellectuals – literati, historians, journalists, analysts, songwriters…

Confirmed guests include national revival philosopher and writer Syarhey Ablameika, chairwoman of the Skaryna association and organiser of Czech-Belarusian integration Alena Cichanovič Kovářová, essayist, translator and polyglot Jan Maksymiuk and the director of the department, writer Alexander Lukashuk. Translator Syarhey Smatrychenka will chair a discussion with them on their native Belarus, RFE, Belarusian Prague and themselves and their work.

All Tomorrow’s Parties Band

All Tomorrow’s Parties Band

  • Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
  • When: September 24, 2015, 19:00 – 21:00

Concert by a Prague tribute band to the legendary Velvet Underground.

Admission CZK 50.

The Story of a Refugee: Europe of Dreams and Reality

The Story of a Refugee: Europe of Dreams and Reality

  • Where: Prague Crossroads, Zlatá 1, Prague
  • When: September 30, 2015, 08:30 – 16:00

Third annual conference linked to the Václav Havel Human Rights Prize

International conference held in honour of Lyudmila Alexeyeva - the winner of the Václav Havel Human Rights Prize - which focused this year on the wave of refugees from the Middle East and Northern Africa and the humanitarian and political problems that Europe and the international community is facing in this regard.

More information and registration here.

Havel Channel

Havel Channel je audiovizuální projekt Knihovny Václava Havla, jehož cílem je šířit myšlenkový, literární a politický odkaz Václava Havla, bez ohledu na vzdálenost, zeměpisné hranice či nouzové stavy. Jeho páteř tvoří debaty, vzdělávací projekty a rozhovory. Velký prostor je věnován též konferencím, autorským čtením, záznamům divadelních inscenací a koncertům. Audiovizuální projekt Knihovny Václava Havla Havel Channel se uskutečňuje díky laskavé podpoře Karel Komárek Family Foundation.

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Publications / E-shop

The central focus of the Library’s publishing programme is the life and work of Václav Havel, his family and close collaborators and friends. For clarity, the programme is divided into six series: Václav Havel Library Notebooks, Václav Havel Library Editions, Student Line, Talks from Lány, Václav Havel Documents, Works of Pavel Juráček and Václav Havel Library Conferences. Titles that cannot be incorporated into any of the given series but which are nonetheless important for the Library’s publishing activities are issued independently, outside the series framework.

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Conferences & prizes

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Václav Havel European Dialogues

The Václav Havel European Dialogues is an international project that aims to initiate and stimulate a discussion about issues determining the direction of contemporary Europe while referring to the European spiritual legacy of Václav Havel. This idea takes its main inspiration from Václav Havel’s essay “Power of the Powerless”. More than other similarly focused projects, the Václav Havel European Dialogues aims to offer the “powerless” a platform to express themselves and in so doing to boost their position within Europe.

The Václav Havel European Dialogues is planned as a long-term project and involves cooperation with other organisations in various European cities. Individual meetings, which take the form of a conference, are targeted primarily at secondary and third-level students, as well as specialists and members of the public interested in European issues.

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Václav Havel Human Rights Prize

The Václav Havel Human Rights Prize is awarded each year by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) in partnership with the Václav Havel Library and the Charta 77 Foundation to reward outstanding civil society action in the defence of human rights in Europe and beyond.

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Havel - Albright Transatlantic Dialogues

Since the first Václav Havel Transatlantic Dialogues at GLOBSEC and FORUM 2000 conferences last year, we have lost another stalwart advocate of the transatlantic bond and of the need to face threats to democracy and international order together on both sides of the Atlantic, the former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. In view of the close bond between Václav Havel and Madeleine Albright and, after Havel's death, between the Secretary and the Library, the Václav Havel Library, with the approval of Madeleine Albright's family, renamed and rebranded the program as The Havel-Albright Transatlantic Dialogues (HATD), after the two major figures with roots in Central Europe who have personified the bond. Together, Václav Havel and Madeleine Albright symbolize the transatlantic relationship and the fundamental values underpinning it perhaps better than any other two people in recent history. The upcoming Dialogues “The Indispensable Woman: The Legacy of Madeleine K. Albright”, at the FORUM 2000 conference on September 1, and at the “Havel and our Crisis” conference at Colby College, ME, on September 28, will thus become venues for a well-deserved tribute to the pair we all respected and admired.

