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Slovenian wines and the presentation of the main tourist regions of the country

Under the auspices of the Embassy of the Republic of Slovenia in Prague and the Ambassador H.E. Ms. Tanja STRNIŠA, an event dedicated to the tasting of Slovenian wines and the presentation of the main tourist regions of the country took place at Kaiserštejnský palace, Malostranské nám Prague.

In the program:

Tasting of selected wines

Meeting with more than 60 Slovenian winemakers

Presentation of traditional winemaking procedures and technologies

Meeting with representatives of Slovenia and the Queen of Wine 2024

Presentation of regions of tourist interest, including tasting of local products

The Place was full of members of the media who were able to taste more than 20 different wines.

The first part of the event was instructed by Valentin Bufolin – the best Sommelier in Slovenia and Rolanda Vitkoba – Editor in Chief of the Vino & Styl magazine.

You can watch selected parts of this event.

The second part took place in the evening with Ambassadors, distinguished guests, and members of the Slovenia community in the Czech Republic.

The guests were welcomed by H.E. Ms. Tanja STRNIŠA, Ambassador of Slovenia in the Czech Republic – You can watch her speech and taste wine and delicious food from Slovenia.

109 anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Since the 1920s April 24th is the day Armenians commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide, the most tragic element of Armenian history.

On April 24, 1915 hundreds of Armenian Intellectuals: poets, musicians, publicists, editors, lawyers, doctors, and deputies, were arrested in Constantinople under warrants issued by the Turkish authorities. They were all sent into exile and were horrifically slaughtered. The annihilation of the Armenian Intellectuals was part of a systematic, fiendish plan to exterminate the Armenian people in their homeland. It was the first state-planned Genocide of the 20th century.

On April 24, 1965, Soviet Armenians organized rallies to demand the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, thus, breaking an era of silence that was created during the Soviet rule regarding this issue.

A mourning procession of hundreds thousands of Armenians, which includes local Armenians as well as Diasporans, begins in a silent march that moves to the Armenian Genocide Memorial every year on April 24. As each mourner brings flowers to place around the eternal fire, a sea of flowers can be seen encircling the area creating a solemn visual impact.

In Prague H.E. Mr. Ashot HOVAKIMIAN, Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia together with many other ambassadors and members of the Armenia community, got together to remember and honor the victims.

Watch the Speech of  H.E. Mr. Ashot HOVAKIMIAN, Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia

TWO GORILLA BABIES: MOBI IS GETTING TO HIS FEET AND THE NEW YOUNG ARE TAKING CARE OF BY A NURSERY

32-year-old female Shinda holding the cub of her half-sister, 31-year-old female Kijivu. Behind this situation is the close relationship between the two gorillas, who live together all their lives. From the left, the 26-year-old male Kisumu and the 11-year-old female Duni are also pictured. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

An extraordinary spectacle – two baby lowland gorillas – awaits visitors at the Prague Zoo. The Kijiva female has been lending her offspring to her half-sister Shinda less than two weeks after giving birth. On the other hand, Duni, the mother of the female Mobi, born in January, continues to guard her daughter carefully and has not yet loaned the four-month-old infant to anyone. The different approaches of a mother of five and a first-time mother can be seen with your own eyes in the pavilion of the Dja Reserve. Best at 10 am or 3 pm, when the gorillas are fed.

Kijivu has known Shinda all his life, they have never lived apart, so he has a lot of trust in her. Just a few days after giving birth, she lends her half-sister a small gorilla – according to preliminary observations, also a female – for burial and inspection without any problems. At that moment, Shinda shows herself as an experienced mother, and, even in the role of nanny, she instinctively tries to feed her niece or nephew.

A typical scene observed these days in the Dja Reserve: Kijivu (left) with a two-week-old cub on her breast or belly and Duni (right) with an almost four-month-old Mobi on her back while traveling through the pavilion. Photo by Jaroslav Šimek, Prague Zoo

The greatest interest in the new cub seems to be the same as in the case of Mobi, the newly eight-year-old gorilla adolescent Ajabu. He doesn’t miss a single opportunity for even a fleeting touch. It’s like he’s checking to see if he can play with his new partners. The leader of the Kisumu gang has an overview of everything, and if Ajabu hits on the females too much, he does not hesitate to kill the young man.

Mobi is almost four months old and the breeders have just discovered her sixth milk tooth. She also sucks solid food, although she does not swallow it yet. According to the assumption, Mobi is also trying to get back on its feet. But for now, he can only last a little while before he returns to all fours again. She is also trying to be a toddler, but still with the help of Duni, who supports her tummy with her hand. They also try to grab branches and ropes. In short, he shows all the abilities that such an old and healthy young gorilla should show.

A young female Kijivu, which was born in the Prague Zoo on April 12. A month later – on May 11 – world-renowned primatologist and nature conservationist Jane Goodall “baptizes” Kijiva’s fifth child. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

Cubs are of course an enrichment not only for the gorilla family but also for visitors to the Prague Zoo. Having two such small gorillas in a group is rather exceptional in the context of the world’s zoos. The spacious auditorium in the warmth of the Dja Reserve pavilion, where people can have a snack or charge their mobile phones, is thus a unique space for watching the growth of both cubs, their joint steps, and discovering the world.

While little Mobi’s name was chosen by Cameroonian schoolchildren and then by the Czech public in the final vote, the second born cub will be named by world-renowned primatologist and nature conservationist Jane Goodall. She will visit the Prague Zoo next month, and on May 11 at 11 a.m., the cub’s ceremonial “christening” will take place. In cooperation with the Czech University of Agriculture, the Prague Zoo organizes a public lecture by this legendary English scientist. The zoo will soon publish more information about registration for the event on its website and social networks.

Little Mobi tries to grab a branch or a rope in the exhibit from the back of her mother Duni. Photo by Miroslav Bobek, Prague Zoo

Trans man speaks about impact of Czechia’s forced sterilisation law on daily life

Czechia is one of the last countries in Europe to still require transgender people to undergo medical sterilisation in order to legally change their gender – meaning that officially changing your sex is not possible without undergoing surgery to remove your reproductive organs. The Justice Ministry announced over a year ago that they were preparing legislation to scrap this requirement, but with little political will to change the law, it has so far not made it to parliament, despite years of criticism from international human rights organisations. Recently around two dozen Czech NGOs and prominent people signed an open letter to Prime Minister Petr Fiala calling for the government to take action.

To help make sense of this often-misunderstood topic, I spoke to Jáchym, a trans man (meaning he was born female) about his experiences of going through the Czech system for gender reassignment. I know Jáchym personally, and indeed had known him as a man for several years without knowing that he was trans. He spoke very candidly and openly about his personal process, starting with when and how he came to the realisation that he wanted to live life as a man.

See the rest here.

Author: Anna Fodor

Discover the beauty of the South Bohemian Region

Photo: Paul-Henri Perrain, Radio Prague International

The South Bohemian Region boasts ancient towns full of life, fairy-tale castles and palaces, unique picturesque villages and literally thousands of fish ponds.

See the rest here.

Friedrich or Bedřich? Novel highlights Smetana’s complicated background

Photo: Barbora Navrátilová, Radio Prague International

Bedřich Smetana has been in the spotlight recently in connection with the 200th anniversary of the Czech composer’s birth. Smetana is also the subject of a new novel, Friedrich řečený Bedřich (Friedrich, Known as Bedřich), by Milena Štráfeldová. One focus of the book is the music great’s complicated German and Czech background.

Hundreds of earlier books have been devoted to Smetana, says writer Milena Štráfeldová, but there is still plenty of material about him that is not widely known. For instance, his diaries, which he began keeping aged 16, have never been published in full.

“What’s interesting is that he wrote them in German. And that could be one reason why people rather tiptoe around this issue. Because in reality how was it with his Czechness and his Germanness?”

See the rest here.

Author: Ian Willoughby

Prague 1 residents tired of constant noise from tourists

Photo: Prague City Tourism

While the streets of Prague 1 may be breath-taking by day, they turn ugly by night for the city’s residents who are severely plagued by noisy drunk tourists wanting to make the most of their time in Prague. The locals, many of whom have lived in the city centre for generations, accuse the authorities of turning a blind eye to the problem. But the solution is not so simple. Many businesses in the city centre rely on these tourists for their survival, as Karolína Šnejdarová, spokesperson for Prague 1 explained to me.

“This situation is not new and we are very aware of this problem. This is often a problem that many capital cities face – for instance Prague, Paris and Rome. It’s a difficult situation because on one hand we want to accommodate our citizens, but on the other hand we are the city centre of Prague and it cannot be closed at 10pm. So we have to deal with this.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

Prague still not truly Western city, study suggests

Photo: Magdalena Hrozínková, Radio Prague International

new study by the Prague Institute of Planning and Development (IPR Prague) comparing the Czech capital with 11 other European cities has found that there is still a gap between East and West in many respects. The analysis looked at areas of life such as housing, transport, work and free time to see how Prague fared in a European context, and concluded that the city has not yet shaken off its post-communist legacy in some ways. I spoke to Lucie Pára from IPR Prague to find out more.

You compared 12 cities in your study – Prague, Budapest, Warsaw, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Vienna, Munich, Amsterdam, Milan, Barcelona, Bucharest, and Sofia. It seems like you got a good spread from north to south and east to west, but were there any other criteria by which you selected them?

See the rest here.

Author: Anna Fodor

Hundreds of vintage car lovers visit Poděbrady

Photo: Hana Slavická, Radio Prague International

Hundreds of people attended the 25th edition of a gathering of vintage car enthusiasts in the Central Bohemian city of Poděbrady at the weekend. One model on display came all the way from Italy.

Author: Hana Slavická

Speaker of the House at the EU conference: Expanding the family of EU democracies is our strategic necessity

The Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies Markéta Pekarová Adamová, together with the President of the Senate Miloš Vystrčil, participated in the two-day international Conference of Speakers of the Parliaments of the European Union in Spain.

One of the main topics of the joint discussion was the ongoing Russian war of aggression in Europe.

In her speech, the Speaker emphasized, among other things, the strategic necessity of expanding the Union to include other states with similar values and praised the cooperation of other European legislators in the Czech initiative to purchase ammunition for defending Ukraine. The conference concluded Spain’s presidency of the Council of the EU last year.

“We are being told that those who support Ukraine, unlike the Kremlin, do not want peace. Unfortunately, many citizens and politicians in Europe and beyond believe this lie. It is therefore essential that we agree on how things really are: Putin, who started the war, is not offering peace, but surrender. The only way to achieve peace is further support for the Ukrainians, especially military and economic,” said the Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, Markéta Pekarová Adamová, in her main speech, adding, “I am pleased that so many countries have joined the Czech initiative to purchase ammunition for the Ukrainian the army.”

Other topics discussed were the conflict in the Middle East and the issue of the strategic autonomy of the EU. It is currently facing new security challenges in the form of artificial intelligence and social networks.

“If we are to face threats and manage them, we must first tell ourselves how we are doing. We have to admit the situation we are in. Let’s take this conference as a wake-up call, if we continue to be as slow as we are now, if we think so much and do so little, things will not turn out well. Because the others, the undemocratic ones, the totalitarian ones, will attack us and maybe even overpower us, and that would be a disaster not only for us but especially for our children,” emphasized Senate President Miloš Vystrčil during the subsequent discussion.

Leading representatives of the European legislatures, who were hosted in their homeland this year by the President of the Congress of the Kingdom of Spain Francina Armegnol, also dealt with the issue of further EU enlargement as part of the conference.

“The European perspective for the countries of the Western Balkans, the South Caucasus, Moldova, and Ukraine is no longer a matter of our choice. I am convinced that this is a strategic necessity. Even for the Czech Republic in the 1990s, joining the EU was a distant dream which many refused to believe. This year marks 20 years since accession, and our country is a full member of the community and contributes to its security and prosperity. I believe that the same chance will be given to all other countries that are sincerely interested in it,” concluded the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Markéta Pekarová Adamová.

The conference is traditionally hosted by the country that presided over the Council of the EU in the second half of the previous year. It was therefore a formal completion of the parliamentary dimension of last year’s Spanish presidency.

On the ice! The new exhibit features hockey and ice skatingin pictures

The phenomenon of hockey and ice skating in fine art is the subject of a new exhibition of the National Gallery Prague (NGP), which reopens the Kinské Palace on Old Town Square to visitors. The exhibition will present almost a hundred works across various art techniques and media from Czech institutional and private collections. They will be visiblefrom April 26 to October 27, both paintings by old masters and works by contemporary Czech artists.

How does folk entertainment become a work of art? Through an unusual exhibition, the National Gallery in Prague shows how skating and hockey, a much-loved sport in Bohemia, were reflected in art over time. Like the old masters even contemporary artists have captured the emotion, fun, and life associated with these sports. The current hockey world championship was the inspiration to look at this sporting phenomenon from a new point of view and bring something to the audience that hasn’t been seen before to see.

Ice skating began on frozen canals, lakes, and rivers in the Netherlands in the 17th and 18th centuries, then this social entertainment gradually moved to our landscapes and became a common part of winter for all classes of the population. At the beginning of the 20th century, real hockey began to be played here and the first winter stadium was built. This sport gradually began to be perceived as part of the national identity and found its place as a theme in art, for some artists it became a free field for artistic experiments.

“At the exhibition On ice! Hockey and ice skating in pictures we will show visitors how paintings of old masters such as Pieter Brueghel II. or Norbert Grund, the most outstanding creator of Czech art of the 19th century – August Bedřich Piepenhagen, Karel Purkyně or Antonín Barvitio. But a number of works with the theme of hockey throughout the 20th century will also be exhibited, and last but not least, the works of contemporary artists,” says the general director of the National Gallery Prague, Alicja Knast, adding: “I am pleased that we are opening up a topic that has not yet been treated more comprehensively presented.”

Across media and centuries

The exhibition, which was prepared by NGP in cooperation with the Sport in Art platform and with the support of general partner Komerční banka, will present almost a hundred works of art from Czech collections. In addition to the aforementioned artists, they will be seen and (not only) the Prague rinks of T. F. Šimon, Otakar Nejedlý, or Karel Holan. Marcel Niederle’s drawings draw viewers into the world of hockey and the first big matches and victories, many hockey moments are also reminded of the photographs. “In addition to the classical treatment of the theme in painting and drawing, experimental artistic approaches by Jiří Kolář, Vojtěch Tittelbach and Teodor Rotrekl are also presented,” explains the curator of the exhibition, Anna Strnadlová.

The 1990s opened up new possibilities, which in art on the hockey theme are manifested mainly by a critical and even ironic perspective, as can be seen in the works of Krištof Kintera, Jiří Surůvka and Ondřej Kohout. “In cooperation with the NGP, we approached contemporary artists to create new works on the subject of hockey specifically for this exhibition. They include Alena Anderlová, Pavel Jestřáb, Alena Kotzmannová, Laura Limbourg, Julius Reichel, Paulina Skavova, Jakub Špaňhel, Karel Štědrý and Jan Vytiska,” says Petr Volf from the Sport in Art platform.

Hana Kovářová, Executive Director for Brand Strategy and Communication from Komerční banka, which is the general partner of the exhibition, adds: “On the tenth anniversary of cooperation with the National Gallery Prague, we gave each other this unique gift in the form of the exhibition On ice! It is no coincidence that it combines hockey and art, in the year when the national team is playing the World Championship in Prague. I would like to cordially invite everyone to the exhibition to explore for themselves how sport, which is so fundamental to the Czech Republic, is reflected in art.”

The exhibition will be open from April 26 to October 27, 2024 in the Kinský Palace on the Old Town Square, i.e. a place connected with the history of hockey

and celebrating his achievements. A Czech and English catalog is published for the exhibition.

On the ice! Hockey and ice skating in pictures

Venue: Kinských Palace, Staroměstské náměstí 1/3, 1st floor

Date: April 26 – October 27, 2024

Curator: Anna Strnadlová

Professional collaboration: Petra Kolářová, Olga Kotková, Blanka Kubíková,

Michal Novotny, Petr Volf

In cooperation with the platform: Sport in Art

General partner of the exhibition: Komerční banka

A Czech and English catalog is published for the exhibition.

Czech National House in La Villette ready to pull out all the stops at the Paris Summer Olympics

Photo: Ondřej Deml, ČTK

With just over three months to go to the Summer Olympics in Paris, work on the Czech Olympics House is in full swing. Where will it be and what can visitors expect?

The popular La Villette park on the north-eastern suburbs of Paris is set to become a hot spot of the summer Olympics. Rather than having national Olympics houses scattered around the capital, the French Olympics Committee has decided to place 15 of them in one location – Parc de la Villette –a popular venue for walks, picnics and street artists. The massive venue of over 20,000 square metres will now become a melting pot of different cultures where athletes and fans alike will come together to celebrate their victories and cheer on fellow athletes. Aside from the hosts, Club France, La Villette will be home to the national houses of Canada, the Netherlands, Brazil, New Zealand, Portugal, Czechia, Slovakia and Slovenia, among others.

See the rest here.

Authors: Daniela Lazarová, Ladislav Hampl, Source:Český rozhlas

Voting for the winner of the Public Prize within the Olga Havlová Award

The Committee of Good Will – The Olga Havlová Foundation will award the Olga Havlová Award for the thirtieth time this year and the Public Award for the eighth time. The award goes to personalities who, despite their health handicap, help others and are an inspiration to others. The laureate of the Olga Havlová Prize is chosen by a jury appointed by the foundation’s board of directors, while the winner of the Public Prize will be chosen from an online vote. The medallions of the nominees, who can vote until May 10, are published on the website www.cenaolgyhavlove.cz.

 

“The jury of the Olga Havlová Prize selected three candidates for short nomination for the Public Prize. They are Daniela Bláhová, Michaela Linková and Jaroslav Winter. It also selects the winner of the Olga Havlová Award from all 19 nominees,” says Monika Granja, director of the Goodwill Committee – Olga Havlová Foundation. Like the winner of the Olga Havlová Prize, the winner of the Public Prize will be presented at the award ceremony on May 27 in the Fant building of the Main Railway Station in Prague.

 

Candidates for the Public Award within the Olga Havlová Award

 

Daniela Bláhová

Daniela has been living with multiple sclerosis for more than 25 years, due to which she is confined to a wheelchair. All this time she has been working full-time in the ROSKA organization, and since 2013 she has been the president of the Prague organization. In addition to ensuring operation, he conducts occupational therapy and art therapy for clients of ROSKA Prague. He organizes rehabilitation stays for patients with multiple sclerosis and handles accounting for the non-profit organization Center for Disabled Skiers, z.s. She became a model, and showed off models that convinced hundreds of women that they could look good even in a wheelchair. She managed to get financial resources, as well as media and, above all, enormous moral support for a group ascent to Kilimanjaro to tell everyone that a wheelchair is not an absolute barrier to life. She herself climbed to a height of 5100 meters! Daniela has also become an example of life’s optimism, diligence, perseverance and overcoming difficulties for thousands of healthy students – her classmates at the Metropolitan University of Prague.

 

Michaela Linková

Michaela suffers from a rare and very serious disease, systemic scleroderma. She works in the association Revma Liga Czech Republic, where for the last two years she has been intensively dedicated to the preparation of a project that fundamentally changes the patient environment in our country. During this time she had to face two difficult battles with cancer. Although she is currently undergoing regular chemotherapy, Míša is not leaving the project. Even in the most difficult moments after chemotherapy, she helps others by phone or email, organizes congresses and workshops, and in addition, she works with energy on the Revma web project in peace. In addition, in 2018 she founded the Skleroderma patient group, which provides valuable assistance to all patients with this diagnosis in our country. As a patient herself, she decided to take the initiative and start actively caring for the education and care of these patients. She is a pioneer in the field of care for rare rheumatic diseases, through her participation in the creation of official recommendations, organizing conferences and other projects that really help people with this diagnosis.

 

Jaroslav Winter

Jaroslav, although he himself is almost deaf, has been running the www.helpnet.cz portal for over 20 years, which provides the public with information about the lives and needs of people with medical disabilities and interesting things from the world of disabled people. He is very actively involved in raising awareness about the world of the deaf. As a coordinator of projects supported by the Vodafone Foundation between 2008 and 2011, he made a significant contribution to the introduction of simultaneous transcription of spoken speech as a social service and, through the management of the project Elimination of discrimination of hearing-impaired persons in court proceedings, contributed to the use of simultaneous transcription in courts. He has already organized 20 years of the INSPO conference, the largest of its kind in Central Europe, which focuses on technologies for people with specific needs and which is completely barrier-free for participants with any handicap. In 1999, he co-founded and since then manages the BMI association, whose mission is to support the development of the Internet as a global means of communication and the use of modern technologies for the development of civil society and especially people with specific needs.

 

About the Olga Havlová Prize

The Olga Havlová Award was first announced by Mrs. Olga in 1995 with the aim of honoring people with a medical disadvantage who, despite their handicap, do not forget others and are an inspiration to overcome obstacles for others. Olga Havlová participated in the first year, and after her departure, the Award became a memory of a personality who always stood up for the rights of endangered citizens.

