Prague museum displays totalitarian-era surveillance technology

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Prague museum displays totalitarian-era surveillance technology

The Iron Curtain was more than just a figure of speech: Communist regimes set up thousands of miles of heavily-guarded, electrified barbed wire fencing to completely isolate Eastern Europe from the West.

That still didn’t stop many from desperately attempting to flee the totalitarian East. Some succeeded, but many lost their lives.

Among the latter, in what was then Czechoslovakia, was a priest in the brutally-persecuted Catholic Church named Josef Skop.

Hoping to reach East Germany before the Berlin Wall sealed off its connection with the West, he decided to cross the River Elbe undetected by walking underwater in a home-made diving suit complete with rubber boots.

He used a rubber garden hose as a breathing tube - a fatal mistake as it proved too long and too narrow to ensure a sufficient air supply.

Nearly 300 people are known to have died, many killed by border guards with orders to shoot on sight, while attempting to escape from Czechoslovakia to the West.

Skop’s diving suit is on display in “Technology in Dictatorships,” a new exhibition at the National Technical Museum in Prague, now capital of the Czech Republic, one of the two countries into which Czechoslovakia split after communism. The display marks the 30th anniversary of the 1989 anti-communist Velvet Revolution by looking back at the surreal repression the nation underwent and at how it resisted.

It focuses on the technology used by the totalitarian regime to control its citizens - and the innovative means they used to undermine the omnipresent control.

“Spying was massive,” said Jan Hostak, the exhibition’s curator. The secret police known as StB - with about 15,000 staffers and a network of up to 100,000 collaborators - could spy on and bug 600 people at the same time.

“The secret police agents were masters in bugging and eavesdropping on people, and no dissidents could be certain that their apartment was not targeted,” Hostak said.

But protests intensified in 1989 and the StB could no longer contain them.

On Nov. 17, 1989, fiery speeches at a university campus inspired thousands of students to march toward Prague’s central Wenceslas Square. As darkness fell, police cracked down hard.

Unbowed, the students went on strike and huge street rallies followed. The government collapsed and President Gustav Husak resigned.

Weeks later, Vaclav Havel became the country’s first democratically elected president in decades.

The exhibition also includes mimeographs, copying machines that helped Havel and other dissidents spread their message, the Charter 77 human right manifesto among them.

“It’s important to remind people of what it really was like,” Hostak said.

AP
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