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Václav Havel

Václav Havel
* 5. 10. 1936 Praha
† 18. 12. 2011 Hrádeček u Trutnova

1936
Foto
Václav Havel grew up
in a well-known, wealthy entrepreneurial
and intellectual family.
1951
Foto
Václav Havel completed primary schooling. Because
of his "bourgeois" background, options for
higher education were limited.
1951
Foto
Václav Havel worked as a chemical laboratory technician
while attending evening classes at a high school
from which he graduated in 1954.
1955
Foto
Václav Havel studied at the
Economics Faculty of the Czech
Technical University in Prague.
1960
Foto
Václav Havel began working at Prague's Theatre on
the Balustrade, first as a stagehand and later as
an assistant director and literary manager.
1963
Foto
Havel´s first play The Garden
Party was staged at Prague's
Theatre on the Balustrade.
1964
Foto
Václav Havel
married Olga
Splichalova.
1966
Foto
VH finished studies at at the
Theatre Faculty of the Academy of
Performing Arts in Prague .
1968
Foto
Václav Havel played an active role in
democratization and renewal of culture during the
era of reforms, known as Prague Spring.
1969
Foto
Havel's work were banned in Czechoslovakia. He
moved from Prague to the country, continued
his activities against the Communist regime.
1974
Foto
Václav Havel worked as a manual laborer
at a local brewery near Hrádeček in
the north of the Czech Republic.
1975
Foto
Václav Havel wrote an open
letter to President Gustav Husak,
criticizing the government.
1977
Foto
Václav Havel co-founded the Charter 77
human rights initiative and was one
of its first spokesmen.
1978
Foto
Václav Havel co-founded The
Committee for the Defense
of the Unjustly Prosecuted.
1979
Foto
Václav Havel was imprisoned several times
for his beliefs, his longest prison
term lasting from 1979 to 1983.
1989
Foto
Václav Havel emerged as one of the
leaders of the November opposition movement, also
known as the Velvet Revolution.
1990
Foto
Václav Havel is elected
President of Czechoslovakia on
December 29.
1993
Foto
Václav Havel is elected, after the
dissolution of Czechoslovakia, the first President
of the Czech Republic.
1996
Foto
On January
27, Olga
Havlova died.
1997
Foto
Václav Havel married Dagmar Veskrnova,
a popular and acclaimed Czech theatrical,
television and movie actress.
1999
Foto
Václav Havel enabled the entry of
the Czech Republic into the North
Atlantic Treat Organisation (NATO).
2003
Foto
Václav Havel left office after
his second term as Czech
president ended on 2 February 2003.
2004
Foto
Foundation of Václav
Havel Library in
Prague.
2004
Foto
The Czech Republic became the 35th
member State of the Council of
Europe on 30 June 1993.
2010
Foto
Václav Havel directed
a film adaptation of
his play Leaving.
2011
Foto
Václav Havel died at his
summer house Hrádeček in the
north of the Czech Republic.
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Educational projects

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Archive / Documentation centre / Research projects

Dokumentační centrum

The Václav Havel Library is gradually gathering, digitizing, and making accessible written materials, photographs, sound recordings and other materials linked to the person of Václav Havel.

  • 70739 records in total
  • 27668 of events in the VH's life
  • 2831 of VH's texts
  • 2125 of photos 
  • 403of videos
  • 568of audios
  • 6604of letters
  • 15101of texts about VH
  • 8260 of books
  • 40574of bibliography records

Access to the database of the VHL’s archives is free and possible after registering as a user. Accessing archival materials that exist in an unreadable form is only possible at the reading room of the Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, 110 00 Prague 1, every Tuesday (except state holidays) from 9:00 to 17:00, or by prior appointment.

We will be glad to answer your queries at archiv@vaclavhavel-library.org.

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Havel in a nutshell

The virtual exhibition Václav Havel in a Nutshell places the life story of Václav Havel in the broader cultural and historic context in four chronologically distinct chapters with rich visual accompaniment. The exhibition is supplemented by the interactive map Flying the World with Václav Havel, which captures in physical form Havel’s global “footprint”.

