No One Guarded It There
In August 1987, Rudolf Bereza participated in a meeting of Czechoslovak and Polish dissidents on the Blueberry Mountain, (Borůvková hora). This meeting of members of Czechoslovak civil initiatives and of Polish Solidarity was organized by the Polish party. The meeting resulted in the establishment of successful cooperation between these two groups. Rudolf Bereza recalls that he was very surprised by the perfect organization on the Polish side: “We did not know that the Poles would have it so well organized; that no one would guard us.” Many important figures of the Czechoslovak dissent participated in the meeting, among them were Václav Havel, Petr Uhl, Jiří Dienstbier, Josef Vohryzek, Rudolf Battěk, Anna Šabatová, and Tomáš Hradílek. Rudolf Bereza was afraid that they might be followed by members of the National Security Corps, (SNB), and therefore, he decided to travel light: “We drove to the mountain and then we hiked to the top. Back then I had a really nice colourful jacket, but I decided not to wear it. I also decided not to take any alcohol with me, so that the bottles would not clink together.” When he reached the top, he was welcomed by Jacek Kuroň and Anna Šabatová: “Jacek Kuroň held a bottle in his hand and he was yelling: ‘Hi there, Rudolf!’ And I said: ‘Why are you screaming like you're at a football game.’ And he answered: ’There are no guards here. Not for a hundred kilometers around us.’ So that was our meeting at the Blueberry Mountain.”
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