Prague 1, Neruda Street
Nerudova 258/1, 118 00 Prague-Prague 1, Czech Republic
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Václav Dušek participated in the student march to the Prague Castle on 25 February 1948: “I came to the Faculty of Law and they told me that there would be a march to the Castle in the afternoon, the goal being for President Beneš not to sign the document for the communists. We joined forces at the Faculty of Arts and walked to the Charles Bridge and towards the Castle. I was almost at the end of the Charles Bridge when they started to dissolve the march. I got to the front row. Suddenly I met a gendarme with whom I used to play football in Jaroměř during wartime, his name was Martin. I looked at him and said: ‘Martin, what are you doing here?’ And he said: ‘You have lost, it’s over, Václav, pack it up! The President has signed it.’” The student march was subsequently dissolved by armed forces in Nerudova Street.

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Václav Dušek

Václav Dušek

Václav Dušek, CSc. was born October 2, 1923 in Potěhy near Čáslav in a family of a railway-employee. Due to his father's profession the family often had to move. Václav studied at elementary and a higher elementary school. In 1938 he began the 2nd grade of the grammar school in Jaroměř, and he graduated in 1945. In 1944 he managed to avoid being sent on forced labour to the Reich thanks to playing soccer for the Slavoj Jaroměř club. From 1944 he was a member of the resistance group "Václavík;" one of their actions included sabotage on a cable leading to general Schörner's command. At the end of the war he guarded the Josefov fortress where he suffered a gunshot injury. After the war he studied law in Prague. He took part in the student march to the Prague castle in February 1948. In 1949 he made an unsuccessful attempt to emigrate to West Germany. He worked in the textile factory Mostex in Mostek, in Strojtex in Dvůr Králové and later in AŽD in Prague. From 1970 he worked at the Ministry of Transport, where he focused on labour law.

Prague 1, Neruda Street

Available in: English | Česky

This street leads from the Charles Bridge to Prague Castle. Two processions of students, teachers and journalists passed through here in support of President Edvard Beneš in February 1948. The first was organized on 23 February and representatives of the students were accepted into Prague Castle. The second procession from 25 February was stopped by a fully-armed police division on Neruda Street. The students had decided to support the president following 20 February 1948, when government ministers from three parties – the National Socialists, the, (Christian), People’s Party and the Democrats – handed in their resignation to President Edvard Beneš. They disagreed with staff changes made by Minister of the Interior Nosek in the police force, and they protested that Nosek had not complied with the government decree from 13 February which had ordered him to stop such changes. The matter concerned eight non-communist police officers who were relegated to unimportant positions. The three parties wanted to use the resignations to force early elections or to change the status quo in Gottwald’s government and the National Front where the Communists were forced to be more cooperative. Instead of this, however, new bodies of power arose: the Action Committees of the National Front; by 25 February these had usurped command of the country. President Edvard Beneš resisted the increasing pressure until 25 February 1948. At that point he gave in to the Communists’ demands and accepted the new government set up by Klement Gottwald.

Prague 1, Neruda Street

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I command you to go separate ways

I command you to go separate ways

February 1948
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