- František Kriegel
František Kriegel (
10 April 1908 —3 December 1979 ) was a Czechoslovak politician, physician, and a member of the Communist Party reform wing ofPrague Spring (1968). He was the only one of the political leaders kidnapped toMoscow during theWarsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia who declined to sign theMoscow Protocol .Early life
František Kriegel was born in Stanislawów (today
Ivano-Frankivsk ),Austria-Hungary (presentUkraine ) to the family of aJew ish builder. His father died when František was ten, and the family became dependent upon help from František's grandfather. Due to the fierce anti-semitism in Galicia of that time, young Kriegel left home to study medicine atCharles University inPrague (instead of the nearby Lwów University where there was an unofficialJewish quota Czech Who is Who: [http://www.libri.cz/databaze/kdo20/search.php?zp=4&name=KRIEGEL+FRANTI%A9EK František Kriegel] Cs icon] in place). [http://zpravodajstvi.ecn.cz/index.stm?apc=zkvx1-1907879&x=1818539 The Charta 77 Foundation announces 2006 František Kriegel Prize] , econnect, 22. 4. 2006] His mother could only give him a little money and six white shirts.Leoš Kyša, " [http://www.hejrup.sk/view.php?cisloclanku=2004082405 Osamělý bojovník František Kriegel] ", 2003 Sk icon]Prague
Kriegel had to earn a living in a shoemaker's shop or as a theatre figurant (he even sold sausages in football stadiums), but he enjoyed an independent life in the highly tolerant society of 1920s Czechoslovakia. During the
Great Depression , he joined theCommunist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) and believed that social and national justice would solve the problem of the poor and theJewish Question . He became adoctor of medicine in 1934 and started his career in the I. Internal Medicine Clinic in Prague.pain and the Far East
In December 1936, Kriegel joined the
International Brigades to fight against Spanish nationalists ofGeneral Franco in theSpanish Civil War . He served as a doctor and gained the rank ofMajor . After the defeat of Republicans in 1939, Kriegel crossed thePyrenees toFrance where he was interned inSaint-Cyprien and then inCamp Gurs . A return to Czechoslovakia was impossible because it had been occupied by Nazi Germany. Kriegel accepted the challenge of the NorwegianRed Cross to go as a doctor toChina to help in theSecond Sino-Japanese War . He joined a group of 20 doctors, among them Friedrich Kisch (1894 – 1968), brother toEgon Erwin Kisch . During the siege ofWalawbum , he treated nearly 50 injured soldiers. Toward the end of the war, he served with Chinese and American units inIndia andBurma Karel Pacner, "Osudové okamžiky Československa," (Prague, 1997), 455-6. Cs icon] where he witnessed the victory of the Allies in October 1945. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,920736,00.html?iid=chix-sphere Deaths Dec. 17, 1979] ,Time Magazine ]Back in Czechoslovakia
Kriegel returned to Czechoslovakia in November 1945 and, while continuing to work as a doctor, he involved himself in the political work of the Communist Party. He was a member of the KSČ Regional Committee in Prague and was working as a secretary in Lidové milice (People's Militias) when the KSČ seized control of the country in February 1948. He was appointed as the undersecretary of the Ministry of Health in 1949. During the political purges of the Party in the 1950s, Kriegel had to leave the Ministry and worked as a doctor for the
Tatra company. He resumed his medical career in 1957 and became Chief Physician at theVinohrady hospital in Prague. In 1960, he went toCuba as an adviser of theFidel Castro ˈs government on the organisation of medical care – thus he was there at the time of theCuban Missile Crisis . When he returned to Czechoslovakia, Kriegel refused a post in the Party organisation but stood as the Member of theNational Assembly and was elected in 1964. Finally, he became a member of the Central Committee of KSČ in 1966, though he was opposed to the conservative neo-Stalinist stream in the Party. WhenAlexander Dubček was elected the First Secretary of the Central Committee of KSČ in January 1968, Kriegel was one of the main proponents of the democratic wing of the Party. Throughout this period, he did not give up his medical career; he worked as the Chief Physician first at the Rheumatic Diseases Research Institute (1963-65) and then atThomayer hospital in Prague (1965-69).Prague Spring
In April 1968, Kriegel became the chairman of the Central Committee of the National Front (a coalition of tolerated left-wing parties) and a member of Presidium of the Central Committee of KSČ. As one of the main personalities during the
Prague Spring , he grew to be hated by Soviet officials as well as the conservative Czech Communists. During theWarsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia onAugust 21 1968 , he and five other main representatives of the Party were arrested by the SovietKGB and CzechStB (Šalgovič) units and deported by plane to Moscow (the others wereAlexander Dubček ,Oldřich Černík ,Josef Smrkovský ,Josef Špaček , andBohumil Šimon ). Kriegel was treated particularly roughly, and made the target ofanti-semitic insults. [William Korey, "The Origins and Development of Soviet Anti-Semitism: An Analysis,"Slavic Review , Vol. 31, No. 1 (Mar., 1972), pp. 111-135.] He was so distrusted by the Soviets that he was not allowed to be present during the negotiations of the two parties, and when he was asked to sign the text of the concluding statement [ [http://www.totalita.cz/texty/komunike_mosk_1968_08_27.php Komuniké z Československo - Sovětského jednání v Moskvě dne 27. 8. 1968] (Moscow Protocol) Cs icon] he was the only one of 26 politicians to refuse. "Send me to Siberia or shoot me dead," he replied. He was eventually released with the others and accordingly, he voted against theTemporary Sojourn of the Soviet Army Treaty in October 1968 (with three other MPs). He was removed from the Central Committee and then from the Party in 1969.1969-1979
In the last decade of his life, Kriegel worked for the opposition. He was among the first to sign
Charter 77 . He died in hospital in Prague under police control in 1979, and his body was seized by the authorities to prevent any demonstrations at a funeral. [Christopher Hitchens, "For the Sake of Argument: Essays and Minority Reports," (Verso, 1993), 121.]Legacy
The "František Kriegel Award" is granted annually to a person who has fought for human rights. It was founded in
Stockholm in 1987 and is funded by the Charter 77 Fund. [ [http://www.bariery.cz/projekty/ceny/kriegla.asp Cena Františka Kriegla] Cs icon]References
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