 

The main media partners of the 30th Olga Havlová Prize are Český rozhlas and Deník N. Other partners are: Railway Administration, Minet Elektro, spol. s. r. o., ČSOB, Mountfield, Rückl, Copy General, Model Obaly a.s. and Radio 1.

 

You can vote for the Public Prize as part of the Olga Havel Award 2024 here: https://www.cenaolgyhavlove.cz/

 

Bohuslav Martinů’s long lost Concerto for Violin and Orchestra

Photo: Bohuslav Martinů Centre in Polička

Music must be beautiful,” wrote Bohuslav Martinů, “or it wouldn’t be worth the effort.” One of the most prolific 20th century Czech composers wrote around 400 works, drawing inspiration from different styles and genres. His long-lost Concerto for Violin and Orchestra carries typical Czech traits.  

Bohuslav Martinů (1890 -1959) was born in the small town of Polička as the son of a simple bell ringer, but his great talent for music opened the way to fame and success and a cosmopolitan life in some of the world’s greatest cities.

Recognizing his talent, the townspeople of Polička raised money to fund his studies, sending him to Prague where he studied with Josek Suk and played violin in the Czech Philharmonic. The ensemble’s concerts took him to London, Geneva and Paris. The latter made a big impression on him and in 1923 Martinů moved there to study with Albert Roussel.

See the rest here.

 

 

Nicholas Lowry: It was part of my Czech identity that my family owned a condom company

Photo: Archiv Mowshe

Nicholas Lowry leads viewers through IDENTITA: A Film About Czech Graphic Design, which is set for release later this year. The New York auctioneer, art expert and TV personality seems the ideal man for the job, given his vast knowledge of the subject and his family background. We discussed Lowry’s Czech heritage, his time in Prague in the “Wild East” early 1990s and what he has learned from working on IDENTITA in Prague recently, shortly after shooting wrapped on the feature-length documentary.

What are your own Czech roots, Nicho?

“My father was born in Prague in 1932 and lived here with his parents and his brother. They were officially at that time Sudeten Germans, so German was his first language; Czech was his second language.

“We’re also a Jewish family, so come the war, come 1938/1939, the family had to leave, and were able to successfully get out.

See the rest here.

Author: Ian Willoughby

EP99: Nicholas Lowry

Photo: Archiv Mowshe

Art expert Nicholas Lowry has Czech heritage and lived in Prague in the early 1990s. He will soon be seen as the presenter of a documentary on classic Czech graphic design.

Author: Ian Willoughby

See the rest here.

Roma Holocaust victims finally honored with dignified memorial in Lety

Photo: Matěj Vodička, Czech Radio

Roma representatives, top officials and cultural figures attended the opening of a memorial to Romany and Sinti victims of the Holocaust in Lety, south Bohemia on Tuesday. Due to communist neglect, the site of a former concentration camp originally served as a pig farm and it took close to three decades for the state to buy out the property and erect a dignified memorial in its place.

It was an emotional experience for descendants of the Roma whose lives ended in the Lety concentration camp in illness, poverty and isolation. Over 1,300 Roma passed through the camp’s gates between 1942 and 1943 never to come out. More than 300 of them died there, mostly women and children. Over 500 inmates were sent to Auschwitz.

See the rest here.

Authors: Libor Kukal, Daniela Lazarová

Prague Uprising monument set for spot where Konev statue stood

Photo: RSAA/ ZAN studio

A new monument honouring the courage of those who fought in the May 1945 Prague Uprising has been selected in a public competition and will be erected in the Bubeneč district. It will replace a statue of the Soviet Army commander Ivan Konev, which was removed in 2020.

A larger-than-life statue of Red Army Marshal Ivan Konev was taken down four years ago due to his repressive role within the Communist Eastern Bloc. This caused a quite a stir in Czechia, including protests and disputes between Prague and Moscow. Now, a monument to the liberation of Prague from Nazi occupation is set to be erected in its place.

See the rest here.

Author: Ruth Fraňková

“This old crone has claws”: Kafka’s Prague

Photo: Magdalena Hrozínková, Radio Prague International

In today’s episode of our series In Franz Kafka’s Footsteps we are back in Prague to visit places where the famous writer lived, worked and wrote, and also where he spent his free time.

This is how Franz Kafka described Prague to his friend Oskar Pollak. Today, the city has a square, a gallery and a museum named after the famous German-speaking Jewish writer. But his legacy can be found in many other, often unexpected places, such as the Botanical Garden in Troja or the Civic Swimming Pool on the banks of the Vltava River.

In 1907, at the age of 24, Franz Kafka started his first job, which was located in an impressive, neo-Baroque palace on the corner of Wenceslas Square and Vodičkova Street. It was the Prague branch of the Italian insurance company Assicurazioni Generali. Journalist and publicist Judita Matyášová, author of a book called On the Road with Franz Kafka (S Kafkou na cestách), continues:

“This job was arranged for him by one of his uncles through various business contacts. Kafka took it very pragmatically. He was interested in the fact that the company had headquarters in Trieste, by the sea. He decided that if he was industrious enough and learned Italian, he might be sent to the headquarters of this insurance company.”

See the rest here.

Author: Ruth Fraňková

Expert on homelessness in Czechia: “We have high demand year round”

While the worst of the winter months are behind us, the need for the services that aid people experiencing homelessness in Prague have not diminished. Homelessness continues to be a significant problem across Czechia’s capital, as Jitka Klánová, Director of Social Services for the Salvation Army, told me.

“The humanitarian measures that Prague introduced for the winter months are over. The 600 extra beds are no longer provided, so we are back to our normal everyday capacity for our services for people experiencing homelessness in Prague. As we are all experiencing, there is a cold wave right now, and this morning in Prague it was slightly below zero, so the situation is not good. We are still offering all of the services we provide during the year, and we are still seeing a very high demand for them. Our night shelters are full, and so are our day shelters.”

See the rest here.

How will return of freezing temperatures impact growing crops in Czechia?

Photo: Štěpánka Budková, Radio Prague International

After nearly a week of temperatures in the mid-20s Celsius, Czechs are having to put their winter coats back on as the weather dips below freezing. But the sudden change doesn’t only impact our clothing choice – it has an even more detrimental effect on the crops that have begun to grow and respond to the warm temperatures. To understand more, I spoke with Miroslav Havránek, a researcher from the Charles University Environment Centre.

“If you think about it in the bigger picture, the impact will be a loss of crops and yields. The trees that had already started to bloom – like cherries and peaches. Some of these trees will have lower yields, and in some extreme cases, lose their production completely. Other impacts could be the stunting of growth, which would also cause smaller yields. It’s very unfortunate, because we had a very warm February and part of March, and nature started to react to it like it was real spring. Now we are getting temperatures that are below zero, and freezing temperatures are always going to harm crops.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

58th Karlovy Vary to turn spotlight on Kafka and cinema

Photo: Vít Šimánek, ČTK

The first details about this year’s Karlovy Vary International Film Festival have just been revealed. The 58th edition of the region’s biggest cinema event will feature a special section dedicated to Franz Kafka, while its visual identity will reflect the Brutalist hotel at the centre of the festival.

Cameras whirred as Karlovy Vary festival president Jiří Bartoška and designer Aleš Najbrt pulled back a sheet to reveal the visual identity of the 58th edition in Prague on Tuesday morning.

The main image comprises three circles and a square making up a number 58.

See the rest here.

Author: Ian Willoughby

Czechast: Edvard Beneš in London

Photo: ČT24

We’re diving into the enduring relationship between Czechs and this vibrant city, exploring moments that have left an indelible mark on our nation’s story.

Today, we’re focusing on a truly remarkable chapter from World War II – the story of how the exiled Czechoslovak president, Edvard Beneš, managed to de facto recreate a country that was torn apart by the Nazi occupation. It’s a tale of resilience, but also the beginnings of diplomacy that in effect brought Czechoslovakia into the Soviet sphere of influence and led to the installment of a totalitarian regime for over 4 decades.

See the rest here.

Author: Vít Pohanka

26 April 1929: First Czech “talkie” screened in Ústí nad Labem

Photo: Ondřej Hájek, ČTK

The innovation of film with sound first made it to Czechoslovakia 95 years ago. The first sound film to be screened in the country was not a feature film, however, but an advert for a factory in Ustí nad Labem. It had its premiere in the same city, four months before the first sound film was shown in Prague.

Georg Schicht, the owner of a soap manufacturing company in Ústí nad Labem, was behind the successful premiere of the first sound film to be screened in Czechoslovakia. He bought a huge sound system for the Alhambra cinema in Ústí – reportedly so huge that it took up the entire room – and used it to show an ad for his factory.

The memorable screening on April 26, 1929 was attended by the cream of Ústí society as well as people from Prague who travelled to come and see it. The premiere’s aim was not so much artistic as commercial – it was intended to introduce sound film and its advantages to the owners of Czechoslovak cinemas who were in the audience and to emphasise the importance of sound film for advertising.

See the rest here.

 

Prague’s Old Town Square Christmas tree gets second life

Photo: Marie Vítů, Czech Radio

Ever wondered what happens to your Christmas tree after the festive season is over? Well, in the case of one particular Christmas tree at least, it won’t end up on a scrapheap or in an incinerator. Apprentice carpenters from one of the capital’s vocational schools are turning Prague’s Old Town Square Christmas tree into useful wooden objects for old people’s homes.

Benches, moveable crates, and insect hotels – those are just some of the items being created in the carpentry workshops of the Secondary Vocational School in Prague 9 from the wood of the 22-metre-high spruce tree that adorned Prague’s Old Town Square until early January. Students from the school are working on giving the tree a second life now that the Christmas season is over.

See the rest here.

Authors:Anna Fodor, Marie Vítů, Source:iROZHLAS.cz

 

Cities that are planned to be inclusive for children are “inclusive for all”, says head of CAMP

Photo: Barbora Navrátilová, Radio Prague International

How would cities look if we designed them with children in mind? That’s the topic of an event hosted by Prague’s Centre for Architecture and Metropolitan Planning (CAMP) taking place on Wednesday evening. The lecture, titled “Start with Children”, argues for cities to put children at the centre of urban planning in order to create greener, safer places for youth to grow. Head architect at CAMP, Štěpán Bärtl, told me more.

“Today we have a special event called ‘Start with Children’, which is a preview for a conference taking place next month in Bratislava. The idea is quite simple, it’s the theory that if you design a city that is friendly and inclusive towards children, it will be friendly and inclusive for all. Our panel is going to discuss how to make Prague, and cities in general friendlier to children and our future generations.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

The Kingdom of the Netherlands King’s Day

On the occasion of King’s Day, the Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, H.E. Mr Daan Huisinga, and Mrs Anne Huisinga-Paret host a reception at the Ambassador’s Residence garden

Mr. Jozef Síkela Minister of Industry and Trade was the honor guest for the 3rd year.

Watch the Video with the speech of H.E. Mr Daan Huisinga – Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Mr. Jozef Síkela Minister of Industry and Trade of the Czech Republic.

Happy Orange King’s day!

The 30th Commemoration of the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda

The Embassy of the Republic of Rwanda in the Czech Republic organized on 18th April 2024 a ceremony at the Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech Republic with the theme: Remember-Unite-Renew

The commemoration period, commonly referred to as Kwibuka ( the Kinyarwanda word for Remembrance), is an opportunity for Rwandans and the global community to stand together and draw lessons from Rwanda’s tragic history ensuring sustainable peace in the region and around the world.

The hall at the Parliament was full of Ambassadors, Deputies, politicians, and other distinguished guests.

The ceremony was moderated by Benedicto Nshimiyimana, the first counselor at the Rwanda embassy.

After lighting candles and a minute of Silence to commemorate the Genocide victims, the guests were welcomed by Mr. Simon Heller – a member of the Chamber of Deputies and Chairperson of the Rwanda-Czech Republic Parliamentary friendship group.

Then a Video with a statement by Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary General on Kwibuka 30.

Ambassador H.E. Mr. Richard Masozera had a remarkable speech (Video attached ) and Mr. Jan Marian – Deputy minister at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs gave his remarks ( video attached ).

The video Despair to Hope was screened, with testimonies of survivors of the Genocide. Not even one dry eye could be found on the full hall.

Video of Mrs. Alice Wairimu Nderitu – the UN secretary general & special adviser on the prevention of Genocide, spoke about UN steps to avoid such cases in the future.

Ambassador Karel Kovanda – former permanent representative of the Czech Republic to the UN presented a very interesting the topic:The Failure of the UN and lessons learned from Rwanda in 1994”

You can read more at: https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/the-rwanda-genocide

Ambassador H.E. Mr. Richard Masozera expressed his gratitude to the participants and the guests and closed the memorial ceremony.

One year before the opening of the world exhibition EXPO 2025, the Czechs present the Czech national pavilion in virtual reality

On Wednesday, April 17, 2024, the General Commissioner of the Czech participation in the World Expo, Ondřej Soška, signed a contract with the general contractor for the construction of the Czech national pavilion, the Japanese construction company Daisue (its CEO Kazunori Mura).

“We are very happy that we can be part of the construction of the Czech national pavilion and that we have received such an honor. The Czech pavilion will be a demanding construction – the wooden CLT structure will be covered with glass. However, our company is currently starting to deal more with the construction of wooden buildings, and we take your pavilion as an excellent reference for other orders. We would like to establish deeper cooperation with the Czech Republic in the future,” says Daisue CEO and President Kazunori Murao.

On this occasion, the virtual premiere of the Czech National Pavilion also took place. It now has its virtual twin, just outside of Prague, at the Virtuplex headquarters. A year before the start of the world exhibition, partners from companies, as well as regions, cities, and various institutions can visit the pavilion and talk about the possibilities of cooperation.

“The ability to walk through the pavilion with 3D glasses, see it on a 1:1 scale, catch all sorts of flaws before we start building, and at the same time show a very real model to our contracted and potential partners is invaluable. From the beginning, I conceived the entire project in such a way that I wanted to allow excellent Czech architects and Czech contractors to show their talent and creativity, present themselves abroad, and open up new opportunities and possibilities for cooperation. That is why, after more than twenty years, we have announced an open architectural competition in which 38 great projects have applied. The advantage of the architectural competition compared to the Design & Build used in recent years (i.e. a situation where you compete with a construction company and architects at the same time) is the fact that we can better control the design and the whole process so that it is in line with the concept of the Czech participation in EXPO 2025, which approved by the government in 2022,” says Ondřej Soška, general commissioner of Czech participation.

The transformation of the Czech national pavilion for the World Exhibition EXPO 2025 in Osaka into virtual reality exemplified the great benefits of modern virtual reality technologies. From the early stages of the project, it was possible to walk through the pavilion in the lobby area of Virtuplex and coordinate the model with the architects down to the last detail – from the materials used to the intensity of the light inside. Thanks to the virtual model, the first-ever video of the Czech national pavilion was also created.

“With the EXPO organizational team, we discussed in detail and simulated, for example, the journey through the pavilion and its key parts. Thanks to the fact that you walk through the model on a 1:1 scale, you have the opportunity to perceive all distances, views of the interior, but also views outside the pavilion. Through various variants of the interior solution, the model also enables business partners to become more familiar with potential variants of the use of space,” explains the co-founder and CEO of Virtuplex, Martin Petrovický.

The second step after the architectural competition is to choose the pavilion contractor – someone who will build the building. “Although we were unable to find a Czech company that had the Japanese construction license required by legislation, we were looking for Japanese companies that want to cooperate with Czech suppliers. We are planning to import Czech wood and glass to Japan,” explains Commissioner Soška and adds: “Based on previous indications and expressed interest, we invited six companies to the selection process for the general contractor, and we received an offer from three of them. The company Daisue submitted the lowest bid.”

After the signing of the contract, which took place on Wednesday, April 17, 2024 at Virtuplex, the Daisue company will begin preparatory work on the Czech land on Yumeshima Island in Osaka.

“The pavilion will take advantage of its exposed location at the intersection of the coastal promenade and the main boulevard, attracting attention in all weathers with its dominant solitary mass and the visuality of the building’s transparent glass envelope. The facade made of sheet art glass refers to the rich history of glassmaking in the Czech territory and at the same time offers unusual exhibition spaces with a changing interior atmosphere. The house will be an exhibit in itself,” explain architects Michal Gabaš and Tomáš Beránek from Apropos Architects.

Following the selection of the general contractor, the team of the Office of the General Commissioner for EXPO 2025 is launching an active recruitment of partners. During the 26 EXPO weeks, he is preparing several business topics and conferences that he and his partners would like to present in Japan. These are, for example, nanotechnology, fintech, space technology, cyber security, or the circular economy. Those interested in cooperation can contact e-mail partnership@expo2025czechia.com or fill out the questionnaire on the website www.expo2025czechia.com. For example, the companies Elmarco and AtomTrace, which signed a cooperation agreement with Commissioner General Soška on Tuesday, April 16, 2024, are preparing for the EXPO in this way.

“Participation in EXPO 2025 will above all provide companies with a great opportunity to expand not only to Japan but also to the broader Asia-Pacific region, where it is not always easy to get to. In Asia, the perception of the state is generally much stronger than in Europe, and if a company cooperates with the state and participates in the national pavilion, it has much more weight and relevance in the eyes of the partners there. Of course, some companies do not have ambitions to expand into Asia, but they perceive the EXPO as a prestigious event and a great reference order for domestic and international partners. Which ultimately can mean, for example, expansion into new markets or an increase in the volume of orders. Companies like Koma Modular, GreeenTech or Česká mincovna have such an experience in the past,” summarizes Tomáš Akerman, partnership manager of the Czech EXPO team.

The business program will usually take place in the pavilion from Tuesday to Thursday, Mondays are set aside for so-called corporate days, when partners will be able to rent certain parts of the pavilion. A cultural program will take place on Friday and at the weekend.

The current director of the Czech Center in London, Přemysl Pela, is now participating in the preparation of the cultural program of the Czech National Pavilion and explains: “We will build the cultural program of the Czech Pavilion at EXPO 2025 in Osaka with partners from the cultural sphere so that it corresponds to the purpose of the event in dialogue with the business program: draw attention to the current Czech Republic. In addition to traditional cultural attributes, we will focus on contemporary Czech artistic creation, which has the potential to interest the domestic Japanese public as well as foreign visitors to the exhibition.” In the coming months, open calls will be issued for Czech artists who are interested in presenting themselves at EXPO 2025. These events will underline the theme of Czech participation at the next world exhibition in Osaka – the Czech Republic as a country of talent and creativity.

During the virtual premiere of the Czech National Pavilion, the Office of the Commissioner General presented the official mascot of the Czech participation in EXPO 2025 – exhibitor René. “Mascots and cartoon characters are extremely popular in Japan, after internal discussions we decided to use a mascot to pay tribute to the exceptional Czech artist René Roubíček, who exhibited in Osaka in 1970,” says Aleš Kysela, marketing director of the Czech EXPO team.

On this occasion, the Office of the Commissioner General presents a video clip that it shot in collaboration with Michaela Lesařová Roubíčková, glassmaker Pačinek Glass and director Jakub Jahn.

René is a creature of crystal glass, friendly, surprising and playful like the glass itself. He was born in the fiery furnace of a glass factory in the legendary crystal valley in Bohemia. René, named after its creator, glass artist and designer René Roubíček, will become the official symbol and mascot of the Czech pavilion at the EXPO 2025 world exhibition in Osaka. René Roubíček, who designed the sculpture “Cloud-Water, Source of Life” for EXPO 1970 in Osaka, symbolically returns after 55 years to the same city in Japan, for the world exhibition EXPO 2025. René has a crystal and plush form, and in the Czech Republic he will be officially available for purchase by the end of 2024.

“Father and mother were among the founders of a new view of glass, when glass – a material used exclusively for the production of utilitarian objects – began to be used as a material for making sculptures, a new branch of art and the term glass sculpture were born. Roubíček’s sculpture, chosen as a mascot, is just such a work from the time of the emergence of this new art branch. I am glad that his contribution to global development has not been forgotten. At the same time, I am very proud that my father’s work can become the official symbol of the presentation of our country abroad,” concludes Czech artist Michaela Lesašová Roubíčková.

About the Czech pavilion at EXPO 2025

In December 2022, after more than twenty years, the Office of the Commissioner General announced an open anonymous architectural competition for the design of the national pavilion for EXPO 2025. 38 competition teams applied for it, from which an expert jury led by the world-renowned architect Eva Jiřična selected the winning design in March 2023 in the shape of a glass spiral by Apropos Architects. The load-bearing structure of the building will be made up of modern wooden panels, while the facade will be made of art glass, which is a centuries-old tradition in the Czech Republic. The national pavilion will offer a worthy background for the Czech participation in EXPO 2025, which will be held from April to October 2025 on the artificial island of Yumeshima in the Osaka Bay. The pavilion will house a permanent exhibition, a multifunctional auditorium, facilities for business meetings, a restaurant, and a VIP lounge, and in front of the pavilion there will be a relaxation area with a view of the sea for visitors.

About Czech participation in EXPO 2025

The Czech Republic will participate as an independent state in the World Exhibition EXPO for the sixth time. Ondřej Soška, who won the selection procedure of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs with his concept and theme “Talent and creativity for life”, holds the position of the general commissioner from September 2022. The Czech Republic should be presented in Osaka not only with what the Japanese know very well and have admired for a long time, for example, Czech glass and classical music, but especially with Czech innovations, nanotechnologies, promising startups, and regional talent.

