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Gustáv Husák (in the middle) in 1971 on a visit to DDR
Gustáv Husák (10 January 1913 - 18 November
1991) was a Slovak
politician, president of Czechoslovakia and a long-term Communist leader of Czechoslovakia and of
the Communist Party of
Czechoslovakia (1969-1987). His rule is known as the period of
Normalization after the
Prague
Spring.
Life
Gustáv Husák was born as a son of an unemployed worker in Dúbravka (now part of Bratislava), Kingdom of
Hungary, Austria-Hungary (now Slovakia). He joined the Communist Youth Union
at the age of sixteen while studying at the grammar school in
Bratislava. In 1933, when he started his studies at the Law Faculty
of the Comenius University in Bratislava, he
joined the Communist Party of
Czechoslovakia (KSČ) which was banned from 1938 to 1945. During
World War II he
was periodically jailed by the Jozef Tiso government for illegal Communist
activities, and he was one of the leaders of the 1944 Slovak National Uprising
against Nazi
Germany and Tiso. Husak was a member of the Presidium of the Slovak National Council from 1
September to 5 September 1944.
After the war he began a career as a government official in Slovakia and party
functionary in Czechoslovakia. From 1946–1950 he acted as a
quasi-Prime Minister of Slovakia, and as such he strongly
contributed to the liquidation of the Democratic
Party of Slovakia, which had won 62% in the 1946 elections in
Slovakia, thus preventing the Communists from seizing power in
Czechoslovakia.
In 1950 he fell victim to a Stalinist purge of the
party leadership, and was sentenced for life, spending the years
from 1954 to 1960 in the Leopoldov Prison. A convinced
Communist, he did not cease to view his imprisonment a gross
misunderstanding which he periodically stressed in several
appealing letters addressed to the party leadership. It is well
known that Antonín Novotný, the Czechoslovak
president and first party secretary of that time, repeatedly
declined to grant Husák pardon by assuring his comrades that "you
do not know what he is capable of when coming to power". The true
reason for Novotný's stance, however, may be ascribed to his
personal politically motivated Slovakophobia as well. Finally, as a
result of the De-Stalinization period in Czechoslovakia, Husák's conviction was
overturned and his party membership restored in 1963. By 1967 he
attacked the KSČ's neo-Stalinist leadership, and he became a
deputy premier of Czechoslovakia in April 1968, during the
period of liberalization under party leader Alexander
Dubček.
As the Soviet
Union grew increasingly alarmed by Dubček's liberal reforms in
1968 (Prague
Spring), Husák began calling for caution. After the Soviets
invaded Czechoslovakia in August and he
participated in the Czechoslovak-Soviet negotiations between the
kidnapped Alexander Dubček and Leonid Brezhnev in Moscow, he suddenly
became a leader of those party members calling for the reversal of
Dubček's reforms. An account for his pragmatism was given in one of his official
speeches in Slovakia after
the 1968 events, during which he ventured the rhetorical question,
where his opponents (i. e. supporters of opposition against the Soviet Union) want to
find those "friends" of Czechoslovakia (i. e. countries in
Europe) that would come to support the country (i. e. against
Soviet troops).
Supported by Moscow, he was appointed leader of the Communist Party of
Slovakia in as early as August 1968, and he succeeded Dubček as
first secretary (title changed to general secretary in 1971) of the
Communist Party of
Czechoslovakia in April 1969. He reversed Dubček's reforms and
purged the party of its liberal members in 1969–1971. In 1975,
Husák was elected President of Czechoslovakia. During the two
decades of Husák's leadership, Czechoslovakia became one of Moscow's
most loyal allies.
In the first years following the invasion, Husák managed to
appease the outraged civil population by providing a relatively
satisfactory living standard and avoiding any overt reprisals like
was the case in the 1950s. While his regime was certainly less
harsh than the first 20 years of Communist rule in the country, he
belonged to the most loyal followers of Moscow and the suppression
of civil liberties - namely the freedom of cultural exchange in
Czechoslovakia - reached a point incomparable with Kádár's Hungary, Tito's Yugoslavia and on the cultural level even
with Ceauşescu's Romania, being rather close to East
German model. Under the cover of everyday stability, there was
a permanent campaign of repression by the secret police (StB) targeted at the outspoken dissidents
represented later by Charter 77 as well as hundreds of unknown
individuals who happened to be objects of StB's preventive strikes. Husák yielded his post as
general secretary in 1987, when younger members of the Communist
party wanted to participate in power (Milouš
Jakeš, Ladislav Adamec). Communist rule
collapsed in Czechoslovakia in late 1989, and that December Husák
resigned as president. In February 1990 he was expelled from the
Communist Party. He died almost forgotten on 18 November 1991.
