A female student holds a Czechoslovakian flag as she and hundreds others face riot police 19 November 1989 in downtown Prague

Image copyright
LUBOMIR KOTEK/Getty Images

The Berlin Wall had only just fallen when 15,000 students gathered in Prague on 17 November 1989.

It was a moment that precipitated the end of communism in Czechoslovakia and is being marked 30 years on by the people of two states, Czechs and Slovaks.

Three memorable locations in the Czech capital symbolise the Communist regime and its downfall – a peaceful overthrow that became known as the Velvet Revolution.

Letna Plain

“I lived in the very centre of Prague, 15m from Wenceslas Square,” recalls journalist and translator Tomas Tulinger, now 49.

“I had long hair back then, so whenever there was any form of rebellion against the regime, the police always grabbed me on my way home, even when I hadn’t done anything,” he added, with a throaty laugh.

Tomas attended most of the demonstrations that convulsed Communist Czechoslovakia and remembers the period before 1989 as a time when the only freedom was among families and friends.

The protests began with the peaceful 17 November student march that was brutally suppressed by riot police; subsequent mass protests on Wenceslas Square addressed by dissident playwright Vaclav Havel; and then, the largest protest of all on Letna Plain, which attracted an estimated 800,000 people.

Thirty years on, Tomas has conflicted feelings about life as he stands by a puddle at Letna. This is a large, barren expanse of land that once hosted the annual May Day parades and, before it was demolished in 1962, Europe’s largest statue of Stalin.

While everything seemed rosy initially, now he feels things are little different from the 1980s. “Things today feel a bit like what we used to call ‘salami communism’ – give the people something to eat, something to drink, and they will shut up.”

Image copyright
Getty Images

For many Czechs, the liberal and humanist values espoused by ex-president Vaclav Havel, who died in 2011, are now highly toxic.

Tomas no longer lives in Prague and complains attitudes in his small town are far less enlightened and tolerant than in the cosmopolitan capital.

He opens his jacket to reveal a T-shirt with the slogan Havel A Nice Day. “If I wore this in Litomerice, I would either be directly assaulted or at least frowned upon.”

Mala Strana

A shortish tram ride takes you down the hill to Mala Strana, the Lesser Side, with its ancient red roofs nestling in the shadows of Prague Castle.

It is home to one of the five most visited tourist attractions in Prague – the Lennon Wall, a short stretch of wall shaded by trees opposite the French embassy.

“In 1980, when John Lennon died, someone painted over the little water faucet that was built into the wall to make it look like a gravestone for Lennon,” said artist and designer Pavel Stastny, who was a 24-year-old gallery curator in 1989.

Stastny was chosen to design a logo for Havel’s Civic Forum, the political movement that rushed in to fill the vacuum left by the collapsing Communist regime.

Pavel Stastny

BBC

Young people, especially fans of rock music, started lighting candles and scrawling messages to Lennon

The little shrine quickly became a problem for the authorities.

It began to attract long-haired “underground” types who listened to Western music and refused to conform to the norms of socialist society. They were repeatedly harassed, arrested and beaten by the police, and the increasingly political messages were painted over again and again.

But the new-found freedom of 1989 brought its own problems. Until recently foreign visitors were being handed cans of spray paint by their guides and encouraged to add their own creations. The result left graffiti on neighbouring buildings, cars, even trees.

The wall’s owners, the Sovereign Order of Malta, had had enough. The new wall, designed by Stastny, features designated areas where scrawling is permitted, and is covered in a layer of anti-graffiti paint for when things get out of hand.

“But the freedom is still there,” he insisted.

Konev Statue

Across town, in the capital’s biggest district, Prague 6, there’s another memorial from 1980.

This one, though, is very much official – a bronze statue of Ivan Stepanovich Konev, the Soviet general whose forces liberated much of the country from the Nazis. But Konev was not, as the original communist-era plaque claimed, the “saviour of Prague”.

“Although Marshal Konev led the Soviet troops that liberated most of Czechoslovakia, he and his troops did not liberate Prague,” said Ondrej Kolar, the centre-right mayor of Prague 6, who is proceeding with plans to move the statue to a different location.

The decision has provoked fury from the Communist Party, the Russian embassy and far-right groups.

“Prague was liberated by itself,” added the mayor, explaining that the Czech capital was freed in a popular uprising with the support of anti-Soviet Russian soldiers who had fled the Red Army.

Konev and his soldiers didn’t arrive in the city until 9 May 1945. He was accompanied by the notorious Smersh Soviet counter-intelligence, which swiftly set about abducting Russian emigres and whisking them off to the gulag prison camps.

Konev also oversaw the brutal suppression of the 1956 Hungarian Uprising.

Years of bickering over the wording of the plaque descended during the summer into scuffles. A tarpaulin protecting it, ostensibly from red paint, was repeatedly torn down.

