Václav Havel

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Biography

Playwright, essayist, poet, former dissident and 1st President of the Czech Republic

  • Primary profession
  • Writer·actor·director
  • Country
  • Czech Republic
  • Nationality
  • Czech
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 05 October 1936
  • Place of birth
  • Prague
  • Death date
  • 2011-12-18
  • Death age
  • 75
  • Place of death
  • Hrádeček
  • Cause of death
  • Natural causes
  • Spouses
  • Olga Havlová·Dagmar Havlová
  • Education
  • Akademické gymnázium Štěpánská·Theatre Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague
  • Knows language
  • Czech language
  • Member of
  • Royal Society of Literature·Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung·Czech Helsinki Committee·Committee for the Defense of the Unjustly Prosecuted·Club of Rome·American Academy of Arts and Sciences·Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste·Civic Forum·Civic Forum
  • Parents
  • Václav Maria Havel·Božena Vavrečková

Music

Movies

Books

Awards

Quotes

Hope is not a feeling of certainty that everything ends well. Hope is just a feeling that life and work have a meaning.

This is the moment when something once more begins visibly to happen, something truly new and unique. . . something truly historical, in the sense that history again demands to be heard.

Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well, but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.

Even a purely moral act that has no hope of any immediate and visible political effect can gradually and indirectly, over time, gain in political significance.

For by this very fact, individuals confirm the system, fulfill the system, make the system, are the system.

The point I am trying to make is that words are a mysterious, ambiguous, ambivalent, and perfidious phenomenon. They can be rays of light in a realm of darkness. They can equally be lethal arrows. Worst of all, at times they can be one or the other. They can even be both at once!,The worst thing is that we live in a contaminated moral environment. We feel morally ill because we became used to saying something different from what we thought. Concepts such as love, friendship, compassion, humility or forgiveness lost their depth and dimension.

You do not become a ‘dissident’ just because you decide one day to take up this most unusual career. You are thrown into it by your personal sense of responsibility, combined with a complex set of external circumstances…. It begins as an attempt to do your work well, and ends with being branded an enemy of society.

True enough, the country is calm. Calm as a morgue or a grave, would you not say?,Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well but the certainty that something makes sense regardless of how it turns out.

Hope is a state of mind, not of the world. Hope, in this deep and powerful sense, is not the same as joy that things are going well, or willingness to invest in enterprises that are obviously heading for success, but rather an ability to work for something because it is good.

Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.

Hope is definitely not the same thing as optimism. It is not the conviction that something will turn out well, but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.

Work for something because it is good, not just because it stands a chance to succeed.

It lies in human nature that where you experience your first laughs, you also remember the age kindly.

The exercise of power is determined by thousands of interactions between the world of the powerful and that of the powerless, all the more so because these worlds are never divided by a sharp line: everyone has a small part of himself in both.

The salvation of this human world lies nowhere else than in the human heart, in the human power to reflect, in human meekness and human responsibility.

The deeper the experience of an absence of meaning - in other words, of absurdity - the more energetically meaning is sought.

When a truth is not given complete freedom, freedom is not complete.

Without free, self-respecting, and autonomous citizens there can be no free and independent nations. Without internal peace, that is, peace among citizens and between the citizens and the state, there can be no guarantee of external peace. .

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