There is still some question about Husák's moral responsibility
for the last two decades of Communist rule in Czechoslovakia. After
its collapse Husák kept saying that he was just trying to diminish
the aftermath of the Soviet invasion and had to constantly resist
pressure from hard line Party Stalinists such as Vasil
Bilak, Alois Indra and the like. It is true that in the early
1970s he personally pushed for an early withdrawal of the Soviet
troops from Czechoslovak territory, which did not happen until
1991; this may be ascribed to his pragmatic attempts to ease the
situation and to give an impression that things were leaning toward
"normality".
However, there are many irrefutable facts, convicting him of a
great deal of personal contribution to the regime's nature. As the
General Secretary of the Party he was well able and willing to
control the repressive state apparatus. There are many documented
cases of appeals from politically persecuted persons, however
almost none of them was given Husák's attention. As the overall
decay of Czechoslovak society was becoming more and more obvious in
the 1980s, Husák became a politically impotent puppet of events.
Evidence shows him emotionally sticking to his Party positions
until the bitter end of Communism in Czechoslovakia.
Gustáv Husák was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 9
January 1983 [1]
Functions
Communist Party of
Czechoslovakia/KSČ (prohibited 1938, dissolved 1939-1945)
- 1933-1938/1939 and 1989(December)-(February)1990: common
member
- spring 1945: member of its Provisional Central Committee
(established in the parts of Czechoslovakia liberated by the Red Army)
- 1949-1951 and 1968 (31 August)-1989: member of its Central
Committee and (except for 1949-1951) a member of its Presidium
- 1969 (April) -?1987: one of its secretaries
- 1969 (April)-1987: party leader (first secretary, since 1971
general secretary)
- 1987 (17 December): resigned as party leader (replaced by Miloš Jakeš)
Communist Party of
Slovakia/KSS (illegal 1939-1944/1945)
- 1939-1945: one of its leaders
- 1943-1944: member of its 5th illegal Central Committee
- 1944-1950 and 1968 -1971: member of its Central Committee and
(except for 1970-1971) member of its Presidium and (except for
1944-1948) one of its secretaries
- 1944-1945: vice-chairman
- 1968 (28 August)-1969: party leader („first secretary“)
Slovak National Council (during
WWII a resistance parliament-government, since 1968 the Slovak
parliament)
- 1943-1944: one of its main organizers
- 1944-1950 and 1968 (December)-1971: its deputy
- 1944-1950: member of its Presidium
- 1944-1945:vice-chairman
Council of Commissioners (Zbor povereníkov) (a quasi
government responsible for Slovakia)
- 1944-1945: Commissioner of the Interior
- 1945-1946: Commissioner of Transport and Technology in
Slovakia
- 1946-1950: President of the Council of Commissioners, in which
he contributed to the suppression of the influential Democratic
Party of Slovakia by the Communists (1947–1948)
- 1948-1950: Commissioner of Agriculture and Land Reform in
Slovakia
- 1949-1950: Commissioner of Alimentation in Slovakia
Czechoslovak Parliament (called National Assembly and since 1968
Federal Assembly)
- 1945-1951 and 1968-1975: deputy
- 1969-1975: member of its Presidium
Czechoslovak government
- 1968 (April-December): a vice-premier of the Prague Spring
Czechoslovak government
President
of Czechoslovakia
Other
important data
- 1929-1932: member of the Communist Youth Union (prohibited in
1932)
- 1933-? : studies at the Law Faculty of the Comenius University in Bratislava, then a
lawyer in Bratislava
- 1936-1938: member of the Slovak Youth Union (1936 founder and
secretary)
- 1937-1938 vice-president of the Slovak Students Union and
secretary of the Association for the Economic and Cultural
Cooperation with the Soviet Union
- 1940-1944: four times jailed by the government of Jozef Tiso for illegal
Communist activities
- 1943-1944: member of the 5th illegal KSS Central Committee, one
of the main organizers of the anti-Nazi Slovak National Uprising
(1944) and of its leading body, the Slovak National Council
- late 1944- February 1945: he fled to Moscow after the defeat of
the Slovak National Uprising
- 1950: charged with "bourgeois nationalism" with respect to
Slovakia (see History of
Czechoslovakia)
- 1951: arrested
- 1954: sentenced to life imprisonment
- 1954-1960: imprisoned
- 1960: conditionally released through an amnesty
- 1963: his conviction was overturned and his party membership
restored and he was rehabilitated
- 1963-1968: scientific employee of the State and Law Institute
of the Slovak Academy of
Sciences
- 1969 (April)-?1989: chief commander of the Popular Militia
- 1971 (January)-?1989: president and member of the Presidium of
the National Front Central
Committee
See also
References
- ^
(Russian)Biography at the website
on Heroes of the Soviet Union and Russia
| First Secretaries of the Central Committee
of the KSČ |
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