You can find more information on the website of the Czech participation in the world exhibition EXPO 2025. You can also follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

From January 2023, the Office of the General Commissioner is part of the Czech Centers network.

Studying in Czechia: Tips and advice to get your visa approved

Czechia is becoming increasingly attractive for international students, and numbers are growing fast, but the bureaucratic challenges faced by prospective students can be daunting. Here you can find some useful tipes and advice to get you through the visa process.

See the rest here.

Author: Ela Angevine

Studying in Czechia: Getting your diploma recognised

Czechia is becoming increasingly attractive for international students, and numbers are growing fast, but the bureaucratic challenges faced by prospective students can be daunting.  We bring you tips and advice on how to get your diploma recognised.

To many people the word nostrification is unknown until they become students abroad. In essence, this is the official process of comparing and matching foreign high school or university qualifications to the local system. Contrary to its simple explanation, the nostrification process in the Czech Republic can be long and complicated, especially for undergraduate students who have completed their secondary education outside the country or the European Union as a whole.

See the rest here.

Author: Lora Lúkova

See outer space from Prague’s Petřín: Renovated telescope will allow for deeper observation

Photo: Filip Jandourek, Czech Radio

A telescope in the Štefánik Observatory on Prague’s Petřín hill has been returned after underdoing extensive repairs in Germany for two years. The telescope, which was first placed in the observatory in 1930, allows visitors to observe the moon, planets, and even the Sun during the day. Magdalena Hrnkova, a specialist at the Observatory, told me more.

“The telescope has been at the observatory since the 1930s and has undergone some minor repairs, most of which were done by hand. It was in dire need of serious repairs this time.”

What is special about this telescope? What can be seen through it?

“It’s a telescope with a very big lens, which aren’t very common these days although they were quite common 100 years ago. Telescopes like these are used for mapping the moon, it has two telescopes – one for observing and one for taking photographs. It is particularly good at observing the solar system, the moon and the planets.”

Given the fact that the telescope is quite old, was it complicated to take out for repair and reinstall?

“Yes, it was quite a complicated process and we were quite nervous about it. To get it out of the building, we had to lift it out with a crane. Since the observatory is in the middle of the rose garden at Petřín, we didn’t know if the crane would fit. The telescope is quite heavy, five tonnes in total. So we needed to take it out in two parts. But all went well, and it’s safely back in now.”

See the rest here.

Písek: small city with big history

Písek, a South Bohemian town of around 30,000 inhabitants, was an important town in the Middle Ages and has a well-preserved medieval centre with six churches and a partly preserved Gothic castle, rebuilt into the town hall and a brewery. Known as a centre of education, it also is home to a number of important schools.

Where is Czechia’s oldest bridge? You might be tempted to think it’s Charles Bridge in Prague – but you would be wrong. The oldest surviving bridge in what is now Czechia is actually located in the South Bohemian town of Písek, as Jaroslav Jiřík from the Prácheň Museum in Písek proudly tells me.

“We have here the oldest stone bridge in the Czech Republic. It’s older than Charles Bridge in Prague. It was founded in the 13th century and Charles Bridge was built by Emperor Charles IV, so only in the middle or late 14th century.”

The Písek Stone Bridge, one of the oldest preserved bridges in Europe, was the site of some colourful local traditions, says Jan Kouba, also from the Prácheň Museum.

See the rest here.

Authors: Anna Fodor, Zdeňka Kuchyňová

Czechia is running low on paediatricians. What’s the impact?

When your child isn’t feeling well, the next step any parent would take after over the counter medicine would be a paediatrician – but that’s not so easy any more in Czechia. Today, many Czech parents don’t have a general practitioner for their child, meaning more end up going to emergency rooms for more minor issues, causing a backlog in hospitals. Czech Radio reporter Lucie Pávová told me more about the issue.

“The main problem is that the paediatricians in the Czech Republic are getting older. Right now, there are about 2,000 of them – but half of them are older than 60. This is a big problem, especially because younger paediatricians don’t want to work in smaller towns, cities, and villages. There is a small town called Tachov near the German border – and the issue is that the few paediatricians who are working in the town are older and will retire soon, and no one younger wants to replace them.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

The President of the Republic received new Ambassadors.

On Thursday, April 18, 2024, at Prague Castle, the President of the Republic Petr Pavel received the credentials of the new ambassadors to the Czech Republic:

H.E. Mr. Suwat Kaewsook, the new Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Kingdom of Thailand, based in Prague

H.E. Mr. Kansuke Nagaoka, the new Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Japan based in Prague

H.E. Mrs. Ana Berenice Díaz Ceballos Parada, the new Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of Mexico, based in Prague

H.E. Mr.  Benjamin Albert Hayes, the new Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Commonwealth of Australia, based in Warsaw.

Source : Hrad.cz

Pictures : Tomáš Fongus

Monuments in the Czech Republic are among the main drivers of tourism

In the past year, 43% of foreigners and 36% of domestic travelers visited one of the cultural monuments in the Czech Republic. Castles and chateaux are the most frequently visited. Monuments in Prague play a leading role, and visitors also spend the most on this activity. Among foreign visitors, the sights in the Czech Republic are most often sought by travelers from the USA, France, Spain, and Italy.

Cultural monuments have long been among the most visited destinations from the point of view of foreign and domestic tourists. During the last year, they recorded a total of over 21 million visits, 3 million year-on-year, and almost 17% more. People in this area most often head for castles and chateaux, but there is also interest in museums and galleries, temples and churches, towers, folk culture, architecture, or perhaps places associated with important personalities.

“From the VISA data, it follows that expenses for activities from the category of cultural monuments make up roughly 17% of all tourist spending, the most of which is in Prague – almost 80%. Those who are further away from us travel to see monuments. It is logical – if a person is considering a longer trip, he wants to see as much of the country as possible. But those who believe in cultural monuments and history also include people who have culture in their blood. In addition to US citizens (73%), travelers from France (77%), Spain (73%), or Italy (72%) also search for them most often. Swedes (69%) and the Dutch (66%) also like them. On the other hand, citizens of neighboring countries – Austria, Slovakia, Poland, and Germany – spend their stay in the Czech Republic also in other activities, and on average a third of them go to see sights in their own country,” sums up František Reismüller, director of the Czech Tourism Office – CzechTourism.

Last year, 4.2 million people visited state castles, chateaux, and other monuments managed by the National Institute of Monuments, which is a year-on-year increase of 10%. % more than the year before. Last year, the greatest increase in the interest of tourists was recorded in monuments after restoration, which made available additional spaces or sightseeing routes and thus offered new things to visitors.

“The other most visited monuments are Lednice Castle with 349,000 visitors or the European Marian pilgrimage site Svatá Hora in the Příbram region, which was visited by over 310,000 people. There is also considerable interest in the largest Czech outdoor museum – the Wallachian Museum in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm, where 305,000 people went. tourists. The Sedlec Campus in Kutná Hora, which was chosen for a visit by 291,000 people, is sought after. tourists, the art nouveau gem of Prague, the Municipal House, which was visited by 261 thousand visitors, or the Old Synagogue, where last year they welcomed over 251 thousand. lovers of history and sacred monuments,” adds Petr Janeček, head of the Institute of Tourism of the Czech Tourism Headquarters – CzechTourism.

Monuments, as a key attraction, form the basis of CzechTourism’s promotion of the country. They are reflected in almost all her activities. The aim is to support tourism in all regions. Including those that are away from the crowds but have a lot to offer and are worth a visit. An example of a campaign for the domestic market is the TV series Skryté skvosty, the second season of which is currently running on ČT, and in which the actor Jaroslav Plesl, himself a passionate lover of monuments, guides viewers through lesser-known jewels of Czech historical architecture.

Those interested can also find tips for visiting cultural monuments, including lesser-known and normally inaccessible objects, on the Kudy z nudy web portal. They can thus remember the International Day of Monuments, which was declared in 1982 by UNESCO and the United Nations Department for Education, Science, and Culture, and which falls on April 18 every year.

Prolific 20th century Czech composer Bohuslav Martinů

Check-out the fourth part of our video series Czech Music Greats, devoted to the work of one of the most prolific 20th century Czech composers – Bohuslav Martinů.

Bohuslav Martinů’s works include 15 operas, 14 ballet scores, 6 symphonies and a vast number of orchestral, chamber, vocal and instrumental works. We recommend his First Violin Concerto, which he composed in Paris in 1932. It was never performed during the composer’s lifetime, somehow got mislaid and was considered lost after his death. It premiered in 1973 to great acclaim.

See the rest here.

Author:

Library of Lost Books: Prague Jewish Museum joins search for books looted by the Nazis

Source: Prague Jewish Museum

The Jewish Museum in Prague has joined an international project called the Library of Lost Books. It invites readers from all over the world to help track down the thousands of books that once belonged to the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies in Berlin, one of the world’s most important Jewish libraries before the Second World War.

The Higher Institute of Jewish Studies or Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentum operated in Berlin since 1872 and housed some 60,000 books on Jewish history, culture and religion, before it was shut down by the Nazis in 1942. Some of the confiscated books were destroyed during the war, but others survived, ending up in various libraries and collections all over the world.

See the rest here.

Authors: Ruth Fraňková, Terezie Jirásková

Třešť: Kafka’s frequent summer hideaway

Photo: Martina Schneibergová, Radio Prague International

One of the places writer Franz Kafka liked to visit was Třešt’. Indeed before he entered the workforce he regularly visited his uncle in the small Vysočina town in summer.

We begin our journey in Franz Kafka’s footsteps at the former synagogue in Třešt’. Our guide is Romana Št’astná, head of the Department of Culture at the local municipal office. She leads the way through an arcade into a striking white building and we continue up the stairs to the first floor. There we find an exhibition dedicated to Kafka and his family.

The Prague-born German-language writer regularly came to Třešt’ during his studies, between 1900 and 1907. He spent his holidays there with his uncle Siegfried Löwy, who had a medical practice in the town. Dr. Löwy was the youngest brother of Kafka’s mother.

See the rest here.

Author: Martina Schneibergová

Have mullet, will travel: Czech hitchhikes across US for free

Photo: Vojta Pechar, @mulletnatripu

Travelling along Route 66, riding free by plane, going to a casino and taking part in a beer run. These are just some of the many adventures Czech traveller Vojtěch Pechar experienced on a hitchhiking trip across the United States, during which he didn’t spend a cent of his own money. He spent three months travelling from New York to San Francisco, passing through 18 states, getting rides in 50 cars and covering a distance of 9,000 kilometres. He documented his journey on an Instagram account called Mullet na tripu or Mullet on a Trip, which refers to his rather unusual haircut, and which attracted more than 90,000 followers.

I caught up with Vojtěch Pechar to discuss his unusual journey and I started by asking him what made him embark on his trip across the US without a single dollar.

“I just love hitchhiking. I have been hitchhiking in Europe, and I wanted some bigger challenge, so I decided to hitchhike the longest range in a country where I can understand the language. That’s why I chose America and the longest distance between its two cities.”

See the rest here.

Author: Ruth Fraňková

The Czech Republic is gaining popularity as a destination for golfers.

The Czech Republic is strengthening its potential as a European golf destination. Golf tourism is one of the important sources of income in the tourism industry. Golf is gaining popularity among both domestic and foreign tourists. In this regard, the Czech Republic can entertain the whole family. The position of the unequivocal leader in Eastern Europe is currently confirmed by the opening of the largest golf destination in the country – 55 HOLES Golf Destination, which was created by connecting two golf resorts, Prosper Golf Resort Čeladná, and Golf & Ski Resort Ostravice.

Golf has a rich and long history in the Czech Republic. We can boast of three roughly century-old playgrounds. One of the oldest golf courses in continental Europe is the Royal Golf Club in Mariánské Lázně, which was inaugurated in 1905 by the British King Edward VII. In 2007, the Czech Republic received the title “Undiscovered Golf Destination of the Year” from the International Golf Travel Writers Association. There are currently more than 100 courses and roughly 200 golf clubs in the country. Foreign tourists most often go to the Central Bohemian, Moravian-Silesian, and Karlovy Vary regions for this sport. Domestic golfers then go to Central Bohemia, Karlovy Vary, and the Ústí Region.

“Golf tourism has huge potential and fits into the concept of promoting the Czech Republic as a destination suitable for active tourism. A golf holiday with us doesn’t have to be just about golf. We have castles, chateaux, beautiful nature, and all this can be combined with this sport. In other words, we can entertain the whole family. Even if, for example, one of their members is not looking for golf. Travelers can thus divide the day into parts, spend it according to their preferences, and then enjoy relaxation together, for example in the wellness spa. Or, on the contrary, they can go to the playground and combine their visit with a trip to, for example, a nearby castle,” says František Reismüller, director of the Czech Tourism Center – CzechToursim.

As already mentioned – this year’s golf event is the opening of the 55 HOLES Golf Destination. Adherents of the traditional game on the green can play on three 18-hole championship courses. They have two restaurants, three hotels, and two conference halls for organizing social events and conferences or wellness. In other words, this is an example of an activity where the country offers comprehensive services.

“In the context of the Czech Republic’s offer for golfers, it is a unique combination of beautiful nature, cultural monuments and other leisure opportunities. In short, the whole family can come to the Czech Republic, and even directly to North Moravia, and everyone will find something for themselves. The opening of a new destination takes your golf vacation to the next level. The unique golf destination 55 Holes Golf Destination is unique not only in its area, but also in its services, the untouched nature of the Beskydy Mountains and a number of attractions in the immediate vicinity, from traditional culture in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm to the modern face of Ostrava with technical uniques,” says the director of the product management department, České head office of the tourism industry – CzechTourism Veronika Janečková.

One of the goals of 55 Holes Golf Destination is to increase the attractiveness of the Moravian-Silesian region not only for Czech golfers and tourists but also to address foreign clientele and increase awareness of the region in foreign markets. Very good cooperation with the Moravian-Silesian Region, Destination North Moravia, and CzechTourism helps in this.

“Golf is one of the cornerstones of tourism in our region. We definitely welcome the fact that the region will be proud of the largest golf destination in the Czech Republic. Linking golf courses is an important undertaking in the tourism industry, which will help improve the image of our tourist destination North Moravia. I believe that this significant investment in golf infrastructure will attract even more visitors to us and strengthen not only our position on the map of golf destinations, but also the awareness of the destination North Moravia as a great holiday area with a rich network of services and quality facilities for leisure activities.” adds Petr Koudela, executive director of Moravian-Silesian Tourism.

“We are very happy that after many years we can take advantage of the unique situation where two of the most important golf resorts in the Czech Republic are so close together. By combining them into joint products and services, the most significant golf destination in our country can thus be created. The great thing is that thanks to our reinforcement, the Spanish coach Gonzálo Sanchez, from the very beginning with international overlap. The news is all the more that Prosper Golf Čeladná has undergone an extensive renovation and is ready for the new season in better condition, not only technically, but also in terms of the services it offers to golfers and other guests,” says General Manager of Prosper Golf Resort Čeladná Jan Kastner.

For some time now, golf has been among the most sought-after sporting experiences in the Czech Republic for a wide range of people of all ages and social groups. Lovers of holes in the country will find excellently equipped golf resorts, championship courses, training academies, indoor simulators and golf courses. New courses are added every year, where you can relax perfectly on the green. The Kudy z nudy web portal also offers tips for inspiration.

“In the beginning, golf tourism was predominantly a male affair. Currently, the general Czech golfing population is divided into 70% men and 30% women. As part of golf tourism, couples most often travel – a man and a woman who both play golf. Or groups of couples. And mixed or all-female groups continue to seek golf. The newest group in golf tourism is families. As a rule, it happens with them that, for example, three out of five family members play golf. It is important for them to have sufficient infrastructure available, including practice fields or golf academies,” says the president of the Czech Golf Federation, Vratislav Janda.

The Czech Republic also supports golf tourism as part of youth support within the project “Going to Golf School”. Some schools have even included this sport in their curriculum.

Gilgul: Jazz album draws on Jewish musical traditions

Photo: Dušan Tománek, Animal Music

Guitarist David Dorůžka, regarded as one of Czechia’s leading jazz musicians, teamed up with flutist Robert Fischmann and drummer Martin Novák to record an album inspired by Jewish music. Called Gilgul, which means “cycle” in Hebrew, it has recently been awarded the Czech Music Academy Anděl award for the best jazz album of the year. You can listen to excerpts from the record in today’s edition of Sunday Music Show.

The trio, including jazz guitarist David Dorůžka, flutist Robert Fischmann and percussionist Martin Novák, formed in late 2020 with the aim to create new music that would develop the various Jewish musical traditions that have evolved over many centuries in different regions of Europe and the Middle East.

All three musicians have been involved in Jewish music before. This time, however, they came with a very unusual concept and sound, based on unusual instrumentation and mixing liturgical Hasidic melodies from Eastern Europe with melodies from medieval Spain, Ashkenazi Yiddish songs as well as inspirations from New York’s downtown scene.

See the rest here.

Author: Ruth Fraňková

PM Fiala: Israel has the right to defend its existence

Photo: Kateřina Šulová, ČTK

Czechia joined international condemnation of Iran’s strikes on Israel on Saturday night, backing Israel’s right to self-defense and expressing concern regarding a further destabilization of the region.  The worsening global security situation is expected to be high on the agenda of Monday’s meeting between US President Joe Biden and Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala. 

As news of the night attack broke, Czech leaders were quick to voice support for Israel, backing its right to self-defense and praising the work of allied states in defending the country. On his way to talks with President Joe Biden in the White House, Prime Minister Petr Fiala said Israel’s right to exist must not be questioned.

See the rest here.

Author: Daniela Lazarová, Source:Český rozhlas

Czechast Special: Remembering Iraq Ordeal of Three Czech Reporters 20 Years Ago

Photo: ČT24

There were scenes of great joy at Prague airport 20 years ago when three Czech journalists kidnapped in Iraq were reunited with their families. Vít Pohanka, now your Czechast host, was one of them.

This special episode is really a Czechast first: it is hosted by Amelia Mola-Schmidt and her guest is Vít Pohanka. He was among the three Czech reporters kidnapped near Baghdad twenty years ago.

The drama lasted over 5 days and was frontline news for the whole time. Czech authorities put together an emergency team at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and were in constant contact with the American authorities in occupied Baghdad but nobody knew whether the three journalists were alive, held by the insurgents or dead.

This was a time of a very high level of violence when quite a few other foreigners were kidnapped in Iraq and, in some cases, gruesomely executed in front of a video camera, their deaths then broadcast globally.

See the rest here.

Author: Vít Pohanka

Czechast About Lord Runciman’s Mission to Czechoslovakia

This episode serves as a prologue to our upcoming discussions about the deep-rooted connections between Czechs and Britain, particularly through the lens of London.

It was the late summer of 1938, and the clouds of war loomed ominously over Europe. The Sudetenland, home to a significant German-speaking minority, became the flashpoint in an international crisis. These Czechoslovak citizens found themselves at the heart of a contentious debate: remain part of Czechoslovakia or join Nazi Germany. Adolf Hitler’s aggressive demands threatened not just peace in our homeland but across the continent.

In a desperate bid to avoid conflict, Britain and France, though bound by treaties to support Czechoslovakia, were eager to appease Hitler. Into this tense atmosphere stepped a British diplomat—Walter Runciman, 1st Viscount of Doxford, or as he is commonly known, Lord Runciman.

See the rest here.

Author: Vít Pohanka

Canoeing season opens in Czechia

Photo: Václav Pancer, ČTK

The traditional ceremony of “unlocking rivers” opened the canoeing season in Czechia at the weekend. Pictured here are fans of canoeing in Český Krumlov.

Source:ČTK

 

Another Gorilla Baby in the Dja Reserve!

Already the Friday before last I published in a newspaper a photo of the gorilla female Mobi “looking out” for a sibling. By that I meant the baby, which Kijivu was due to give birth any day, if not any second.

According to data in literature on the duration of gravidity of lowland gorillas the earliest day of the birth could have been as early as March 14th. On the other side, the latest day, when we could expect Kijivu’s baby, was May 7th. But Kijivu already had four babies in the past, so we could base our guesses on the duration of her previous pregnancies. According to this criteria, Mobi’s sibling should have been already born last Thursday, on April 4. So, when I was publishing the picture of Mobi “looking out” for a sibling, I added that while the newspaper was being pressed, the baby might have already been born.

Well, it did not happen. And we waited in vain even on following days. The time came only the night of Thursday 11thto Friday April 12th.

Kijivu gave birth to her fifth baby at half past midnight. She behaved very expertly and pushed it to her breast, so before 1 am we could confirm that the baby was drinking. However, we know all of that thanks from the camera footage; we let everything to take its course and we went to see Kijivu with the baby on our own eyes only at 8 am, when the curtain covering the gorilla exhibit from the light of phytolamps was raised.

At that moment, Kijivu was sitting with her new-born baby just next to Duni with little Mobi. It was an amazing sight! However, Kisumu, the father of both babies immediately stood in front of them, and then they moved a bit away from each other.