Ondrej Kolar, who was five in 1989, has received so much abuse over the plan he briefly needed police protection.

Prague is a city of ghosts, and at these three sites the past is never far away.

Find out more about 1989 and the fall of communism

image

Media playback is unsupported on your device

image

Media playback is unsupported on your device

0 comments

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • Laketić: Neformalna ekonomija najveći rizik sa kojim se suočava Poreska uprava
    on 29/05/2026 at 20:35

    Neformalna ekonomija je trenutno najveći rizik sa kojim se suočava Poreska uprava, kazao je direktor te institucije Sava Laketić tokom prvog dana XI Međunarodnog Simpozijuma računovođa i revizora koji se održava u Ulcinju.

  • Đukanović: Ukoliko budemo investirali u zelenu energiju, cijena struje neće rasti
    on 29/05/2026 at 19:27

    Predsjednik Odbora direktora Elektroprivrede Crne Gore, Milutin Đukanović, kazao je u emisiji "Okvir" da će cijena električne energije u Crnoj Gori ostati među najjeftinijima u Evropi, ukoliko budemo razvijali proizvodnju iz zelenih izvora. Takođe je istakao da je poslovna politika EPCG-a "Proizvodi gdje trošiš" pobjednik zelene tranzicije u Evropi.

  • Spajić: Ugovor o izgradnji Univerzitetske klinike u Podgorici biće potpisan naredne sedmice
    on 29/05/2026 at 14:51

    Francuske kompanije veoma su zainteresovane za ulaganja u Crnu Goru, a ugovor o relizaciji projekta od vitalnog interesa za crnogorske građane - izgradnju Univerzitetske klinike u Podgorici, sa kompanijom Bouyges biće potpisan već naredne sedmice u Crnoj Gori. To je poručeno sa današnjeg sastanka premijera Milojka Spajića sa predstavnicima Saveza francuskih preduzeća (MEDEF) u Parizu, saopštili su iz Vlade.

  • Slovenija izdala sedmogodišnje obveznice u vrijednosti 350 miliona eura
    on 29/05/2026 at 12:51

    Slovenija je na tržištima kapitala izdala sedmogodišnje obveznice u ukupnom iznosu od 350 miliona eura, sa promjenjivom kamatnom stopom i rokom dospijeća 29. maja 2033. godine.

  • Monstat: Rast BDP-a u prvom kvartalu 2,6 odsto
    on 29/05/2026 at 10:52

    Bruto domaći proizvod (BDP) Crne Gore u prvom kvartalu ove godine porastao je 2,6 odsto, pokazuju preliminarni podaci Monstata.

  • Usvojen Master plan investicija: 5,75 milijardi eura za infrastrukturu do 2030.
    on 29/05/2026 at 08:54

    Vlada Crne Gore usvojila je Master plan investicija u infrastrukturu za period 2026–2030, strateški dokument kojim se definiše najveći državni investicioni ciklus u narednim godinama. Plan obuhvata projekte ukupne vrijednosti oko 5,75 milijardi eura, dok je planirana realizacija do 2030. procijenjena na oko 4,72 milijarde eura, odnosno prosječno oko 944 miliona eura godišnje.

  • Narodna banka Austrije podržava reforme CBCG
    on 28/05/2026 at 16:03

    Narodna banka Austrije /Oesterreichische Nationalbank/ (OeNB), prema riječima njenog guvernera Martina Kohera, snažno podržava Centralnu banku (CBCG), posebno u oblasti integracije finansijskog i platnog sistema, pri čemu je država pokazala jasnu posvećenost evropskom putu.

  • HE Piva slavi jubilej: I narednih 50 godina oslonac energetskog sistema Crne Gore
    on 28/05/2026 at 09:43

    Rukovodilac HE Piva Nikola Daković povodom 50 godina rada ovog postrojenja je istakao da jubilej dočekuju sa punom pogonskom spremnošću, te da su modernizacijom potrojenja obezbijedili da bude oslonac energetskog sistema Crne Gore i u narednih nekoliko decenija.

  • Apelacioni sud održao sjednicu vijeća u predmetu „Aerodromi“
    on 27/05/2026 at 09:01

    U Apelacionom sudu Crne Gore danas je održana sjednica vijeća u predmetu protiv Duška Kneževića, Marka Nikolića, Dijane Zečević i pravnog lica Atlas banka AD Podgorica, poznatom u javnosti kao slučaj „Aerodromi“.

  • Vučinić: Elektrifikacija saobraćaja štiti crnogorsku ekonomiju od naftnih kriza
    on 26/05/2026 at 13:35

    Energetska tranzicija je nezaustavljiv proces, a naš ključni zadatak je da taj pomak u energetskom ekosistemu Crne Gore i budućem integrisanom tržištu učinimo još izraženijim i uspješnijim, poručio je predsjednik Odbora direktora Crnogorskog operatora tržišta električne energije (COTEE) Maksim Vučinić.