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  • Charter 77

    The 30th anniversary of the petition that gave a voice to opposition in Czechoslovakia. The Czech centre and Orange Tree Theatre present an evening to celebrate the 30th ...

  • Charter 77 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Charter 77 (Charta 77 in Czech and in Slovak) was an informal civic initiative in Czechoslovakia from 1977 to 1992, named after the document Charter 77 from January 1977.

  • Charter 77 - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Charter 77

    It is named after the 1977 human-rights manifesto signed by over 700 intellectuals and former party officials in response to the 1975 Helsinki Conference on Security and ...

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Charter 77

Encyclopedia Article

Charter 77, human rights movement active in Czechoslovakia from 1977 to 1990. Supporters of Charter 77 called for greater civil and political liberties, and contributed to events that in 1989 helped end 40 years of Communist rule in Czechoslovakia. The movement was named after a 1977 document that petitioned the Czech government to adhere to three international agreements on human rights—the 1975 Helsinki Final Act and two United Nations covenants.

The Charter 77 document was written in reaction to the invasion led by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) of Czechoslovakia in August 1968. The invasion occurred after the general secretary of Czechoslovakia's ruling Communist party, Alexander Dubček, initiated reforms in the strict Communist control of Czech society. Many Eastern European leaders feared that Dubček's reforms would encourage reform movements in their own countries, and so supported his replacement in April 1969 by a Communist hard-liner, Gustav Husák, who re-established the authoritarian system. In protest against the new government's disregard for human rights, more than 200 intellectuals, academics, and Church officials signed the Charter 77 document, which was published openly in January 1977. The charter's stated aim was to draw attention to human rights violations and “to conduct a constructive dialogue with the political and state authorities”. In response, the government harassed and persecuted the signatories of the Charter 77 document, many of whom lost their jobs.

The Charter 77 movement was established by supporters of the document, along with the charter's main spokesmen—Jan Patoçka, professor of philosophy; Václav Havel, playwright; and Jiri Hájek, professor and former foreign minister of Czechoslovakia during the Dubček era. Members had to meet and organize themselves secretly. The movement maintained a legal and non-violent approach, and it effectively exposed the regime's hypocrisy, becoming a regular source of reports for the Western news media.

In the 1980s, many Communist regimes of Eastern Europe began weakening. The reforms implemented by Mikhail Gorbachev, president of the USSR, and the weakening of Communism in Poland and East Germany, led to increased calls for change in Czechoslovakia. On November 17, 1989, hundreds of thousands of demonstrators demanding greater freedom gathered in Prague, the capital. Two days later, Czech opposition groups, led by the Charter 77 movement, formed a broader coalition called the Civic Forum. Mass demonstrations and strikes followed, leading to a two-hour general strike on November 27. As a result of these massive public protests, many government leaders stepped down. In December 1989 Havel, the Charter 77 leader, was elected president of Czechoslovakia by a unanimous vote of the Federal Assembly. Havel became the first non-Communist head of state since 1948. The Charter 77 movement was formally dissolved in 1990.

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