If I recall the view of both mothers with babies, I can describe it in a style of Jára Cimrman in this way: there was grandmother Kijivu next to her granddaughter Duni, who was carrying her great granddaughter Mobi in her arms. But for Kijivu’s newborn baby Mobi is a sibling – they have the same father Kisumu – and a great-niece at the same time. Ugh, I hope I got it right, if not, correct me. But I had to mention it because of various pettifoggers.

However, the important thing is that the second baby born this year in our Dja Reserve is doing well, Kijivu is taking perfect care for it and that there is harmony in the gorilla group. We even evaluated the situation as being good enough that we could keep the house opened for visitors and only limited using long lenses and big cameras, which could provoke Kisumu.

We don’t know the sex of the Kijivu’s baby with one hundred percent certainty, but it seems that it might be a female. But we know exactly, who will select the name for it. It will be the famous primatologist and conservationist Jane Goodall, who will officially baptise it on May 11, at 11 am in the Dja Reserve.

Pundit on Fiala’s US visit: Czech initiative for Ukraine has increased Czechia’s stature on world stage

Photo: Office of Czech Government

Following talks with US President Joe Biden on Monday, Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala visited the US Congress on Tuesday meeting with House Speaker Mike Johnson and a number of Democrat and Republican lawmakers ahead of a crucial vote on funding for Ukraine.

The Czech prime minister has been a staunch supporter of military aid to Ukraine and I asked political analyst Jiří Pehe whether the timing of the Czech prime minister’s visit to the US added to its significance.

“I think the timing of the visit was important because Prime Minister Fiala visited the US exactly at the same time when the House of Representatives will be voting on one of the most important pieces of legislation in recent history. The fate of Ukraine will depend on whether the US will decide to support the country. So yes, the timing of the visit was quite important. Whether he was able to influence US lawmakers is, of course, a different story.”

See the rest here.

Author: Daniela Lazarová

Malbec World Day – Wines of Argentina

On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the Czech Republic and the Argentine Republic, the Embassy of Argentina and the restaurant Gran Fierro organized a special event the “Malbec World Day”.

The wine tasting will take place in the Gran Fierro restaurant, Myslíkova 8, Prague 2.

The tasting was a unique opportunity to bring together key importers of Argentine wine and showcase the potential of Argentina products to representatives from restaurants, catering companies, wholesalers, distributors, and specialized media.

In addition to the exquisite wines, Gran Fierro will be served gourmet appetizers to complement the tasting experience.

H.E. Mr. Claudio Javier ROZENCWAIG – Ambassador of Argentina greeted the guests.

The President of the Republic commemorated the thirtieth anniversary of the beginning of the genocide in Rwanda

The President of the Republic, Petr Pavel, continues his visit to Rwanda. The second day of the planned trip was dedicated to commemoration the Kwibuka 30 event, which commemorated the thirtieth anniversary of the beginning of the genocide in Rwanda.

It was the Czech Republic that was the first country to describe the events in Rwanda on the grounds of the UN Security Council as genocide. In 2010, the then Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Karel Kovanda, received one of the highest Rwandan honors – Umurinzi.

The main part of the commemorative events took place in the capital, Kigali. The heads of state and government and other guests started day with a ceremony and laying of wreaths at the Genocide Memorial. The event in the new BK Arena sports hall was also attended by the public. The day ended with a night memorial event for the victims of the genocide “Night Vigil”.

Photos By: Zuzana Bönisch

THE ELEPHANT BROTHERS MAX AND RUDI ARE HEADING TO THEIR NEW HOMES

Max (left) and Rudi (right) are already starting to show themselves as adult males, so it is appropriate for them to leave the Prague Zoo and strengthen breeding – on the recommendation of the breeding program coordinator – elsewhere in Europe. Photo by Miroslav Bobek, Prague Zoo

The first purely Prague elephants Max and Rudi are coming of age and are therefore heading to new homes. Maxmilián, born in April 2016, will go to the zoo in Antwerp, Belgium in June, while Rudolph, who is half a year younger, will still be traveling to the Pombia Safari Park in northern Italy in April. The two young Indian elephants went down in history as the first elephants born and conceived at the Prague Zoo. Visitors were able to say goodbye to the almost eight-year-old brothers on Saturday., they got a “farewell gift” in the grass enclosure of the Elephant Valley near the Gulab restaurant.

Indian elephant Maxmilián (Max) is the first elephant born and conceived in Prague. Now, on the threshold of his eighth birthday, a new home awaits him at Antwerp Zoo in Belgium. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

“The birth of the first and second ‘100% Prague elephants’ – Max and Rudi – was a great satisfaction for us, and the upcoming farewell is all the more difficult for us,” said the director of the Prague Zoo, Miroslav Bobek. “Their arrival in the world was not only the result of breeding efforts, but also the long-term work associated with obtaining their mothers – Janita and Tamara – from Sri Lanka.”

Maxmilián was born on April 5, 2016 to Janita, with Mekong as the father. Max has been playful and self-confident since childhood. Named after Emperor Maximilian II. Habsburg, who probably had the first elephant ever to enter Czech territory in his yard. Rudolf was born on October 7, 2016 to Tamara, while the father was Ankhor. Compared to Max, Rudi is more conservative and calm. His name is a reminder of Rudolph II. Habsburg, whose Prague menageries were the forerunners of European zoos.

Rudolph (Rudi), the second Indian elephant conceived and born in Prague, has larger tusks compared to his brother. He, too, will soon leave the Prague Zoo and head to the northern Italian Pombia Safari Park. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

Today, both male elephants are on the threshold of adulthood, and they are also beginning to manifest their personalities accordingly. The task of the coordinator of the European Breeding Program (EEP) was to choose a suitable location for both youngsters.

“For me, the breeding of any animal is truly complete only when it is involved in breeding with us, or goes to a new home as part of the breeding program,” claims curator of mammals Pavel Brandl. “It must be added that Max and Rudi stayed with us for an exceptionally long time, mainly thanks to the great coexistence with the adult male Ankhor. He functioned flawlessly as a calming element among elephant adolescents.”

Max (center) and Rudi (right) lived in the Prague Zoo in recent years alongside the adult male and father Rudi Ankhor (left). Ankhor was not afraid to discipline the two daring young men, and it was thanks to his calm and patient nature that the elephant brothers could stay in Prague’s Elephant Valley for quite a long time. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

Hari Raya Aidilfitri Open House

H.E. Ms. Suzilah Mohd Sidek, Ambassador of Malaysia, hosted a Hari Raya Aidilfitri Open House at her beautiful residence.

Hari Raya open houses are the ultimate celebration of Malaysian hospitality, where family, friends, and even strangers gather to share mouth-watering traditional food and good company.

It’s a cultural event where doors are kept wide open, and everyone is welcome to join in the festivities

At its core, the Hari Raya open house symbolizes unity’ generosity and communal harmony. It reflects the Malaysian ethos of “Muhibbah” – the spirit of tolerance and understanding across different ethnic and religious boundaries, making it an exemplary practice of Malaysia’s multiculturalism.

The 15th anniversary of Equal Pay Day

According to Eurostat, women in the Czech Republic earn on average 17.9% less than men, which means that they work 65 days longer on average to reach the same remuneration as men. This is the third worst result among EU countries. The goal of the Equal Pay Day conference is to draw attention to this issue, open public discussion, and help find solutions to make pay fair. At the same time, it also significantly contributes to strengthening the position of women in society and on the labor market by presenting female role models, sharing experiences, education, and mentoring.

“The issue of equal opportunities is a societal issue, and for it to be successful, men must be involved in its solution. The difference in wages between men and women is unfair not only to women but above all to entire families,” says Lenka Šťastná, founder and president of the non-profit organization Business & Professional Women CR, which organizes EPD. “The Czech Republic is moving forward very slowly. We keep coming up against the prejudices we are brought up with. There are preconceived notions of what is a typically female and typically male profession.”

According to Frederik Jorgensen, the ambassador of Sweden, which traditionally ranks first in the Gender pay gap index, “the Czech Republic should arm itself with patience, as quick successes in this area cannot be expected.” In Sweden, the representation of women in influential positions is exceptionally high in private companies even in politics, yet it is “only 36% of women on the boards of large companies and 12.1% of women in the position of general directors. “There’s no reason why the number shouldn’t be higher,” he added during the ambassadors’ panel discussion, where he spoke alongside the ambassadors of South Africa, Malaysia, Denmark and a representative of the Central European Initiative (CEI).

The opportunity for change is still here

That is why this year’s conference was subtitled Opportunity. The opportunity that equality means for companies, households, women themselves and for the Czech economy. As it turns out, there are already a number of companies whose example shows the way. Representatives of such companies as Philip Morris, Danone, Mars, GasNet, Lego, VML, ČEPs, Skupina Nova or Pestle & Mortar shared their inspiring strategies.

“At Philip Morris, we purposefully focus on a sufficiently high representation of women in management. In practice, we often encounter a lack of women interested in growing into these positions,” says Andrea Gontkovičová, Chairman of the Board and CEO of Philip Morris for the Czech Republic, Slovakia and HU, which was the general partner of the conference. “For us, it is important that women’s interest in career growth is authentic, so that women do not seek to obtain an influential position just because they are forced into this situation. They can then draw strength from their own decision in moments when they encounter a barrier in their career or find themselves at some of the crossroads in life.”

The expert partner of the conference this year was the Equal Remuneration project of the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs. In her presentation, Lenka Simerská, the main manager of the project, dispelled disinformation spreading around the legislation requiring transparency in remuneration. “Transparency means the right to information: how much is earned for a given position in the company where you work, plus the possibility to ask why I am where I am. And this information should already be heard during the interview,” said Lenka Simerská. And finally, she advised women: “Act as if the legislation already applies, ask about money. Let’s turn it into an opportunity!”

Record attendance

This year’s jubilee year saw record participation, including a record number of foreign performers from 15 countries around the world, as well as the number of mentees, which exceeded two thousand.

The international reputation of the Equal Pay Day conference is underlined by the support of leading international institutions such as the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and CEI, which designated it as a flagship event this year. According to Lenka Šťastná, their cooperation is not only a recognition of the efforts made so far, but also the key to expanding the reach and influence of the conference. It is precisely thanks to the support of CEI that this year’s edition can rightfully bear the designation of international.

In a speech for EPD, Ulrik Vestergaard Knudsen, OECD Deputy Secretary General, emphasized that the promotion of gender equality is a strategic policy of the OECD and listed three key measures that are necessary to change the current situation. “First, it is necessary to continue to support the more equal use of parental leave by fathers and mothers. Second, it is very important to ensure continuous and affordable formal childcare and out-of-school services for all young children. And third, policymakers can reduce the fiscal disincentive to work, ie. to ensure that the tax and benefit system does not favor single or main earner families,” he said.

The European Commission includes the EPD campaign and conference among the important measures of the EU and its member states to support equal pay. This topic is gaining importance together with the newly created obligation to implement ESG sustainable business principles and related non-financial reporting (CSRD). Among the metrics that must be monitored and reported under the “S” pillar are, among others, the gender pay gap, the level of representation of women in top management and equal opportunities, diversity and inclusion. And that’s exactly what the Equal Pay Day conference is dedicated to.

The next edition of the conference will take place on 25-26 March 2025 again at the Clarion Congress Hotel in Prague.

Equal Pay Day 2024 in numbers:

16 nationalities

36 speakers at the conference

812 participants

78 female mentors

2,180 mentees

President Pavel participated in the summit of the Three Seas Initiative

On Thursday, April 11, 2024, the President of the Republic, Petr Pavel, went on a one-day working trip to Vilnius for the summit of the Three Seas Initiative, which unites thirteen countries from Central and Eastern Europe.

The summit aimed to strengthen the resilience and competitiveness of the region through deepening cooperation in the energy, transport, or digital economy sectors. For example, a concrete project is to connect the transport infrastructure using high-speed lines, which could connect the Czech Republic and Poland via the Baltic states in the future.

“The main goal of this summit of the Three Seas countries was, on the one hand, to express continued support for Ukraine, with absolutely specific promises, agreements and at the same time with specific projects. And the second was to emphasize cooperation between member countries and partner countries in the three key areas, that is primarily energy, transport infrastructure, and digital technology,” said President Pavel.

The representatives of the states also confirmed their unequivocal support for Ukraine and their readiness to participate in its reconstruction. President Pavel was among the main speakers of the plenary session.

At the same time, the President used his business trips to attend several bilateral meetings with international partners. Among them with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Sesto head of state Alar Karis.

Photo author: Tomáš Fongus, CPR.

American Franchises Looking for Czech Partners

Ambassador Bijan Sabet and the Commercial Service of the U.S. Embassy in cooperation with the Czech Franchising Association (ČAF) are organizing a presentation of American franchise brands that are looking for partners/master franchisees in the Czech Republic.  This was the 4th presentation and more to come.

Ambassador Bijan Sabet hosted the presentation of Mobile Outfitters, RAVE Restaurant Group/Pizza Inn, The Wendy’s Company, and Wyndham Hotels & Resorts at the Beautiful Ambassador residence

Mr. Jamal Suboh – Director of Development and support at Mobile Outfitters, shows the best way to protect your mobile  

Veronika ( Lukesova) Novakova – present the Pizza Inn

Ms. Meg Tagodzinska – Developer Manager – Central & Eastern Europe at Wyndham Hotels & Resorts – the biggest Hotel chain worldwide, presents this biggest company and what kind of partners they are looking in the Czech Market

Wendy’s International – the 3rd biggest burger chain worldwide, presents its company and the opportunities in the Czech Market.

“This place reflects who we are as human beings”: New natural wine bar opens in Prague

Photo: Amelia Mola-Schmidt, Radio Prague International

Farah Abou Kharroub has one of those personalities that draws you in from the moment you meet her. That warmth and hospitality is something that she is trying to translate into her new venture, Aleb – a wine bar purveying exclusively natural wines from around Czechia and serving up food from the Levant region where she hails from. A filmmaker by training, a wine bar was never in the cards for Farah, but when I visited Aleb, she told me more about her time in Prague and how it’s led her here.

“I moved to Prague seven years ago to study film direction at FAMU. I’m in love with the city and the culture, and I call this place my home. I’m graduating this year, and it’s important for me to have more things to do in Prague after I finish at FAMU. I wanted to start a cultural space where we introduce my culture’s food and create a hub where my friends and I can learn together and be together, so that’s how this place was born.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

Tropical weather has arrived in Czechia – but what’s the climate impact?

Illustrative photo: Hana Slavická, Radio Prague International

Czechia experienced its first bout of tropical weather this past weekend, with temperatures reaching as high as 30 degrees Celsius in some parts of the country. While the warmer weather is welcomed by some, it’s indicative of a larger problem being experienced globally – climate change. Miroslav Havránek, a researcher from the Charles University Environment Centre, told me more.

We had a really warm weekend here in Prague and all over Czechia. Temperatures reached almost 30 degrees in some parts of the country. What are these weather patterns saying about our current climate here?

“This is something we have been observing for two or three decades now, so it’s surprising by the standards of the month, but scientists and climatologists are not surprised that we are getting new record temperatures. This weekend we actually had the first tropical day of the year, which has never happened before this early in the spring. Every year, we are getting new record temperatures, and this pattern is directly tied to climate change.”

Is this a trend where we suddenly have different seasons appearing sporadically throughout the year? Will seasons begin to amalgamate with one another?

“In short, yes. These mid seasons like spring and autumn will become shorter and shorter. We’ve only had spring for two or three weeks and we’re starting to have early summer. So it’s a pattern that’s going to be observed more often.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

Record April temperatures in Czechia

Photo: Vít Šimánek, ČTK

Unusually high temperatures have been leading Czechs to spend their free time by the water and it feels like summer in many places. Pictured are girls on a pedal boat near Prague’s Charles Bridge.

Source: ČTK

The incredible story of Vlasta Kálalová Di Lotti: Czech female surgeon, entomologist, polyglot and traveller

Photo: Archive od Ilona Borská / Wikimedia Commons, public domain

The name Vlasta Kálalová Di Lotti might not mean very much to you – even many Czechs have not heard of her. But the woman with the exotic-sounding name was decidedly one of the most fascinating figures of the First Republic and had an incredible life story that deserves to be more widely known. Not only a female surgeon at a time when this was extremely uncommon, she was also intrepid and pioneering, setting up a clinic in Iraq in the 1920s, and was said to have been fluent in over a dozen languages.

Most of what is now known about Vlasta Kálalová Di Lotti comes from a single book – Doktorka z domu Trubačů or The Doctor from the Trubač Family House, by the now-deceased biographer Ilona Borská. Jana Renner, who a few years ago published a book about pioneering Czech women who made their mark on history, which of course included the story of Vlasta Kálalová Di Lotti, told Radio Prague that reading Di Lotti’s story in Ilona Borská’s biographical novel had made an impression on her as a young girl.

See the rest here.

Author: Anna Fodor, Source:Český rozhlas

New lab studying dangerous viruses opens near Prague

Photo: BIOCEV

A new laboratory enabling safe work with highly infectious viruses and bacteria opened this week at the Biocev science centre in Vestec near Prague. The state-of-the-art facility will enable scientists to study hepatitis B, HIV, Covid and other dangerous viruses.

The Biotechnology and Biomedical Centre research centre of the Academy of Sciences and Charles University, opened in Vestec, a small village on the western outskirts of Prague, already in 2014.

However, over the past year it has now been upgraded to a high-security facility, known as BSL3, which enables scientists to work with dangerous viruses.

Tomáš Košt’ák, a manager for JRTech, the company that carried out the year-long reconstruction, says the laboratory must comply with very specific conditions concerning heating, ventilation and air-conditioning:

“The lab’s air ventilation system has to be self-contained. All the exhaust air from the lab is filtered through HEPA filters. There is no way the viruses could escape from the main room, because they are sealed in a vacuum.”

See the rest here.

Authors: Ruth Fraňková, Eva Kézrová

April 1624: Re-Catholicisation of Czech lands begins

Source: National Gallery Prague, public domain

On April 9, 1624 Ferdinand II issued a patent allowing only the Catholic religion in Bohemia. A few days later he banned royal towns from accepting non-Catholic burghers and also forbade non-Catholics to practice their trade in such towns.

The Battle of White Mountain in 1620 was fatal for the Protestant Estates. With the victory of the imperial troops, a new phase of re-Catholization began under Emperor Ferdinand II.

Re-Catholization took basically two forms: a strict, harsh and uncompromising approach using all means of coercion; and a gradual, consistent and non-violent approach with an attempt to awaken a genuine and sincere interest in the Catholic faith. Any rebellion was nipped in the bud.

See the rest here.

No means no: Czech MPs vote to redefine rape as non-consensual sex

The Czech statute books are set for a significant change. After a lower house debate on Wednesday rape will be defined as non-consensual sex, rather than the current forcible sex. The new bill also gives greater protection to the under 12s in this area.

One-hundred and 68 votes for, zero votes against. Politicians from all parties in the Czech Chamber of Deputies raised their hands in unison on Wednesday to overhaul the definition of rape in the country’s statue books.

At present rape is defined as forcible sexual intercourse. But once the new legislation takes effect this will be replaced by a definition of non-consensual intercourse.

Under the government amendment, disapproval can also be indicated non-verbally, through gestures, crying or adopting a defensive posture.

See the rest here.

Author: Ian Willoughby

Franz Kafka’s Prague: An Old Town childhood and youth

Photo: Martina Kutková, Radio Prague International

The great writer Franz Kafka was born in Prague in 1883 and spent his entire life in the city. His early years, and the life of his family, are closely linked to its Old Town district.

Today Prague’s Old Town is filled with tourists from all over the world. Naturally, the place looked rather different in the final years of the 19th century, when the young Franz Kafka walked its streets.

To get a flavour of Kafka’s links to the Old Town we spoke to guide Dana Kratochvílová, who shows visitors – foreign and local – around the district of his youth.

“Czechs don’t know much about Kafka. It always surprises me that teenage Americans have read The Metamorphosis and Kafka is a familiar subject for them. Many Czech young people have also learned about him. But under communism here, Kafka was taboo. For several generations, including my own, he was simply kept secret.”

See the rest here.

Author: Magdalena Hrozínková

Housing investment support centers started operating in the regions. Municipalities will be offered practical help with housing projects

Mayors of the center will be offered suitable financing models for affordable housing projects and will advise on legal and technical questions, for example. Experts will work in all regions. The centers are financed from European sources, specifically from the component of the National Recovery Plan of the Ministry for Regional Development to support affordable housing.

Last year’s representative survey by the Ministry of Regional Development (MMR) and the Union of Towns and Municipalities in the Czech Republic showed that 69% of municipalities are not satisfied with their housing stock and 72% want to expand or renovate it. At the same time, only about a third of the municipalities had any experience with their own housing project in the last eight years. “Big cities have their experts, they know how to manage projects. On the contrary, smaller towns and villages often lack them, which is also why they do not engage in the construction, repair or purchase of apartments as much. After all, due to the low interest of local governments, the support programs under the previous government did not succeed. For this reason, in addition to financial support, we also offer practical advice and recommendations, for example how to find a quality builder and economist, how to change a spatial plan or prepare an urban study,” explains Deputy Prime Minister for Digitization and Minister for Regional Development Ivan Bartoš.

