| Jan Palach |
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| activists who committed suicide | |
| palach, jan | |
| czech people | |
| prague spring | |
| self-immolations | |
| 1948 births | |
| 1969 deaths | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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The Soviet -led invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968 was designed to crush the liberalising reforms of Alexander Dubček 's government during the Prague Spring . Palach died after Setting Himself On Fire in Wenceslas Square in Prague , Czechoslovakia on 16 January 1969 in protest. The funeral of Palach turned into a major protest against the occupation, and a month later (on 25 February 1969 ) another student, Jan Zajíc , burned himself to death in the same place, followed in April of the same year by Evžen Plocek in the city Jihlava . Apart from immediate shock, these suicides didn't have a lasting impact on the political situation in Czechoslovakia. A few months earlier, on 8 September 1968 , a Pole, Ryszard Siwiec had immolated himself in Warsaw during a public event in protest against Warsaw Pact aggression in Czechoslovakia and Polish participation in it. Siwiec died in hospital care four days later, 12 September . However, it is unlikely that Palach would have known about this act of protest, as it was completely concealed by the Polish communist authorities. The first news about it appeared in Radio Free Europe two months after Palach's death. After the Velvet Revolution Palach was commemorated in Prague by a bronze cross embedded at the spot where he fell outside the National Museum , as well as a square named in his honour. The Czech astronomer Luboš Kohoutek , who left Czechoslovakia the following year, named an Asteroid which had been discovered on August 22, 1969, after Jan Palach ( 1834 Palach ). Several later incidences of self-immolation have or may have been influenced by the example of Palach and his popularity in the media. In the spring of 2003, a total of six young Czechs burned themselves to death, notably the secondary school student Zdeněk Adamec who burned himself on 6 March 2003 on almost the same spot in front of the National Museum, leaving a suicide note on a webpage explicitly referring to Palach and the others who had committed suicide in 1969. Reasons for such a wave of suicides are unclear. Also, the song "Club Foot" by the band Kasabian is dedicated to Palach. EXTERNAL LINK |