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Vladimir Hanzel's revolution

Collage of recollections, images and sound recordings from Vladimír Hanzel, President Václav Havel’s personal secretary, bringing the feverish atmosphere of the Velvet Revolution to life.

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Václav Havel Interviews

A database of all accessible interviews given to print media outlets by the dramatist, writer and political activist Václav Havel between the 1960s and 1989. The resulting collection documents the extraordinary life story of an individual, as well as capturing a specific picture of modern Czechoslovak history at a time when being a free-thinker was more likely to lead to jail than an official public post.

Illustration

Pavel Juráček Archive

The Pavel Juráček Archive arose in February 2014 when his son Marek Juráček handed over six banana boxes and a typewriter case from his father’s estate to the Václav Havel Library. Thousands of pages of manuscripts, typescripts, photographs, documents and personal and official correspondence are gradually being classified and digitalised. The result of this work should be not only to map the life and work of one of the key figures of the New Wave of Czechoslovak film in the 1960s, but also to make his literary works accessible in the book series The Works of Pavel Juráček.

The aim of the Václav Havel Library is to ensure that Pavel Juráček finds a place in the broader cultural consciousness and to notionally build on the deep friendship he shared with Václav Havel. Soon after Juráček’s death in 1989 Havel said of him: “Pavel was a friend of mine whom I liked very much. He was one of the most sensitive and gentle people I have known – that’s why I cannot write more about him.”  

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All about Library

The Václav Havel Library works to preserve the legacy of Václav Havel, literary, theatrical and also political, in particular his struggle for freedom, democracy and the defence of human rights. It supports research and education on the life, values and times of Václav Havel as well as the enduring significance of his ideas for both the present and future.

The Václav Havel Library also strives to develop civil society and active civic life, serving as a platform for discussion on issues related to the support and defence of liberty and democracy, both in the Czech Republic and internationally.

The main aims of the Václav Havel Library include

  • Organizing archival, archival-research, documentary, museum and library activities focused on the work of Vaclav Havel and documents or objects related to his activities, and carries out professional analysis of their influence on the life and self-reflection of society
  • Serving, in a suitable manner, such as through exhibitions, the purpose of education and popularisation functions, thus presenting to the public the historical significance of the fight for human rights and freedoms in the totalitarian period and the formation of civil society during the establishment of democracy
  • Organizing scientific research and publication activities in its areas of interest
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Podpořte nás

We are well aware that freedom and democracy must be nurtured. Here at Ostrovní 13, but also on the audiovisual platform Havel Channel, we strive to do so through our own educational programmes, talks, discussion meetings, books, exhibitions, concerts, theatre performances. We honour Václav Havel's legacy and wish that the Library be a living organism and open to all. That is why our programme is free of charge for everyone. This would not be possible without regular financial support from our supporters. Become one of them...
Václav Havel

Support us with a financial donation

Does our work make sense to you and do you want to support the activities of the Vaclav Havel Library?

You can easily make a one-time payment by scanning the QR code.

Would you like to contribute regularly? Then we invite you to become a member of the Friends of the Vaclav Havel Library Club. What are the benefits of membership? Find out more.

Help us expand the archive

The Vaclav Havel Library manages an archive of writings, documents, photographs, video recordings and other materials related to the life and work of Vaclav Havel. This archive is predominantly in digital form. If you or someone close to you owns any original texts, correspondence, photographs, speeches or any other work by Vaclav Havel, we would be grateful if you could contact us.

You can donate in other ways too

Supporting a specific charitable or public benefit organization whose activities you appreciate or have been supporting for a long time is also possible through a will. This form of donation is quite common abroad, but in the Czech Republic this tradition is only just taking root.

Share information about us

The Vaclav Havel Library is open to media and promotional cooperation, mutual sharing of links, publishing our banners or information about our events.

For more information, please contact us.

Donations have their rules

At the Vaclav Havel Library, we uphold a transparent, responsible and ethical way of dealing with all those who contribute to fulfilling our purpose and implementing our strategy. Our code of ethics summarizes the basic rules of donations.

Get involved in volunteering

Would you like to get involved as a volunteer? That's great. We welcome anyone who wants to help our work.

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