SFPI regional housing investment support centers were established in eight regions and their branches operate in the rest – thanks to this, they cover the entire territory of the Czech Republic. They will work in cooperation with regional development agencies and a network of selected experts. “The newly established centers will provide mayors with free advice not only regarding state subsidies in the area of housing, but also expert investment advice. Their staff have previous experience in regional development and public construction in their regions. They will actively contact and tour individual municipalities so that both sides fully utilize their potential,” says Daniel Ryšávka, director of the State Investment Support Fund (SFPI).

Study: Young Czechs are overwhelmingly “mild EU supporters”

Photo: Toy Box, Czech Radio

With European Parliament elections around the corner, Czechs are gearing up to head to the polls. But how do Czechs, specifically younger ones, feel about the EU and Czechia’s membership? That’s a question that Czech Radio reporter Anna Urbanová set out to answer based on data from a new study, and I spoke with her about it in our studios.

“We are talking about a project called Divided by Europe, which is a survey conducted for Czech Radio. This part of the survey focussed on young Czechs aged 18-29, the so called ‘EU Generation’. These people were born into non-communist Czechia that was already apart of western structures. The most important trends we observed amongst young Czechs are that the EU is a natural part of western structures, and that the EU is a part of Czechs character – that they can’t imagine that Czechia wouldn’t be a part of the EU. For example, 78 percent of young people would vote in favour of remaining in a hypothetical referendum.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

Cutting-edge technology to protect Prague’s Charles Bridge tower

Photo: Kristýna Maková, Praha křížem krážem

Conservationists have applied a special protective paint on one of the Gothic towers on Prague’s Charles Bridge, the city’s most famous landmark. The transparent nano-coating can decompose algae and mosses with the help of light alone, keeping the stone walls clean and protected.

The entrance to Prague’s famous Charles Bridge is guarded on both sides by monumental Gothic towers. The taller one of them, known as the Lesser Town Bridge Tower, has been regularly overgrown with mosses and lichen, making its sandstone walls look green rather than beige.

Thanks to modern technologies, experts may have found a solution to the problem. A few months ago, they scraped the walls clean and painted them over with a special coating of transparent nano-paint with self-cleaning properties. So far, it seems to have done the trick, says Karel Kučera, from Prague City Museum:

“There was quite a lot of green growth in the form of cyanobacteria, algae and lichens on both of the tower’s galleries. Occasionally you can still see a trace of lichen. It’s a very indomitable organism and it creates sort of a green map on the stone, but otherwise it’s stable, and nothing new has appeared.”

See the rest here.

Authors: Ruth Fraňková, Tereza Janouškovcová

Two brothers give iconic Czech sneaker brand new lease on life

Photo: Amelia Mola-Schmidt, Radio Prague International

Walking through the streets of Czechia, you might spot people sporting tri-coloured sneakers in the country’s national colours; blue, white, and red. Those kicks are from an iconic brand called Botas, originally founded in 1949. Last year, the company almost went under, but two brothers came to its rescue. I caught up with 22-year-old Vít Staněk to learn more about the plans to give this classic Czech brand a new lease on life.

“In 2023, the Botas company was about to be liquidated. My brother and I had a thought that maybe we could continue the legacy of this iconic brand. We decided we would do whatever it takes to buy this company and keep it alive.”

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

Expert: Adoption of antigypsyism definition a “significant move” for Czechia

Photo: Office of Czech Government

The Czech government has officially acknowledged the term “antigypsyism” with the aim of curbing discrimination towards Roma people in the country. But what does the term mean, and how will its use effect change? I asked human rights activist Gwendolyn Albert.

The Czech government has officially adopted the term “antigypsyism”, which signifies them taking a stance on discrimination towards Roma individuals in Czechia. To start off, could you define what antigypsyism means in this context?

“The definition that has been adopted is a legally non-binding definition, it’s just a recognition of this phenomenon. The term is based on the definition that was adopted by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance to discuss how to keep the memory of the Holocaust alive and the ideology that led to it. The adoption of antigyspyism is meant to be parallel to the term anti-Semitism – it’s a one word way to reference a very specific set of stereotypes and prejudices that are held in the minds of people around the world about the Roma. The pejorative term that has developed over the centuries for Romani people is gypsy, and so the term antigypsyism is against using that term and the ideas that come with it.

See the rest here.

Author: Amelia Mola-Schmidt

FIRST ZOO IN THE WORLD! PRAGUE ZOO PROPAGATED KETUPU PELOVA

The young fish-eating owl Ketupa Pelova can be easily observed at the age of three months in the aviary near the Penguin Pavilion. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

The Prague Zoo is currently rearing a young fish-eating owl Ketupa Pelova. It was hatched here at the beginning of this year and after initial fluctuations in weight and occasional reluctance to eat, the bird is now vital and thriving. The Prague Zoo is therefore well on its way to breeding one of the largest living owls ever, as the first zoo in the world. In addition, the little “fish owl” is now back with its parents in the aviary next to the Penguin Pavilion. Visitors can thus see the extremely rare cub with their own eyes.

“In the fall, we kept both of our pairs of ketup Pels in indoor quarters so they could concentrate on nesting. Our efforts were rewarded by the nesting of one of the pairs. At the beginning of the year, we observed changes in the behavior of both adults, and we soon discovered a young one under them,” says bird curator Antonín Vaidl.

At first, the mother warmed and fed the young, so the parents were left with peace and also plenty of food. But just a few days later, the situation changed. “A week passed and unfortunately we found out that the chick had been kicked out of the nest. We also found him hypothermic, which is why we placed him in an incubator and proceeded to rear him in breeding care,” adds Vaidl. According to him, returning to the nest would be too risky.

Prague’s young ketupa Pelova is a significant addition on a global scale: the Prague Zoo is the only zoo that has managed to breed this rare species. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

The cub was subsequently fed by hand with young mice and rats, and later with fish. Pelova’s ketupas belong to the so-called “fish” or “fishing owls”, whose food in the wild is almost 100% fish. The ketupa look out for their prey from perches low above the surface or search for it while wading through shallow water. They will not disdain even frogs, crustaceans, or a small crocodile.

At the end of winter, the Prague chick continued to willingly accept food and thrive, so at the end of March it was returned to the parents’ improvised nest cavity, where they could gradually get to know each other through the grate in the inlet opening. So far, it cannot be said that it was a complete “adoption by their own parents”, as was the case in the past at the Prague Zoo, for example, with the breeding of Javan grebes or last year with kea nesters, but a large dose of tolerance of the cub on the part of the parents is evident. This step is important for his socialization. Thanks to the return to the aviary, the cub is also easily visible from the visitor areas.

Pelovy’s ketupa chick (on the right in the photo) is characterized by light coloration and remnants of down feathers. Visitors can easily recognize him alongside his parents. Photo by Petr Hamerník, Prague Zoo

Prague Zoo has been breeding Pelovy ketups since 2019, when it acquired the two mentioned pairs from a specialized owl breeding center in Monticello, Italy. It thus became the only public institution in the world where this species can be seen. In nature, ketupa Pelovy inhabit sub-Saharan Africa. These are some of the largest owls in the world – in adulthood they can weigh up to two kilograms and have a wingspan of one and a half meters.

First time affordable housing from the EU

Affordable housing has the green light from the European Commission. Twenty years after joining the Union, the Czech Republic can finance affordable apartments from public sources for the first time.

Minister for Regional Development Ivan Bartoš and the State Investment Support Fund negotiated with the European Commission the support of affordable housing in the Czech Republic from public funds. Thanks to this, the state can finance the creation of rental apartments with a lower than market rent, for example for young people under 35 or beneficial professions in the regions. Subsidies and favorable loans for affordable housing projects will be available to municipalities and private entities – already this year it will amount to approximately two billion crowns.

Until now, the state has financially supported the creation of social housing, which roughly 130,000 people in the Czech Republic can afford. Support for affordable housing, i.e. standard rental apartments even for the middle class, has not yet been possible. This was hindered by the lack of approval from the European Commission that it was in line with public aid rules. “Abroad, the affordable housing sector plays a key role in managing the housing crisis, but in our country, none of the previous governments even tried to negotiate it with the European Commission. In about a year, we managed to agree on everything necessary, and in the second half of the year, we launched the first program. About two million people in the Czech Republic meet the conditions for the target group,” said Deputy Prime Minister for Digitization and Minister for Regional Development Ivan Bartoš.

As part of the so-called notification, the twenty-seven countries notify the European Commission of their intentions to support certain areas from public resources. They must prove that they will not disrupt the free market, or prove that the social benefit of public support outweighs the risks. Only then can the European Commission confirm that the specific plan complies with the rules and is compatible with the internal market. “The decision of the European Commission allows us to provide support to the affordable rental housing sector in the amount of twelve billion until 2030. For the first three years, we have secured funding from the National Recovery Plan. Municipalities and other legal entities can apply for the program. It will be a combination of subsidies and favorable loans, so the invested funds will be returned to the state and will support other housing projects in the future,” adds Daniel Ryšávka, director of the State Investment Support Fund (SFPI).

The costs of construction, renovation or purchase of available rental apartments will gradually be recovered from the rent. In the long term, this will remain below the market level of rental housing in the given location and of comparable quality. “We want there to be a decent alternative for people who, for various reasons, cannot afford or do not want their own housing. We will be happy if as many municipalities as possible apply for support – according to the survey, most of them are dissatisfied with their housing stock. At the same time, we tried to set everything up so that affordable housing is also interesting for the private sector,” Bartoš declared. Subsidized apartments will be, for example, for young families, teachers, health professionals and people who do not own real estate and do not belong to the top 20% of the population with the highest incomes.

The European Commission has previously approved the notification of affordable housing programs for example in Ireland or Sweden. “The example of Ireland shows that promoting affordable housing has positive effects on the market. At a time of high mortgage rates and falling demand for real estate, construction companies can focus more on affordable rental apartments. Thanks to this, there is no such sharp decline in overall construction during crises,” added Bartoš.

The support for affordable rental apartments is part of the broader reform of Housing for Life implemented by the MMR. Among other things, it also includes a new construction law or a draft law on support in housing. The department cooperates with the European Investment Bank and other institutions to find suitable affordable housing projects and sources of financing. It also offers municipalities financial support for the preparation of housing projects and related expertise directly in the regions.

TEN TIPS FOR VISITING ZOO PRAGUE

The main season of the Prague Zoo has officially started, and along with it, the public’s questions are multiplying: When is the best time to go to the zoo? How to avoid the queue at the checkout? Are there any discounts available? That’s why we answer these and other questions in the new top ten of the experienced Prague Zoo visitors.

We attach a thematic photo to each of the tips. Their sources can be found below.

Lev indický. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Sunday is quieter than Saturday

Most people head to the zoo on the weekend. If you are hesitating about which of your free days to spend visiting the Prague Zoo, then keep in mind the secret of all seasoned visitors: Sunday is always less busy than Saturday. Not only will you be able to park more comfortably on Sundays, but you will also avoid possible crowds in the area. And if you plan to visit on a weekday, then know that statistically Tuesday is the “freest”!

Tučňáci Humboldtovi. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. With an e-ticket, no waiting, and cheaper

Queuing to buy a ticket at the box office? No way, waiting is for the uninitiated… A seasoned visitor conveniently buys an electronic ticket in advance in our e-shop and heads straight to the turnstiles. And they save money on top of that. Whether it is an adult, child or student ticket, its electronic version is up to 50 crowns cheaper than a paper ticket. You can even save 150 crowns on a family ticket, which is valid for two adults and up to four children, by purchasing it online!

You can find more information and make a purchase here: https://vstupenka.zoopraha.cz/

Surikaty. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Favorable offer for schools and kindergartens

Speaking of discounts, we remind you of another very favorable offer, for school groups. Pupils of primary and secondary schools here pay only one hundred crowns, kindergarten pupils even only 50 crowns. In addition, teachers can choose from a whole range of thematic tours with our expert guide and thus have fun supplementing the material they are currently discussing in biology, natural science or primary education!

You can find more information here.

Gorila nížinná. Foto Oliver Le Que, Zoo Praha

  1. Use the new entrance and public transport stop

Everyone knows the zoo’s iconic main entrance with its Walk of Fame, and motorists often use the south entrance near the river by the vast parking lot. But did you know that we recently opened a brand new gate to the zoo? Right on Sklenářka, near the new gorilla pavilion. No crowds, no waiting. In addition, if you use the entrance in the morning, you will have the Dja Reservation and the small female gorilla Mobi all to yourself. And what’s more – just like at the main entrance, city buses stop right in front of the gate. Just go in the direction of Podhoří: number 234 from Holešovice or lines 235 and 236 from Bohnice.

Pelikán kadeřavý. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Bad weather as an unexpected advantage

Thinking about visiting the zoo but it’s raining, windy, or cloudy? So don’t hesitate for a second and start putting on your shoes! After all, we have 15 indoor pavilions. In the Dja Reserve, which was opened last year, you can take a seat in the vast auditorium, from where you can not only watch the gorillas but also have a snack there or charge your mobile phone. You can also visit tigers, hippos, or giraffes with dry feet, warm up with orangutans or Komodo dragons in the Indonesian jungle, or among free-flying parrots in the Rákos pavilion. Look at the map and plan the indoor route of the Prague Zoo!

Gaviál indický a želvy Smithovy. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Ride around the area for young and old

A visit to our zoo does not have to be just a walk, it can also be a drive! For families with children, we rent special strollers free of charge at the main entrance, in which you can pull your little ones around the area. If you or your partner have mobility problems, there is nothing easier than booking a wheelchair with us for free, or purchasing a ride on our ZooExpress – in this case, accompanied by an expert guide.

More information about wheelchairs here.

More about ZooExpres here.

Vlk hřivnatý. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Take the dog with you, leave your luggage with us

Dogs of all sizes are welcome at the Prague Zoo. Each visitor is allowed one dog friend on a leash. In addition to visiting pavilions, walk-through exhibitions and playgrounds, it can go anywhere with you. And while you watch the animals in the pavilion, you can leave the muzzled dog at the tethering point. On the other hand, you don’t have to drag any heavy luggage around the area – you can conveniently use the storage boxes at all entrances to store them free of charge.

Lemur kata. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Zoogastro in the 21st century

Fryer, hot dog or ice cream cone. Of course, we do! But today you don’t have to rely only on fried or fatty ones. Did you know that you can find several meat-free dishes at the Gulab restaurant? Will you try black beluga lentils with halloumi cheese or perhaps vegetarian curry with homemade pita bread? At the Oceán restaurant, you will be delighted with a different daily cash offer, at Obora they will prepare fresh burgers with guaranteed the best view in Prague, and at Gočárové houses you will be transported to the period of the First Republic with first-class sirloin steak or duck in front of you. In short, lunch at the zoo can have style!

Orangutan sumaterský. Foto Oliver Le Que, Zoo Praha

  1. Events for free visitors every week

Do you want to experience something special at the Prague Zoo? Follow our program! In all seasons, a number of guided feedings and meetings with the animals await you – you can have breakfast alongside bizarre burrowing owls, have lunch with a flock of penguins or have a snack with the famous nutcracker female Šiška. In addition, we are planning at least one thematic event every week. The program includes tours of selected exhibition units with an expert guide free of charge for all visitors.

Complete program of upcoming events.

Nestor kea. Foto Petr Hamerník, Zoo Praha

  1. Take your time, observe, take pictures, film, share!

And the last tip? Above all, enjoy your visit to our zoo. Don’t try to do everything at any cost. Prague Zoo is vast, you wouldn’t be able to do it in comfort anyway. Stop by the exhibits, watch the behavior of the animals, sit on a bench in the Hippo Pavilion or the African House, or take a seat in the comfortable auditorium next to the gorillas or sea lions and watch the action in front of you. Take your time. And if you manage to photograph or film something nice, tag Prague Zoo in your story on Instagram or Facebook. We will then be happy to share your photo on our official profile!

The Czech Myth about Olgoi-khorkhoi

Olgoi-khorkhoi as portrayed by the painter Jiří Houska.

Olgoi-khorkhoi – the mythical killing worm from the Gobi Desert – is perhaps better known today in Czech Republic than in Mongolia itself. It happened thanks to Czech enigmologists, who searched for it in local sand dunes. And on top of that, one of them, the late Ivan Mackerle, gave rise to olgoi-khorkhoi‘s world-wide fame  that it gained in sensation-hunting circles.

Today we can say that the origin of the legend of olgoi-khorkhoi was caused by the Tartar sand boa. But the truth is that for a long time it was not known what it was all about.

R. C. Andrews, who led an American paleontological expedition in Mongolia in the 1920s, was the first to report on olgoi-khorkhoi:

“At the Cabinet meeting the Premier asked that I should capture for the Mongolian Government a specimen of the Allergorhai horhai. This is probably an entirely mythical animal, but it may have some little basis in fact, for every northern Mongol firmly believes in it and will give essentially the same description. It is said to be about two feet long, the body shaped like a sausage, and to have no head or legs; it is so poisonous that even to touch it means instant death.”

Tartar sand boa peeks out of the sand. Photo: Miroslav Bobek

Note, that in Andrews’ rendering olgoi-khorkhoi cannot kill at a distance.

In the 1940s, the Russian palaeontologist I. A. Yefremov picked up the topic and portrayed it in one of his short stories:

“…I called the driver and Misha to come back. But they continued running to the unknown animals, and either they didn’t hear me, or they didn’t want to.

I took a step toward them, but Darkhin pulled me back. I broke free from the guide’s tenacious hands and at the same moment I watched the animals. My assistants had already reached them: the radio operator in front, Grisha little bit behind.

Suddenly each of the worms curled up into a ring. At the same moment their yellow-grey colouring darkened, turning into purple-blue and bright blue at the ends. Without a cry, the radio operator suddenly collapsed and laid motionless with his face in the sand. I heard a scream from the driver, who was at that moment running to the radio operator lying about four metres from the worms.  A second – and Grisha bent over just as strangely and fell on his side.

His body flipped over, rolled to the bottom of the dune and disappeared from the sight.”

Well, it is a different story!

Yefremov’s short story has also been repeatedly published in Czech – and I am sure that it initiated the interest of Czech enigmologists, among whom the abovementioned Ivan Mackerle stood out. In early 1990s, he searched hard for olgoi-khorkhoi in Mongolia. He was even allegedly trying to drive him out of the dunes by setting off the explosions of small charges. With no result. However, his belief in the existence of a worm, which kills at a distance, was unwavering. At the same moment the testimonies of witnesses he recorded largely support an interpretation that he had even not thought of, namely that the myth of olgoi-khorkhoi arose from encounters between shepherds and Tartar sand boa. For example, the old woman Püret told him:

“ʻI have never seen it myself, but I have heard a lot about it. In the past shepherds occasionally encountered it, but today it is very, very rare. It usually appears after rain, but it rarely rains here. It basks in the sun for two to three days and then it disappears again. In a sea of sand like a fish in water,’ she laughed. ʻUsually, it digs holes just under the ground and on the surface above him the sand is pushed a little bit, so it is possible to see where it is moving. When it wants to attack somebody, it pulls half a way out of the sand. It starts inflating, the bubble on its end gets bigger and bigger until finally the poison squirts out of it.’”

And so, eventhough Mackerle was wrong, he gave rise to popularization of the “killing worm from Gobi” and I dare say that if it were not for him, I probably would not have thought about showing the archetype of olgoi-khorkhoi – Tartar sand boa – in our zoo.

Easter show: Jan Dismas Zelenka’s Cantata sacra Il serpente di bronzo

Photo: Vyšehrad

On this week’s Sunday Music show, we spotlight a classic piece of Easter music – Jan Dismas Zelenka’s ‘Cantata sacra Il serpente di bronzo’. Composed in the year 1730, the piece was first performed on Good Friday of that year in Dresden, Germany. Performed at the Saxonian-Polish court, the piece is an important contribution to Catholic sacred music.

Born in 1679 in the Bohemian village of Louňovi, Jan Dismas Zelenka, dubbed the “Czech Bach”, is one of the most significant Baroque composers. Yet his music was largely forgotten after his death and was only rediscovered more than a century later. Today all his works are available in digitized form and have become increasingly popular with the public.

See the rest here.

“He really moved me”: David Černý on creating David Lynch head for LA

Photo: Emily Sawicki, Santa Monica Daily Press

A new work by David Černý – a five-tonne kinetic metal head of iconic movie director David Lynch – was recently unveiled at an apartment complex in Santa Monica, LA. The Czech sculptor is perhaps best known for works that have made their mark on Prague, such as the babies crawling on Žižkov TV Tower. So how did this project in California come about?

“I was reached by the developer via an art agent. That’s a normal way how I am reached. So it wasn’t even via my American gallerist, it was direct.”

But was it the case that they had seen your Kafka head in Prague and were looking for something similar? Because it is quite similar.

“Yes, actually, they did see what I was doing here. Generally they told me that they would like to have a piece that would resemble, somehow, the piece in Prague.”

See the rest here.

Author: Ian Willoughby

Explore the South Bohemia Region from above!

