Programme
Sunday, 5 June 2005
17:30–20.30
Opening session at the Prague Crossroads Arts Centre (Pražská křižovatka), Zlatá Street, Prague
Monday, 6 June 2005 (Czernin Palais)
8:45 Registration
9:00 Opening
9:15–10:45
Panel 1: The Communist East and Principle VII: East-European Governments implementing the Helsinki provisions
Svetlana Savranskaya (National Security Archive, Washington): The KGB Efforts to Monitor and Suppress Dissent.
Wanda Jarząbek (Insitute of Political Studies, Warsaw): Helsinki - The Approach of the Polish Government
Paweł Machcewicz (Institute of National Remembrance, Warsaw): Détente and the Communist Struggle against “Foreign Political-Ideological Diversion”
Csaba Békés (Centre of Cold War History, Budapest): Hungary and the Helsinki Process
10:45–11:00 Coffee break
11:00–12:30 (cont. Panel 1)
Stefan Wolle (University, Frankfurt on the Oder): The Helsinki Conference and the GDR
Kimmo Elo (University of Turku): The Impact of the Helsinki Process on the Room for Manoeuvre in GDR Foreign Policy, Especially Its Intra-German Dimension
Jan Pešek (Institute of History, Bratislava): The Churches in Slovakia under the Pressure of the Communist Regime
Jan Rychlík (Charles University, Prague): The Helsinki Process and the Freedom to Travel Abroad for Czechoslovaks
12:30–13:30 Lunchtime
13.30–15.00
Panel 2 Principle VII: Western approaches
Keith Hamilton (Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London): Czechoslovakia Remembered: British Diplomacy, the CSCE and East/Central Europe, 1972-75
Michael Libal (German Ambassador, Prague): The CSCE Process in the Context of “Ostpolitik” in the 1970s and 1980s. Recollections of a Diplomat
Heikki Larmola (University of Helsinki): Kekkonen, The Helsinki Process, and Eastern Europe
Jana Starek (Institute of East European History, University Vienna): Solidarity with Czechoslovak Dissidents and Émigrés in Austria
Rodger Potocki (National Endowment for Democracy, Washington): The NED and the East European Dissidents
15:00–15:20 Coffee break
15.20–17.00
Panel 3 Helsinki from below: Dynamic processes and social mobilization in East-bloc states
Rainer Eckert (Zeitgeschichtliches Forum, Leipzig): The Helsinki Final Act and the Civil Rights Movement in the GDR
Oldřich Tůma (Institute for Contemporary History, Prague): Helsinki and the Emergence of Charter 77
Michal Kopeček (Institute for Contemporary History, Prague): The Helsinki Process and the “Politics of Freedom” in (East-)Central Europe.
Manfred Wilke (Freie Universität, Berlin): Why Was There No Charter 77 in the GDR? Comments on a Paper Given in Florence, 25 Years Ago
Tomáš Vilímek (Charles University, Prague): The Impact of Helsinki on the Opposition in the ČSSR and the GDR
19:00–21:00
The Czech Museum of Music (Karmelitská Street 2, Malá Strana)
Meeting of Eye Witnesses: with guests from the former Czechoslovakia and GDR, Hungary, Poland, Russia, Belorussia, and their advocates from the West
Tuesday, 7 June 2005 (Czernin Palais)
9:00–10:45
cont. Panel 3 Helsinki from below: Dynamic processes and social mobilization in East-bloc states
Petr Blažek (Institute for Contemporary History, Prague): A Parallel Mini-congress on Peace, held at the Hvězda Hunting Lodge (June 1983)
Christian Domnitz, (Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung, Potsdam): Human-rights Activists and “The Dream of Europe” in East Germany and Czechoslovakia
Juraj Marušiak (Institute of Political Sciences, Bratislava): The Hungarian Minority in the Slovak Struggle for Human Rights
10:45–11:00 Coffee break
11:00–12:30
Panel 4 Cooperation across the Iron Curtain
Mojmír Povolný (USA): The Czechoslovak Exile Movement in the Helsinki Process
Barbara Day (Prague Society for International Cooperation): Supporting the Independent Culture in Czechoslovakia (Jan Hus Educational Foundation, London)
Júlia Kalinová-Sherwood (London): Amnesty International's Work on behalf of Prisoners of Conscience in Czechoslovakia and Other Communist Countries, 1972-89
Joanna Weschler (Human Rights Watch, USA): US Helsinki Watch and Dissidents in Eastern Europe
András Mink (Open Society Archives, Budapest): The Soros Foundation Hungary
12:30–13:30 Lunchtime
13:30–15:10
General discussion
15:10–15:30 Coffee break
15:30–15:50
Petr Pithart: The Helsinki Process, Discontinuity Czech Style: A Comment on Czech Politics Today
16:00–17:30
Closing panel discussion: The Helsinki Effect: Myth or Reality?
Jacques Rupnik (Paris), Otto Pick (Prague), Vilém Prečan (Prague)
Conference organizer
The Czechoslovak Documentation Centre
Cyril Svoboda, Czech Foreign Minister, is the patron of the conference
Partners and co-organizers
Institute of Contemporary History, Prague
Cold War History Research Center, Budapest
Institute of Political Science, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava
Institute of Political Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw
Institute of National Memory, Warsaw
Stiftung Aufarbeitung der SED Diktatur, Berlin
National Security Archive, Washington
Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington (International Cold War History Project)
National Museum, Prague
Charter 77 Foundation, Prague
Sponsors
International Visegrad Fund
Vize '97 Foundation, Prague
Dr Milan Sládek (Geneve and Prague)
James H. Ottaway, Jr, USA
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Bureau Prague
Museum Kampa, Foundation of Meda and Jan Mladek, Prague
Atkins and Langford Development Ltd, Prague
Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport of the Czech Republic, Prague
Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic, Prague
Muzeum Kampa, Meda a Jan Mladek Foundation, Prague
Atkins and Langford Development Ltd, Prague
Karel Schwarzenberg