Join us on a trip to South Bohemia – a region of castles, ponds, and the famous Budějovický Budvar brewery. Check out its dense network of centuries-old fish ponds, its picture-perfect UNESCO heritage villages, and the lush forests of the Šumava Mountains – all from a bird’s eye view!

See the rest here.

Authors: Vít Pohanka, Barbora Navrátilová

Czech experts develop robots to help search for missing persons

Photo: Martin Pařízek, Czech Radio

Researchers at the Czech Technical University in Prague are using artificial intelligence to train robots, teaching them to search unfamiliar or hard-to-reach areas. In the future, these intelligent robots could help search for missing persons or victims of accidents.

Scientists at Czech Technical University’s Faculty of Electrical Engineering are working with a number of robots, some of which resemble tiny vehicles while others look like dogs or giant spiders.

Doctoral student Miloš Prágr uses a game console controller to drive one of the robots, a black and yellow vehicle on four rubber wheels, out of the lab and into the corridor.

“It’s a four-wheeled robot of small to medium size that we use mainly to inspect sites or facilities.  It is equipped with several cameras. The two located at the top are both colour and depth cameras, which allows them to sense the geometry of the surrounding environment. The other set of cameras are simple colour cameras. We use them to detect various objects or people.”

See the rest here.

Authors: Ruth Fraňková, Ondřej Vaňura, Source:iROZHLAS.cz

“Great teaching can be done with pen and paper.” Pavel Bobek on teaching in London and Prague

Photo: Barbora Navrátilová, Radio Prague International

Pavel Bobek gained his first teaching experience in an immigrant neighbourhood in London’s district of Croydon. After two years he returned to Prague and has since been teaching at one of the city’s primary schools. Are the teaching methods that he learned in the UK also applicable in a Czech school?  How does he gain respect in a classroom of 30 kids? And how does he make sure that all the children, including those with a different mother tongue and with learning disabilities, move forward? These are just some of the questions we discussed, but I started by asking what prompted Pavel, who originally studied political science, to become a teacher:

“I have always been close to education and to work with children. I volunteered in Czech-German youth projects for many years. Later I worked for the Goethe Institute as head of an international debating project, working with pupils alongside teachers.

See the rest here.

Author: Ruth Fraňková

Jourová: EP must respond to revelations Russia paying politicians

Photo: Zuzana Jarolímková, iROZHLAS.cz

Revelations a Czech-based Russian influence network was paying politicians in several states have made headlines around Europe. Czechia’s European commissioner says she sensed Moscow was using such dirty tricks – and says steps should be taken to weed dodgy politicians out of the European Parliament.

Last week Prime Minister Petr Fiala dropped some bombshell news: The Czech secret service had uncovered a Russian network seeking to influence the European Parliament, to which elections take place in two months.

It was soon reported that the group, including pro-Russian Ukrainian politician Viktor Medvedchuk, were funnelling cash to anti-establishment politicians in EU states, including, allegedly, Petr Bystroň of Alternative for Germany.

See the rest here.

Author:Ian Willoughby, Source:Czech Radio

Handprints of celebrities captured in Bohemia crystal

Photo: Stanislava Brádlová, Czech Radio

The Crystal Touch Museum in Litoměřice offers a unique exposition of authentic handprints of famous personalities captured in Bohemia crystal. The exhibition is the work of glass master Jan Huňát who launched the project in 2007.

Most people are familiar with the handprints of celebrities on Hollywood Boulevard, but few people know that Czechia also has its collection of handprints of famous people. The Crystal Touch Museum in Litoměřice offers a unique exposition of authentic handprints of famous personalities captured in Bohemia crystal – among them the hands of the late Czech president Václav Havel, Ringo Starr, Ennio Morricone, Sir Nicolas Winton, Jaromír Jágr, Patrik Elias, Elijah Wood, Sir Tom Finney, Dominik Hašek, Madeleine Albright, Ivan Lendl and many others.

See the rest here.

Authors: Daniela Lazarová, Stanislava Brádlová, Source:Český rozhlas

Controversial statue inspired by Francisco Goya gets new lease on life

Photo: Soňa Vaicenbacherová, Czech Radio

In the West Bohemian city of Plzeň there is a modern sculpture that people either love or hate. Its official name is The Panopticon, but in Plzeň everybody calls it “the pink rabbit”. Why is it there? And is it art or a terrible kitsch?

The concrete sculpture of a gigantic pink rabbit eating a human being was erected in Plzeň’s Lochotín district in 2015. Ever since it was unveiled, it has been a point of controversy among both locals and visitors. Miroslav Brabec, the mayor of the Lochotin district where it stands, says that he too suffered an initial shock on seeing it.

See the rest here.

Authors: Daniela Lazarová, Soňa Vaicenbacherová, Source:Český rozhlas

Pardubice children pull out all the stops with Easter egg tree on main square

Photo: Honza Ptáček, Czech Radio

Easter egg trees are a popular Central European tradition and the town of Pardubice has one to make the locals proud this year. Whoever guesses the exact number of eggs on it can look forward to a prize!

The egg is an ancient symbol of life in many countries of the world and the tradition of brightly decorated Easter egg trees is common in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Czechia, Poland, and Hungary. Multi-colored, mouth-blown eggs are hung on branches of trees and bushes and on cut branches inside homes.

While many families decorate tree branches with eggs in the home, not all towns and villages sport Easter egg trees, which require a lot more time and effort.

See the rest here.

Author: Magdalena Tereza Kadula, Source:Český rozhlas

Blue Monday, Green Thursday and White Saturday? What Czechs call Easter days

Photo: Barbora Navrátilová, Radio Prague International

In the English-speaking world, we know the days during Holy Week leading up to Easter as Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday and so on. But, despite also sharing a Christian heritage with Anglophone countries, the Czechs call these days by pretty different names in most cases – and many of their Easter traditions are quite alien to people from Anglo-American cultures, as they often pre-date Christianity, originating from Slavic pagan times.

Palm Sunday = Blossoming Sunday

Palm Sunday, the Sunday before Easter, is known as “Květná neděle” or Blossoming Sunday in Czech. People would decorate their houses with pussy willow, and according to Czech tradition, one shouldn’t bake anything with flour on this day. Farmers would watch the weather, as the saying went that whatever the weather was like on Palm Sunday was an omen for the coming harvest.

See the rest here.

Authors: Anna Fodor, Barbora Kvapilová, Source:Český rozhlas

Barefoot Carmelite Sisters flee central Prague to build their own monastery on the periphery

Photo: archive of Carmelite Monastery in Drasty

Prague’s Hradčany Square right next to Prague Castle is a top-notch address, but with hordes of tourists and ever rising noise levels it is not conducive to quiet contemplation and prayers. This led the community of Barefoot Carmelite Sisters to roll up their sleeves and get to work to turn a derelict farmhouse on the periphery into their new spiritual retreat.    

The order of the barefoot Carmelite Sisters was founded during the 12th century on Mount Carmel in Israel and reformed by Saint Teresa of Avila in 16th century Spain. The nuns originally walked barefoot, but as the order spread to places with harsher winters, the rules adapted. However what has not changed is that the order lives isolated from the world in silence and contemplation. The sisters rarely venture outside of their spiritual retreat and even do their shopping online.

The Prague-based order originally lived in Prague’s Hradčany square right next to Prague Castle. But when the noise levels and the hustle and bustle around their monastery increased they looked around for a new home in a quieter setting.

See the rest here.

Authors: Daniela Lazarová, Bára Kvapilová, Source:Český rozhlas

Unique glass astronomical clock in Česká Kamenice back in operation

Photo: Ondřej Hájek, ČTK

The historic astronomical clock in Česká Kamenice has been successfully repaired at the cost of about one million crowns. Its fourteen glass figures were made by students of the glass school in neighbouring Kamenický Šenov. The  astronomical clock is the work of local watchmaker and goldsmith Adolf Eiselt, who put it into operation in 1920.

Source:ČTK

Angkor Wat Means the City of Temples

CAMBODIA’S 8TH WONDER OF THE WORLD

Text: M.Zisso; Photo: Václav Pavlas

One of the benefits of being a frequent flyer is collecting miles that will let you get an upgrade or free tickets. Who hasn’t dreamt of flying around the world “for free”? I decided to fulfil that dream. For several years, I have been accumulating miles, and was now starting to finally realize my dream. This time, it was a short three-day trip to Cambodia.

Angkor Wat Temple – the 8th Wonder of the World

The temple was built by King Suryavarman II at the beginning of the 12th century. Unlike other temples, Angkor Wat is facing west. First, it was a Hindu temple dedicated to Vishnu, but at the end of the 14th century it transformed into the current form of a Buddhist temple. During its existence, it was destroyed in the regional wars, but has always been renovated by the rulers of the country.

One of the first Westerners who visited the site (in 1586) was Antonio da Magdalena – a Portuguese monk who was astonished by the temple and its unique shape, unparalleled in the world. Gradually, the temple has become the symbol of Cambodia, and a source of national pride. It has appeared on the Cambodian flag (in various forms) since 1863, being the only structure that appears on a national flag worldwide.

Day 1 – The Beginning

Before our trip could even take off, we had to make a few arrangements. First, we found reliable “babysitting” for our sweet dogs, then packed light, and finally we selected a flight to Cambodia. There are no direct flights to Cambodia from Prague. Instead, you can fly via Bangkok (one of my preferred cities anyway) and then take a Bangkok Airways short one-hour flight to Siem Reap, Angkor airport, which is small but also cozy and modern. On the Cambodia Visas Travel Requirements website, you will find all the legal information necessary. Read it before departure.

Upon our arrival, we were instantly greeted by hot and humid weather that felt like a Mediterranean summer. We were staying at the Angkor Village Hotel, at Wat Bo Road, not far from the local market. The central hotel location was really important, especially for those of us who want to enjoy some independent activity in addition to guided tours. You can go shopping around and enjoy the local bars and restaurants in the evening. Our hotel was beautiful, with 50 rooms in a traditional style, a personal service, and reasonable prices.

Since we arrived earlier than expected, we went to check the local market. It was full of colors and exotic fruits. We were feeling at home… Back in our hotel, we managed to take a swim at their small but very romantic pool, which was followed by a traditional dinner at the hotel restaurant.

Day 2 – Temples and More Temples

The next day, at 5am, we went to explore the place. We wanted to arrive in time to see the sunrise at the Royal Angkor Wat temple. With a local tour leader, and in an air-conditioned car (compulsory in such wet weather), we reached the entrance to the temple to purchase the tickets. You can find out more about the tickets at: www.angkorenterprise.gov.kh/.

The night before, the first rain fell, heralding the end of the dry season. In the morning, the sky was still overcast, and we did not see the sunrise in all its glory. However, that couldn’t spoil the greatness of the experience. Slowly, the dawn light revealed the temple to us in all its glory. When you see it, you cannot help but ponder how they built this wonder hundreds of years ago, and realize the trueness of Antonio da Magdalena’s statement, dating back nearly 500 years, that it is impossible to describe this unique structure and beauty in words.

We were planning on returning to the Angkor Wat main temple again later on. However, to take advantage of the relatively mild weather in the morning, we went to visit a few other temples of the royal complex: Sra Srang, South Gate, Bayon, Baphuon, Phimeanakas, Leper King Terrace, and Elephant Terrace. And then – to feel like Angelina Jolie playing Lara Croft – we headed to the Ta Prohm temple. Here it was, incredibly beautiful, with trees growing wild and huge roots, just like in the movies…

After a short break, we returned to the Angkor Wat main temple to explore it and see the sunset. The temple’s stunning beauty covers a vast area, and is divided into three floors. Our local guide directed us to the depths of the place, explaining that the wall engravings there have been kept intact for hundreds of years, and finally let us climb to the top floor overlooking the temple in all its glory. Going up was relatively easy, although at about a 50-degree angle, dropping to the lower level was a bit more complicated.

We took our last glance at this wonder, which of course looks much more impressive from a distance, in part because it’s not that obvious how the ravages of time gradually take their toll. As a traveler, I always feel it is a must to see a bit more of the local culture and people. So, we didn’t hesitate, and, in the evening, enjoyed a traditional Cambodian dinner, alongside a two-hour show (with a traditional dance performance) at Apsara Theatre, located opposite our hotel.

Day 3 – Village Life is Different

On the third day, we went to see a different aspect of Cambodian life – the Tonle Sap Lake area, and the fishing village of Chong Khneas. An experience not to be missed. The houses are built on stilts, and you can see the houseboats move with the flow of water from place to place when the rainy season starts. The Cambodians living here are “real” – there are authentic fishing river guides who wear farm clothes and offer caged alligators as pets or for the leather industry. You can see the poverty of the people living here – there are sheds, without running water, but with a TV, and a generator that provides electricity.

It was a short trip, just a quick colorful glimpse of Cambodia. If you love Thailand, you will fall in love with Cambodia too. And remember, we were only 40 minutes from Bangkok, and were able to see the world a little bit differently, in a way that was much more authentic and less commercialized.

PRACTICAL TIPS

  • The visa system at the airport – you will need a passport photo and cash.
  • Choose a small and exotic hotel with a central location. Every major hotel chain already has a hotel in the area too.
  • Organize the tours in advance or on the spot: through a travel agent, directly with the hotel, or online.
  • Remember to bring a hat with a brim, and preferably bottled water that you’ll finish quickly. Do not worry, though – you can get a soft drink everywhere.
  • Ask the hotel to arrange a transfer from the airport and back – almost the same price as a taxi, but much more efficient.
  • Do not get fooled by tuk-tuk drivers’ offers to show you the place.
  • Bargain in the market, be polite but quite decisive.
  • Bring cash, it’s much easier. No need to convert to local money though – everybody prefers dollars.
  • Remember to tip your guide, driver, etc. depending on the quality of the service you received.
  • Departure tax is now included in the price of your flight ticket.

Dalibor Stoszek

“Obesity, poor lifestyle, and stress – avoid these and you’ll also avoid chronic illness”

Canadian Medical / Waltrovka, Prague 5

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

“The Czech population is facing a number of chronic diseases, the cause of which, in addition to heredity or age, is mainly poor lifestyle and obesity. That’s why I put prevention first, and recommend regular preventive check-ups with your general practitioner,” explains Dr. Dalibor Stoszek, Head Physician at AFI Clinic. Every year, his clients undergo a much broader examination, which is the basis for possible diagnosis and subsequent specialized treatment. Digitization of patient information and its secure sharing among practitioners, specialists, and nurses not only within Canadian Medical clinics is extremely helpful in this continuous complex care.

Which chronic diseases are most commonly diagnosed in your practice?

Without relying on statistics, I am quite sure it is a trio of high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels, and diabetes. In this regard, we probably won’t differ from other facilities or practices. In our clinics specifically, we are also seeing an increasing incidence of mental health issues, particularly anxiety, depression, and sleep disorders. A large number of people also suffer from back pain.

Do we know the main causes of the most common chronic diseases?

The former, in addition to age and genetics, are clearly associated with poor lifestyle and obesity. The latter, along with generally higher societal stress, are influenced by the spectrum of our clients, who are often performance-oriented and under a lot of pressure. And back pain is a combination of both. To illustrate with an example, many clients come in with a “slipped disk”, but that’s just a marginal cause of their back pain. Most back problems result from faulty posture or working position.

What is the influence of genetic factors on the predisposition to chronic diseases, and how does it affect diagnosis and treatment?

The inquiry about the occurrence of monitored diseases (especially tumors, high blood pressure, cholesterol, cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes) is part of the initial examination conducted by a general practitioner, and is updated at each preventive check-up. Hereditary cancer diseases are relatively rare, accounting for about 5-10%. In women, it typically includes breast and gynecological tumors, and in both genders, colorectal tumors. In such cases, we recommend genetic testing at a specialized clinic, along with additional steps such as breast ultrasound or stool examination for hidden bleeding, or even preventive colonoscopy at a younger age than recommended for the non-risk population. Strong genetic predisposition is also observed in type 2 diabetes, which typically develops at an older age and is associated with obesity. If we have this information, we actively focus on addressing overweight or obesity. If both parents have diabetes, there is a high likelihood that you will have it too. However, the age at which it develops makes a significant difference, and that difference is influenced by lifestyle choices, particularly diet and weight management. In families with frequent early-onset cardiovascular events (heart attack or stroke), it is necessary to investigate inherited disorders of cholesterol metabolism.

Does it make sense to undergo genetic testing in case of a family burden?

As I mentioned above, patients suspected of cancer, especially breast, ovarian, and colon cancers, are referred to genetic counseling or oncology centers where genetic consultations are conducted. Individuals suspected of having genetically determined high cholesterol levels are referred to preventive cardiology centers or lipid centers for detailed analysis, and, if necessary, an examination of the extended family is recommended.

And what is your view on commercial genetic testing?

I would be cautious about extensive commercial genetic testing for otherwise healthy people. Everyone naturally faces some level of risk for certain diseases, we are not robots. Unfortunately, I have also had a patient who, based on a thick book of his risk analysis, kept demanding more and more tests, and basically lived in constant fear of some disease. It is simply a matter of setting a reasonable limit. This is primarily the role of the general practitioner, who knows the patient best.

What impact can lifestyle and dietary habits have on the development and progression of chronic diseases?

An absolutely crucial one. However, proper lifestyle management is a topic that would require several hours or books to fully describe, and I am afraid I am not capable of doing it justice here. Nevertheless, the most important thing is to find the courage to make changes in your lifestyle. My fellow practitioners are well educated in this area, and know where to refer the patient if necessary. Our team includes professionals such as a nutritionist and a psychologist, among others.

“At Canadian Medical, we offer annual check-ups to all clients.”

Can you describe how chronic diseases can influence each other, and how it affects the patient’s overall health?

I would like to take obesity as an example. This is by no means just a cosmetic problem, let alone an isolated one. Obesity leads to increased blood pressure, cholesterol, and diabetes. Each of these three diseases individually, and much less in combination (which is basically the rule), leads to an extreme risk of heart attack, stroke, or kidney failure. Obese people have joint and back problems that make it difficult to lose weight to some degree. Immunity declines, infections become more severe, recovery takes longer, and the consequences of conditions like COVID or the flu are more severe. The constant feel of illness leads to problems with mental health and sleep, which in itself is another independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. And that is “just” obesity. And given the obesity pandemic, we are facing an unimaginably serious problem.

What prevention and screening methods do you recommend for reducing the risk of the most common chronic diseases?

The basic recommendation is to attend preventive check-ups with your primary care physician. By law, they are recommended at two-year intervals, which should be sufficient in most cases. However, at Canadian Medical, we offer annual check-ups to all clients, because we prioritize preventive medicine. These check-ups include updating all the important information about the patient, the so-called medical history or anamnesis, as well as additional examinations according to age and risk factors. For example, blood tests for sugar and cholesterol levels, urine analysis, referral to mammography for women over 45, stool tests for hidden bleeding from the age of 50, and many others. The basic set of examinations is determined by law for everyone. Our clients undergo a much broader scope of examination so that we can gather as much information as possible while avoiding unnecessary burdens on the patient.

How do you deal with comorbidities in patients suffering from more than one chronic disease?

That is a daily bread for practitioners, and their most important role in patient care. As life expectancy increases, the number of these so-called polymorbid patients also goes up. All information should be gathered by the practitioner, sorted, put into context, and monitored, for example medications that should not be taken together. The Czech system is characterized by the fact that patients can visit as many specialists as they want without restriction or control. And since we don’t have digitized documentation, as a practitioner, I often have no idea about it.

What do you think the solution is?

At Canadian Medical, we have practitioners who avoid unnecessary referrals to specialists, but, more importantly, we share all data within one system. This significantly reduces the risk of adverse drug interactions and repeated examinations.

What are the current trends in the treatment of chronic diseases?

In treatment, for example, applications are used to monitor and evaluate certain bodily functions. There is a huge expectation for the rise of artificial intelligence, which is a topic that could fill an entire article. This question cannot be fully answered in one response, but as an example, I can mention smartwatches. There are a considerable number of patients we examine for what’s called palpitations, which are sensations of rapid or irregular heartbeat. The problem is that these sensations are often fleeting, lasting seconds or minutes, and by the time emergency services arrive or the patient is examined in the clinic, they are symptom-free, and their electrocardiogram (EKG) appears normal. Even 24-hour monitoring may not capture the moment of symptoms, leaving uncertainty about whether this is a rhythm disorder that requires treatment. Here, smartwatches with EKG monitoring can be of great service, as they can record the EKG waveform at the moment of symptoms with sufficient quality to evaluate the severity of the finding. Thus, they can help with proper treatment or (mostly) reassure the patient that it is a completely harmless sensation.

What about your devices and digitization? Do your patients have to go from doctor to doctor with a folder of printed medical records?

Canadian Medical has the vast majority of specialties in our clinics. All examinations conducted by our practitioners or specialists are shared in digital form, and are available to doctors and nurses for follow-up care. Most examinations conducted in surrounding facilities, such as university hospitals, are also available in our system. A huge advantage is our myCANADIAN application, where clients can browse their results, findings, medical reports, and also prescriptions.

How do you support patients in their efforts for self-control and self-management of their health while living with a chronic illness?

One of the great advantages of our doctors is the sufficient amount of time allocated to each patient. In most cases, we have the time to properly explain everything the patient needs to know about both treatment and prevention. We strive for an Anglo-Saxon approach to patient care. This means that the patient should receive maximum information from his doctor, have the opportunity to ask questions, actively participate in their treatment, and have the right to make informed decisions. Foreign clients are accustomed to and expect this approach, and undoubtedly, Czech clients appreciate it as well.

As part of your practice, you worked in the UK and Saudi Arabia. Are they very different worlds in terms of prevention and healthcare compared to the Czech Republic?

Saudi Arabia is a completely different world. On one hand, you have extremely wealthy patients who are cared for by the best specialists in the West, in facilities with no limits. On the other hand, there are people who don’t even have basic healthcare. Not to mention the workers from Bangladesh or the Philippines. The healthcare system in the United Kingdom has its fair share of problems, but the reason I went there to learn and work is the significantly different primary care provided in outpatient settings. In comparison to our system, English practitioners have unimaginably greater authority and fewer restrictions. However, they also have more responsibilities and must care for children, pregnant women, contraception, hormonal treatment, and so on.

Referring a patient to a specialist requires careful consideration and justification, ensuring that as a practitioner, you have done everything you could. Specialists are scarce and extremely expensive for the system. That’s why the demands on British practitioners are very high, and many competencies (which Czech practitioners may not even think about) are transferred to nurses.

Working in healthcare is generally demanding. How do you relax, and what do you like to do in your free time?

It may sound cliché, but my family is my biggest anchor. I have a seven-year-old daughter, and since I am away from home four days a week, I try to spend as much of my remaining time with her and my wife as possible.

In the winter, we spend a lot of time skiing, and in the summer, we enjoy the mountains together. And thanks to my fantastic wife, I can also travel and ride my motorcycle, which helps me clear my mind wonderfully.

Dr. Dalibor Stoszek is a Head Physician at AFI Canadian Medical Clinic. He is an experienced doctor, with international experience and a diverse professional history. He graduated from the Faculty of Medicine at Palacký University in Olomouc and subsequently obtained certifications in internal medicine, emergency medicine, general practice, and family medicine in England. In addition to his work as a general practitioner, he also maintains a practice in emergency services. He has further developed his professional skills abroad, in Saudi Arabia and England, and through volunteer work in several sub-Saharan African countries. His work experience as a general practitioner in England has been most beneficial for his current career. The role of a general practitioner there encompasses all fields in great depth, and he strives to apply this concept at Canadian Medical as well.

Do You Fancy a Whole Fleet in One Car? The Future is Here

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

You might know the Lego 3-in-1 building kit, which, thanks to its clever design, offers the possibility to build three different models from a single set of pieces. A similar project is being intensively prepared by the South Korean carmaker Kia, titled Platform Beyond Vehicle cars, or PBV for short. PBVs are scheduled to be launched in the domestic Korean market in the second half of 2025, after which they will enter markets around the world, including Europe with the Czech Republic and North America, in the first quarter of 2026.

How does the several-in-1 concept work?

Modular technology offers the possibility of the basic platform of the car, with the driver’s compartment remaining the same while the rear section can be changed according to the current needs. Specifically, you can look forward to a new product called Platform Beyond Vehicle (PBV), which Kia unveiled at the CES advanced technology trade show in Las Vegas, USA.

Kia demonstrated the functioning of the system using three different concepts: the PV5 – in three all-purpose variants, the PV7 – offering the largest interior space and longest range, and the PV1 – the smallest car for short-distance transport. This clearly shows that we really are talking about several cars in one here. They will all use electric drive, as well as Level 4 autonomous driving and advanced Artificial Intelligence technology.

With this concept, Kia explains, you can enjoy driving a van during the week, a family minivan on weekends, and perhaps a small camper for a vacation.

It is expected to be appreciated mainly by companies that do not plan to purchase multiple cars for their fleet, but will instead use a single car with a cleverly thought-out concept.

A competitive price in the Czech market

“The design strategy is to allow the use of a single chassis to meet different mobility needs. Behind the fixed cab, otherwise known as the ‘driver’s zone’, various interchangeable super-structures or ‘life modules’ can be attached to the base vehicle via hybrid electromagnetic and mechanical coupling technology, turning the PBV into a taxi during the day, a delivery van at night, and a personal recreational vehicle on weekends,” explains Ho Sung Song, president and CEO of Kia Corporation, adding: “It is still too early for specific information on prices, given the launch date of these cars on the Czech market. However, we recognize that it is important to develop a range of affordable PBVs to meet different customer needs and maintain a strong market position. We will ensure that our offering is price competitive.”

According to Kia, the range of applications will be very broad. The hybrid mechanical and electromagnetic principle will ensure simple and fast conversion. With regards to the actual swapping process, the carmaker says there will be no complications thanks to the modular Easy Swap technology. The PBV design requires no welding, which allows for considerable flexibility. All PBVs are equipped with a modular rail system in the ceiling, floor, and side panels for easy adaptation between different vehicles. In addition, thanks to automation, the “conversion” can be easily controlled using a smartphone or tablet.

Kia’s confidence in the whole concept is evident by the fact that it plans to open a factory in South Korea – specifically at Autoland Hwaseong, near the capital Seoul – with an annual capacity of up to 150,000 such vehicles in 2025. The construction costs will reach USD 758 million. PBVs are scheduled to be launched in the domestic Korean market in the second half of 2025, after which PBVs will enter markets around the world, including Europe with the Czech Republic and North America, in the first quarter of 2026. Intensive negotiations are currently underway with partners such as Uber, Coupang, CJ Logistics and Kakao Mobility in connection with the transport of people and goods, including robotaxi. This, to some extent, is also linked to Kia’s other plan to produce a total of 1.6 million electric vehicles per year by 2030.

The Fassati Art Festival: Thank You 2023, and Welcome to 2024

Soprano Markéta Fassati with members of Fassati Ensemble – Adam Pechočiak, Kristýna Bělohlávková, Dana Truplová, Adéla Štajnochrová, David Pavelka, Václav Zajíc, and Anna Kostková (from the left).

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Miroslav Lepeška

The main idea of this festival was designed by first-class soprano Markéta Fassati, who guarantees the uniqueness of your experience. Founded in 2018, the festival bid adieu to 2023 with its 10th jubilee gala evening in December. The event was held in the Advent spirit, and took place in the newly renovated historical premises of the Prague Clam-Gallas Palace. For 2024, two similarly exceptional gala evenings are planned.

The Fassati Art Festival was founded in 2018, and represents an artistic project full of extraordinary experiences and fascinating personalities. The main idea of the festival was designed by soprano Markéta Fassati, who guarantees its uniqueness. The Czech lands are historically renowned worldwide for their diverse artistic talents, and the Fassati Art Festival aims to continue this tradition. The entire festival also has a charitable mission. A long-term partner of the festival in this field is the Food Bank, with which it has been cooperating very successfully for many years.

Each gala evening is held in a unique – and always different – exclusive environment. Each concert features an exceptional programme of works performed by top artists, with each having its own original theme.

The 10th Gala Evening was held in the spirit of Advent, and took place on 7th December 2023 in the newly renovated premises of Clam-Gallas Palace, in the heart of Prague. It is a unique Baroque palace building in Prague’s Old Town, situated in an important central position on the so-called Royal Route. The palace has undergone a costly reconstruction, and we would like to thank the Mayor of Prague, doc. MUDr. Bohuslav Svoboda, CSc., for the patronage and lending of the palace.

Before the concert, Markéta Fassati’s new album, titled Ave Maria, was solemnly blessed. The godfathers were the Mayor of Prague 1 Terezie Radoměřská, Mons. Tomáš Halík, and the Director of the Municipal House Vlastimil Ježek.

The concert featured festive Advent melodies and compositions from the new album for soprano and orchestra, performed by Markéta Fassati and the Fassati Ensemble.

The experience of the gala evening was enhanced even further by several outstanding exhibitions. A unique private collection of graphic works by the world-famous artist Le Corbusier from the Palbric Art Foundation Gallery, designer coins by academic sculptor Michael Vitanovský from the collector’s edition of the BHS company, dazzling jewellery by the goldsmith family studio SALABA, as well as an exhibition of Czech brooches – these were handmade jewellery, made of minerals and the rejuvenating touch of Hydrafacial instrumental cosmetics.

For 2024, two more remarkable gala evenings are scheduled to take place. For more information, go to www.fassatiartfestival.com.

Mons. Tomáš Halík, Soprano Markéta Fassati, Mayor of Prague 1 Terezie Radoměřská, and Chairman of the Board of Municipal House in Prague Vlastimil Ježek (from the left).

REAL HOMES ARE A MIX OF THE OLD AND THE NEW

Co.de co-owners Markéta and Lukáš with their assistant

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

Have you ever enjoyed the many relaxing walking trails and city views of Prague’s Vítkov Hill? This green area creates a natural borderline between two distinctive neighbourhoods: Karlín on one side, and Žižkov on the other. And it is in the latter neighbourhood, located right below the hill, that this original concept store and cosy café is – which we would like to draw your attention to, and suggest as a great spot to finish your next trip to the neighbourhood with. “We love to mix the old with the new because that is where the real home is,” says Markéta Rašková, co-owner of Co.de coffee and design shop on Husitská street. Why not try something new next time as well?

Drink. Eat. Shop. Relax.

The life paths of Markéta and Lukáš, the co-owners of Co.de, crossed in England, and it was also back then that they got the idea of a home design store combined with a café. After 12 years in England, the time was ripe for some major changes in their lives. They decided to move to Czechia, and together transform this nice dream into a reality. “Žižkov attracted us with its character, history, and special charm,” remembers Markéta. “A few days after finding our current location, we quit our jobs and started renovating the space ourselves. Within four months, we opened our dream!”

Inspired by the English approach to life and the character of Prague’s genius loci, Co.de wants to be a combination of both, and suit – as well as inspire – the taste of the locals. The primary concern is the quality, combined with a unique story behind each piece being offered here – both in home furniture and refreshments. In the shop, you can expect a fine selection of interior home pieces, especially from smaller manufacturers. Many of those manufacturers also pride themselves in their sustainable label. In the café, only quality and fresh ingredients are used in order to allow you to indulge in the honest taste of the drinks and food offered here.

“The mix of what we like, what we cherish, what reflects our personality – that should be our home.”

Making our homes bolder

“In the interior, we love to mix the old with the new because that is where the real home is. The mix of what we like, what we cherish, what reflects our personality – that should be our home. We hope to inspire people to make their homes bolder, more colourful, more unique, and different than what their neighbours next door have :). Our mission is to bring soul to your home,” describes Markéta in regards to Co.de’s vision.

In the shop, you can find modern, as well as vintage, decorations such as vases, candleholders, bowls, shelves, hangers, mirrors, and clocks, all of which can be easily combined together in modern, bohemian, scandi, or even traditional homes. A big portion of home textile is the pillows – cotton, wool, or velvet materials. In terms of lighting, there is a nice selection of hanging lights, floor and table lamps, and especially hanging rattan lights – hand-made very precisely, in a very high quality, beautiful, and modern design, so that people can easily include them in modern interiors as well.

Homemade desserts are made from quality ingredients

A notable part of the shop’s items is high-quality furniture. Many pieces they sell in Co.de are unique, whether they are original (vintage), newly made but looking ‘aged’, or are of a brand-new modern style. Original (vintage) furniture pieces such as cabinets, TV consoles, side tables, dining tables etc. are retouched and repaired as necessary – but the main point is that people can appreciate the history and feel of the piece, with its beautiful patina and marks of time. “We have pieces of furniture that are refurbished, with every little detail made to meet the needs of everyday use so that people should not be afraid to purchase such a piece – it’s not going to be just for décor, it’s fully functional!” ensures Markéta.

The second mentioned category of the new but ‘aged’-looking furniture includes pieces such as cabinets, dining chairs, dining tables, and chests of drawers made out of reclaimed wood, with their original patina and marks of the time – so they look old, but they are newly-made. These are also very original pieces of furniture; every piece could be slightly different. This furniture is made from FSC reclaimed recycled wood, which is the only globally recognisable certification for sustainability in this field.

The last category of new modern-style furniture offers items such as dining tables, chairs, cabinets, racks etc. made in modern and chic designs – a great quality for the price tag. As the owner concludes, “In terms of what sort of styles people can find at our place, it is rather wide as we bring to life bohemian and eclectic styles, which are rising in popularity everywhere (and especially outside of the Czech Republic), but are slowly gaining popularity here as well. However, we also love the modern urban style – where you can combine a bit of scandi, light industrial, and a more classic style, but with focus on quality, materials, and even sustainability.”

“We hope to inspire people.”

Co.de café is open every day

Serving honest food

Co.de café was inspired by similar places in England. Open every day, you can make it your “home office” Monday to Friday, as well as a chill stop on weekends – and feel free to bring your fur babies along, it’s no problem at all! Waiting for you are homemade carrot cake, lemon cheesecake, Pavlova roulade, chocolate brownie with salted caramel, granola, and nut cookies, to name a few currently on the menu. “We bake according to our tried and tested recipes that we have collected from our travels, or that we are currently inspired by,” says Markéta.

There’s something for those who don’t have a sweet tooth as well, of course – homemade sandwiches from local artisan bakeries pastries like paninis, bagels, and grilled sandwiches. Their coffee comes from a local coffee source roaster as well, and in summer, you can enjoy a cold brew, matcha latte, espresso tonic, and other iced coffees.

Hilton Christmas Charity Concert

CZK 100,000 DONATED TO TEREZA MAXOVÁ FOUNDATION HELPING CHILDREN IN NEED

Charity Cheque hand over to Tereza Maxová Foundation

Text: M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

On Wednesday December 20, 2023 Hilton Prague and Hilton Prague Old Town organized the 25th edition of the annual Christmas Charity Concert featuring the Karlovy Vary Symphonic Orchestra and soloist Jiří Stivín, conducted by Maestro Debashish Chaudhuri.

The Christmas spirit was brought by the International Ladies Chamber Choir Viva Voce with a special guest, Charlottka Hrubá, a talented pianist from the Tereza Maxová Foundation.

The evening was presented by Michael Specking, General Manager of Hilton Prague together with Czech actress Markéta Hrubešová.

The event was held in support of the Tereza Maxová Foundation, adopce.com project, whose Marketing & Operations Manager Petra Zapletalová took over a cheque amounting to CZK 100,000 from Michael Specking, General Manager of Hilton Prague, Tanya Podgoretska, General Manager of Hilton Prague Old Town, David Lesch, CEO of AV Media, and Vlastimil Vyskočáni, Director of Business Segment at ČEZ ESCO, main partners of the concert.

Special thanks also go to the partners of the concert, especially the main partners – AV Media, ČEZ ESCO and Gesto Computers.

Martin Valovič

“I stand by our election promises”

PRAGUE 10 GAINED 250 MILLION CZK THANKS TO PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION IN PUBLIC EXPENDITURES.

Martin Valovič, Mayor of Prague 10

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

As a local patriot, I wanted to contribute my energy and ideas to improving the place where I have lived my whole life,” explains Martin Valovič, Mayor of Prague 10 district. “Being a mayor is a beautiful job, and I appreciate the trust that the citizens and neighbours of Prague 10 have placed in me. I want to complete projects such as the reconstruction of the surroundings of Strašnická metro station, in order to show people that they have put their trust in people who have energy and determination.”

What would you like to tell our readers about yourself?

I became Mayor of Prague 10 two years ago, and since then I, together with my colleagues and coalition partners, have been constantly working on improving our district to make it an even better place to live.

As a graduate in architecture and a local patriot, I am responsible for urban development and the revitalisation of public spaces. This year, we are restoring the vicinity of the Botič creek. The pedestrian promenade will get a new surface, and new concrete terraces will be built near the Botič. All this will extend the recreational purpose of this popular leisure area.

Before entering politics, I had been in business for many years.

I have built two successful project and production companies. Therefore, I have also included the support of local small businesses in my list of priorities.

You are a member of the ODS political party. Do you draw your inspiration from there?

I have joined the Civic Democrats mainly because of the values and ideas this party represents. Its DNA firmly encodes such values as individual freedom, free market, and personal responsibility. In this concept, the state is a guarantor of fair and understandable rules, still able to show solidarity and offer help to those in need. It was the ODS that helped with the transformation of the Czech economy after the Velvet Revolution in 1989, and who had assisted in putting our country back on the European map.

As you said, you became the Mayor of Prague 10 two years ago. What brought you into local politics in the first place?

As a local patriot, I wanted to contribute my energy and ideas to improving the place where I have lived my whole life. As an architect, I was troubled by the condition of some public spaces, and by the lack of a clear urban strategy. Thus, I have entered politics because actions are better than words.

What actions do the responsibilities of your current position allow you to perform?

Being a mayor is a beautiful but demanding job that has no office hours. You become the face of the place where you live, and which you of course care about. The representative role is only a small part of my daily agenda, particularly when we speak of such a diverse and large district as Prague 10. In terms of population, it is equivalent to a regional city such as Liberec or Olomouc.

In addition, the mayor has to be a good moderator of discussions, as well as a mediator of disputes. There are various groups and diverse interests in the public space. Finding a compromise is challenging on some topics, but it is important.

An informal competence of the mayor is the ability to set the agenda. I would like to use this ability to popularise the beautiful villas in Strašnice, or to bring back the name Jindřich Waldes. In the First Czechoslovak Republic, this businessman’s name was known worldwide. He was nicknamed the Baťa of Vršovice. His snap buttons were produced and sold all over the world. Then World War II, and the Nazi occupation, came. Waldes died on his way to America. This disaster was then completed by the Communists, after the coup. I think this is our debt to him, to bring his name back from obscurity. Our first foray is the “Prague 10 Entrepreneur of the Year” poll, which we launched last year. The main prize is named after Jindřich Waldes.

“In terms of population, Prague 10 is equivalent to a regional city such as Liberec or Olomouc.”

Of course, you were already active before becoming mayor. As deputy mayor, you were the first to publish a detailed list of investor requirements. Was it helpful?

Thanks to specific and understandable rules for investors, the district has already gained CZK 250 million, and more contracts are currently being prepared. We are using the funds to increase school capacities.

When we were preparing the methodology, titled “Private Sector Participation in Public Expenditures”, in cooperation with the Department of Spatial Planning at the Faculty of Architecture, Czech Technical University in Prague, I was sure of the benefit of such a document. However, reality has exceeded my expectations. This methodology is also appreciated by investors, as they can cooperate with the city transparently.

In return, they have the assurance that the financial resources will be fully used for prearranged public beneficial purposes. In our case, we are mainly talking about the growth of school capacities.

If you could highlight one single project that you have on your agenda as mayor, which one would that be?

Time flies by unbelievably fast. As I said earlier, being a mayor is a beautiful job, and I appreciate the trust that the citizens and neighbours of Prague 10 have placed in me.

A lot has happened in those two years. Yet, I would like to highlight the project that will run through these four years like an ongoing thread, and that is the reconstruction of the villa of Karel Čapek.

Together with colleagues, we have the ambition to make this exclusive space a house museum that will be as famous as the Tugendhat villa in Brno.

What are the most troublesome problems for Prague 10, in your opinion? Do you share them with other Prague districts?

One of the big problems that we identified last year with other Prague mayors is the underfunding of Prague’s education system. It’s not just about its capacities, but mainly about low contributions. Although all costs have skyrocketed in recent years, the contribution per pupil has not changed for many years.

A major local topic is the tug-of-war over the future of the Bohdalec-Slatiny brownfield site. A few years ago, we prepared a territorial study for this extensive area, which included the creation of a new green district. Last year, the designers from the Railway Administration showed interest in this site. They wanted a huge sorting station to be built there. Eventually, we managed to find a compromise, and a huge barrier will not be built in the heart of Prague 10.

What are the main challenges for you and your colleagues?

Together with my colleagues, we agree that it is necessary to heal the finances of the municipal district in the following years.

I would like to have a balanced budget at the end of the election period. However, this plan is being complicated by the current economic situation, rapidly rising inflation, and energy prices.

Instead of one-off cuts, we are focused on systematic savings and on reducing the energy performance of buildings. And, of course, we must figure out what to do with the old town hall building in Vršovická after our move to Strašnice. This building, from the second half of the 1970s, requires a complete reconstruction. The building’s shell is in a state of disrepair, and there is also a danger of the windows falling down.

The repair costs are astronomical, and Prague 10 cannot afford them. We are currently having an economic analysis prepared by an external company. The analysis will tell us how to proceed with this building.

I must also mention the revitalisation of parks, and the care of green vegetation. The successful revitalisation of the northern part of Solidarity Park has won the Municipal Project of the Year award, in the public green vegetation category.

A mayor’s job comes with a lot of criticism. How do you handle that?

I take constructive criticism as an essential part of the debate. No man is infallible. Life is not black and white, and the opinions, positions, and life experiences of each of us differ. Criticism is also the job description of the opposition. I respect that. What is not close to me, and I will not say that it does not bother me, are various false attacks and accusations that occasionally appear in the public space.

What are your strategy and plans for the next few years?

I want to complete projects such as the reconstruction of the surroundings of Strašnická metro station, in order to show people that they have put their trust in people who have energy and determination. My colleagues and I stand by our programme declaration and election promises, and I believe that we will manage to fulfil most of them. I want to continue meeting people and the business community, and talking to them about topics and things that interest them, and which I can help them with.

Two years from now, after four years of acting as mayor, will people say you were effective?

That will be shown by the elections. They are the ultimate litmus test.

Colors of Woman, 35 Years of Infinity

Helena Kroftová Leisztner, Mayor of Prague 1 Terezie Radoměřská, and Eliška Hašková Coolidge (from left)

Text: M.Zisso; Photo: Jaroslav Tatek

Renowned artist Helena Kroftová Leisztner is celebrating 35 years of her award-winning art collection – a milestone marked by a special exhibition event called “Colors of Woman”. The event took place at the luxurious Augustine Hotel in Prague.

The “Colors of Woman” exhibition was held under the auspices of the Municipality of the Capital City of Prague and the Prague 1 district under the leadership of the Mayor of Prague 1, Mrs. Terezie Radoměřská.

It was attended by approximately 160 VIP guests, including dignitaries, celebrities, and public figures from the spheres of diplomacy, politics, culture, and fashion, adding a layer of prestige to this unique celebration.

Helena Leisztner, an important painter, photographer, and clothing designer, is known for her unique fusion of artistic expressions. Her multimedia Art & Fashion shows appeal to audiences not only in the Czech Republic but also in the international scene. Ms. Leisztner’s motto, “Intuition is a goddess for all of us,” resonates throughout her work and seminars.

Ms. Leisztner’s artistic journey was strongly influenced by her travels – in her works, we can find cultural elements from Spain, Latin America, and Thailand. This exhibition presents her techniques – with an emphasis on lines emanating from the center, symbolizing infinity and harmonious energy – and explores the sensual and emotional aspects of the female body.

One of the highlights of Ms. Leisztner’s career was her participation in the International Exhibition of Modern Art in Paris, at La Coupole, with “Eden”, a magical 3D effect painting, accompanied by her poetry.

In addition to her artistic activities, Ms. Leisztner is actively involved in charitable activities. As a founding member and president of the Czech Association of Friends of the National Women’s Museum of Art in Washington, she supports various foundation projects, including young and disabled artists.

The Augustine Hotel hosting the event is a historical gem and a work of art in itself, combining elegance and modern luxury. This 13th century former monastery hotel provides a choice backdrop for cultural events and exhibitions, making it the perfect location for this exhibition.

Tomáš Portlík

“Many problems have solutions when you are tenacious and persistent”

Tomáš Portlík, Mayor of Prague 9 (Photo: Anna Vacková)

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso

“I am old school. I believe that a politician should have a long-term vision, and well-thoughtout concrete steps to implement it,” says Tomáš Portlík, Mayor of Prague 9. “My mom would tell you that I got into politics when I was six years old, complaining about what I was missing at home. But seriously. Look at the map of Prague 9 today and compare it with a map that is ten or twelve years old. Look at today’s spatial plan, and you will see where our priorities are.”

Tell us about yourself, please.

What would you like to hear? I follow traditional values, but I’m not afraid of change. I bet on individualism, but I have a great team of colleagues around me at the town hall. I consider healthy self-confidence to be important… Or is it that I was born in Prague, still live here, I got married here, and have two children?

You joined ODS at the age of 18. Who is your inspiration in this regard?

Our family has always been right-wing. My parents – and also my grandfather, who emigrated and lived in exile – taught me that one is responsible for their own life. At the age of eighteen, the politics of the ODS appealed to me. It represented a realistic view of the world for me. In addition, I knew Mr. Jaroslav Kubera, a former senator who lived with us in Prosek. His specific, healthy approach to life and his work in politics influenced me a lot. I still try to follow what he taught me. In other words, the task of a politician is to develop society so that people, if possible, make their own decisions about their lives as much as possible. They should not feel that a politician is a messenger of truth who dictates their life. I want a functioning public administration that manages a debt-free budget and brings maximum benefit to citizens. Those who claim that they know how to spend our money better than us are wrong. Although lower taxes bring less to the state treasury, the state does not have to take care of all its citizens just to please them, but it has to take care of those who have found themselves in a difficult social situation through no fault of their own.

Before entering the world of active politics, you engaged in business. What made you change your life course?

My mom would tell you that I got into politics when I was six years old, complaining about what I was missing at home. Once, she couldn’t take it anymore, and advised me to complain to the local committee. So, I started sending letters to the town hall as a small child. But seriously.

I joined ODS in 1997, and didn’t want any party positions for a long time. This changed when I felt that healthy competition and support for individuality was disappearing from ODS, and I started to get involved in the party, and in municipal politics. In 2006, I successfully ran for the City Council of Prague 9. I realized that I could influence things in my place of residence from the position of a representative or councillor. At that time, like many of my friends, I was troubled by the state of green areas in Prague 9, the slow pace of regeneration of children’s playgrounds, and the lack of funds for investments.

I was also troubled by other related issues, such as lack of places in kindergartens, the housing policy, the non-progressing “privatization”, few cultural events in the district, and, above all, the desperate state of my childhood favourite Friendship Park in Prosek. Many of those problems had solutions, you just had to be tenacious and persistent.

How did you become Mayor of Prague 9?

That was a natural progression. For three electoral terms, I was the deputy mayor responsible for the finances of Prague 9. Pretty soon, we managed to achieve a balanced budget, and started fulfilling the plans with which I entered municipal politics. During all that time, Jan Jarolím was the mayor of the ninth city district and my mentor. Then, when he quit in March 2021 at his own request, he handed over the mayor role to me to continue fulfilling the long-term concept of the development of our district. The big tasks included, for example, the construction of a brand-new Elektra Primary and Kindergarten with 33 classrooms, as well as the expansion of Friendship Park, and the preservation of the relaxing part of Prosek and Střížkov, which I personally consider a significant achievement.

What are the duties of a mayor?

All duties of the mayor are governed by the Act on the Capital City of Prague. I see the role of mayor as a responsibility for the part of the city that I manage, and for the people who live in it. It’s not a job with typical office hours, but I knew that when I decided to do it. I like Prague, and I like the ninth district, so I enjoy improving the place where we live together.

You were elected the Mayor of Prague 9 more than two years ago. How do you remember that time?

I took over the position after a difficult COVID-19 period, at a time when we still had to deal with the consequences of the pandemic, and above all ensure the safe return of children to schools. We did our best for this, and were successful in implementing rational anti-epidemic measures. We were the first in the republic to start testing various methods of testing children for COVID-19, including the so-called “pooling method” – an evaluation using collective PCR testing, or testing from wastewater at schools. We were also successful with a lawsuit in the Supreme Administrative Court, which aimed to end the government’s record for the length of school closures and return pupils to face-to-face classes.

“I like Prague, and I like the ninth district, so I enjoy improving the place where we live together.” (Photo: Archive)

What do you see as the major problems in Prague right now, in both your district and in general?

All of Prague, in my opinion, most needs stability, vision, consolidated finances, a modern approach, and an open mind. I am a supporter of the fact that it does not have to be divided by some kind of ideological war, but its representatives should find a balance between different groups of voters. Take transportation for example. I myself ride a bicycle, scooter, motorscooter, or motorcycle, but I also drive a car. And I walk too. In Prague 9, I support all modes of transport, and it works. So why wouldn’t it be possible in the whole of Prague? There are areas, such as transport and education, which have an impact on all city districts. Back in 2015, I had already initiated the creation of the “Assembly of Mayors” of the city districts. Originally consisting of Districts 1-22, and now of all 57 districts, we are negotiating together with the Capital City Townhall on topics such as the fair distribution of money between city districts, parking in the capital, ensuring a sufficient number of places in schools, and so on.

What are the main challenges you and your colleagues face?

Challenges relating to the fact that, in recent years, the ninth district has been developing in the most dynamic way, compared to the whole of Prague. Over 30% of all apartments in the capital were newly built here. At the same time, we increased the number of places in our schools, built cycle paths, expanded parks, and built playgrounds and community centers, but also saved green areas from development. However, the last generation of politicians did not say which direction Prague should develop in, what the target state of the population should be, what the level of population density should be, et cetera. Many residents believe that there is already a lot of development, and that every meter of green area needs to be protected. But compared to cities in other countries, the population density in Prague is one of the lowest. And if the city is to develop, and at the same time we are to behave ecologically, we must build a city within the city, and not expand it into the fields. And if we don’t want to take up square meters in the park, it’s only natural to build high buildings. It is more generous with public space, and cheaper in terms of construction costs and running economics. But when I recently mentioned that high-rise buildings would suit Prague 9, there was an avalanche of criticism.

Certainly, a mayor’s job always comes with lots of criticism. How do you react to that?

I try to learn from the constructive criticism. Unfortunately, the principle of how politics works has changed with the rise of the use of social networks, through which a negligible group of the population imposes their views on you with a “high” number of likes, and criticizes you. I am old school. I believe that a politician should have a long-term vision, and well-thoughtout concrete steps to implement it. That’s why, in Prague 9, we have been involving our residents in all major development projects for a long time. Of course, we cannot avoid criticism. But, I try to listen to people, convince them of our plans, look for solutions acceptable to the majority, and explain them – especially when they are not among the most popular. And then, of course, take responsibility for them.

What are your plans for the next few years then?

I have many plans, but the most important ones are related to education. Last September, we opened the new Elektra Elementary School and Kindergarten. Over the past thirty years, we were the only district in Prague that has built a school for 800 children from the ground up. We are now starting the project preparation of Elektra II, so that in two years a specific campus, including kindergarten, primary, and secondary education, will begin to grow in Vysočany. We also have a concrete plan for the reconstruction of all the schools and kindergartens we run, because children learn better in a modern environment. The changes should also affect the pedagogical work in our schools. I would like to see kids winning competitions in math, physics, and other subjects, so that they have different approaches, options, and alternatives to choose from without having to go to a private school. I would like us to support talented students, to have the best teachers in our schools, and for all children – regardless of the socio-economic status of their parents – to have the same conditions at the start of school.

After you leave the mayor’s chair, will people say you were effective?

Just ask them. Or look at the map of Prague 9 today and compare it with a map that is ten or twelve years old. There used to be factories in Vysočany, in the area of Poděbradská and Kolbenova Streets, and not even a square meter of land belonged to the town district. Today, there are thousands of apartments including civic amenities, and a cycle path that connects Prague 8 with Prague 14 across Prague 9. We built parks here – Pod Lávkou, Zahrádky, the large Třešňovka orchard underwent revitalization, and the new meanders on the Rokytka River were awarded for their contribution to the micro-climate of the area. We acquired land there for the construction of school facilities, and built the first school buildings on them.

We prevented the mass construction of housing estates in Prosek. And if you look at today’s spatial plan, you will see almost thirty hectares of new areas in it since last year, which belong to the administration of the City of Prague 9, and are treated and managed as green areas, not as building land. This is also the case with my heart’s desire – the central Friendship Park in Prosek, the area of which we expanded from 8.5 hectares to almost 13 hectares. The cultural events we organize in Prague 9 have also multiplied rapidly. At the same time, I get the greatest joy from open-air concerts in our parks, both new and revitalized.

Magical Moments at Hilton Prague

FAREWELL TO THE GENERAL MANAGER OF HILTON PRAGUE MICHAEL SPECKING AND WELCOME TO HIS SUCCESSOR, RYAN GAUCI

Text: M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

From left: Ryan Gauci, Simon Bender, and Michael Specking

On January 10, 2024, The Hilton Prague celebrated a memorable farewell event for its esteemed General Manager, Michael Specking, who was retiring after nearly 17 years at Hilton Prague.

The event brought together ambassadors, clients, business partners, and other special guests to bid him farewell and welcome the new General Manager, Ryan Gauci.

The evening unfolded in the mystical ambiance of “Alchemist”, filled with enchantment, time travel, and captivating performances. The highlight of the evening was the symbolic passing of the key, as Michael handed it over the Ryan.

The Hilton ́s longtime manager used the occasion to express his gratitude in his speech, parts of which we are bringing to you here:

“Dear Excellences, loyal clients, my favourite colleagues, and good evening to my better half – Claudia.

Today, I stand here not as the general manager who selects the best mattresses or introduces the latest technology – no, today I stand here as the freedom fighter who can finally press the check-out button for myself! After over 42 years in the hotel business, and more than 16 years with Hilton Prague I retire to take a well-deserved nap – without the fear of complaints about pillows that are too hard.

Together, we fought battles against rebellious coffee machines and experienced epic dramas over forgotten toothbrushes.

I look forward to spending my days without the worry of overbooked rooms and missing mini shampoos. But I promise not to forget that the real luxury in the hotel lies not in the number of stars, but in the friendliness and dedication of the team.

So, a big thank you to my team who have worked so hard all these years that even the maids have muscles like Schwarzenegger, my chefs cook like the Bocuse and the service is miles ahead of those that serve at George 5 in Paris. You managed to make guests believe that we are wizards who can transform rooms into pristine oases in the blink of an eye and do the same when it comes to culinary surprises.

To my management team – big thanks for being my rock through thick and thin. Despite the ups and downs, we always found a way to turn it into a good laugh.

Cheers to a team that knows how to make work fun! and to Marta, my PA.

Another great appreciation to my colleagues for your endless support. And to my bosses who figured well how to occupy me with reports and statistics – gosh how many budget presentations!

To my and our clients here my big, big “děkuji” for your loyalty and support in all these years here in Prague.

To our owners I extend my greatest gratitude for holding on so long with me. But joke aside, cheers to you for joining the event tonight!

And to my better half – a big shout out to my wife for putting up with my work stories for all these years without falling asleep! Cheers to you Claudia, in crime and in retirement!

To my successor Ryan: May your coffee be strong, your minibars never empty, your guests never get too creative with their room décor, ensure happy team members turn deadlines into ”dead laugh” lines, delight the boss, and satisfy your proprietor. I know for sure – you will make it.

And to myself? May my retirement be as relaxing as a late check-out at no extra cost!

I now pursue my new career as a siesta master and pillow fluff expert!

Thank you, ahoj, goodbye and Auf Wiedersehen.”

Michael Specking is passing the key to Ryan Gauci

Ryan Gauci, the new General manager, addressed the gathering with enthusiasm and gratitude. He shared his excitement about the opportunity to lead the flagship Hilton Prague into a new chapter aiming to continue the hotel’s tradition of providing exceptional services and memorable experiences.

Adding to the significance, Hilton representatives Mr. Dominique Piquemal, VP Luxury Operations EMEA, and Mr. Ben Bengougam, SVP HR EMEA took the stage. They expressed appreciation to Michael Specking for his contributions and extended a warm welcome to Ryan Gauci, wishing him all the best in his new role.

Sonia Deasy

“Standing out in a sea of serums”

Sonia Deasy with her father

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

Driven by the belief that skincare shouldn’t be complicated, Sonia Deasy created a line of simple, highly effective skincare products. Almost 10 years ago, she launched the brand in her home country of Ireland with a single product: Pure Hyaluronic Serum. “I believed I could make a product that stood out in a sea of serums,” she says. “Some people thought I was crazy. There were hyaluronic serums everywhere. But here’s the thing: I didn’t like any of them.”

Who is Sonia Deasy?

I’m Irish of Indian origin, 48 years old, and mum to five children. When I started Pestle & Mortar in 2014, they ranged in age from 10 down to 4. As cofounder, my husband works closely with me in Pestle & Mortar, and, before establishing our company, we also worked together in our portrait photography studio. So, we continue to live and work together in Kildare County, Ireland.

What made you think about going into the skincare business?

As I said, I was working alongside my husband Padraic in our portrait photography studio. During my work with the models, I noticed that many of their skin problems came to light under the camera lens – mainly dryness and flakiness. These girls, women, and mums, were busy, busy people, and they cared about how their skin looked – but they just hadn’t figured out a simple skincare routine to suit their lifestyle and pocket.

My skin often suffered the same fate, especially when I was travelling, and I grew frustrated with all the complicated options sitting on skincare shelves that I couldn’t understand! I wanted simple skincare that worked – and I just couldn’t find it.

“I decided to create skincare products that would be simple to use, easy to understand, and highly effective.”

Can you recall the moment of actually deciding, ‘yes, I will start a new skincare business’?

The breakthrough moment for me was this simple realisation: Many women had the same problem as I did.

They didn’t know what skincare products to choose, and felt confused by the industry and its marketing. Expensive products left them feeling frustrated because they didn’t always work. A dull, lifeless complexion affected their confidence, and they didn’t feel comfortable with their natural skin. So, I decided to create skincare products that would be simple to use, easy to understand, and highly effective.

You dared to launch your brand with just one product. What was the reasoning behind such an unusual decision?

In a single sentence, my driving motivation was ‘skincare shouldn’t be complicated’. And to this day, Pestle & Mortar is known for its less-is-more ethos when it comes to caring for your skin.

Yes, almost 10 years ago, I launched the brand with a single product: Pure Hyaluronic Serum, now a cult-favourite beloved by beauty influencers far and wide. Launching a skincare brand with a single product is unusual – in fact, some might say it’s insane! And some people really did think I was mad – I was intending to launch a skincare brand with a single product, AND it was a product with which the market was already flooded. I mean, there were hyaluronic serums everywhere.

But here’s the thing: I didn’t like any of them.

Sonia Deasy, National Enterprise Winner 2019

How did you create your now globally successful skincare routine?

I was determined to create a hyaluronic serum that provided instant results and didn’t feel sticky or tacky on the skin. I spent 18 months getting the formulation right and researching the market.

I believed I could make a product that stood out in a sea of serums, and I knew the story behind my brand would connect with people. The remarkable success of our first product, Pure Hyaluronic Serum, catapulted the brand onto the global stage. Fast forward 10 years, and we are now proud to offer a comprehensive line-up of straightforward, yet exceptionally effective skincare products.

At Pestle & Mortar, we combine high-performance active ingredients with healing natural extracts to create simple skincare that works. My heritage informs our formulations, and that is why they are unique. I come from six generations of Indian medicine men. Medicine men in India use ayurvedic wisdoms to mix food-based medicines to cure common ailments – I grew up with ayurvedic food philosophies and a back-to-basics approach to beauty and wellness rooted in Indian Natural Healing philosophies, and that’s what inspires my formulations. I was taught that if you are healthy, you look beautiful, and that natural beauty is best. At Pestle & Mortar, we create simple solutions for beautiful skin by combining natural healing ingredients with cutting-edge scientific active ingredients.

If you could share one thought with your customers, what would you tell them?

My passion runs deeper than just wanting to fix skin concerns. I believe everyone is beautiful. At Pestle & Mortar, we’re not just about making effective skincare. We want to empower women to care for their natural beauty properly, so they can look and feel their best every day.

Sonia Deasy, is co-founder and CEO of Pestle & Mortar, an Irish skincare company launched in 2014. As a busy mother-of-five, Sonia understands how difficult it can be to find a daily skincare routine that is both simple and effective. Pestle & Mortar’s philosophies are rooted in Sonia’s Indian heritage in Natural Healing. For six generations, her family have practised as medicine men in India. Pestle & Mortar is now stocked in 21 countries across 3 continents, and the brand has been endorsed in some of the most prestigious international magazines including Vogue, Vanity Fair, and the New York Times. Customers in the Czech Republic can buy her top-quality cosmetics at www.notino.cz, among other places.

David Maxa

“Progressive Judaism embraces necessary changes”

Visit of the delegation of the World Union for Progressive Judaism at the Spanish Synagogue in Prague, from left: Ben Fantini, Vice Chair of the European Union for Progressive Judaism; Andrew Keene, Vice Chair of the World Union for Progressive Judaism; Rabbi Sergio Bergman, President of the World Union for Progressive Judaism; Carole Sterling, then Chair of the World Union for Progressive Judaism; Rabbi David Maxa; Liz and Jim Breslauer; and Sonja Guentner, then Chair of the European Union for Progressive Judaism
(Photo Courtesy: Sheilla Pallay)

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso

“In a world experiencing a pandemic of uncertainty, religious leaders must offer spiritual guidance amidst challenges like war conflicts, climate change, the rise of extremism and totalitarian regimes, and all sorts of crises,” says David Maxa, a Progressive Judaism Rabbi living in Prague. “It’s crucial to note that next to Orthodox Judaism, Progressive Judaism has deep historical roots in the Czech Republic, evident in landmarks like the Spanish Synagogue in Prague, constructed in 1868.”

Can you share an overview of your current roles as the Progressive Rabbi in the Czech Republic, and your leadership positions in various international organizations?

I live in Prague, where I serve as the Rabbi of the Progressive Jewish Community ’Ec chajim’, which I co-founded in 2019. Additionally, I play a role in the Federation of the Jewish Communities in the Czech Republic, supervising the agenda of the Progressive stream of Judaism, and serving as the Rabbi for the Jewish communities in Liberec and Děčín. I also oversee Progressive Judaism in the region; since 2021, I’ve been the Convenor of the Central European Beit Din (CEBD), the rabbinic court for the Progressive stream in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia. In 2022, I became a member of the ROI Community of Schusterman Family Philanthropies, which unites innovative Jewish and Israeli changemakers to address complex challenges in Jewish communities, Israel, and the world. A year later, I was elected an Executive Board Member of the World Union for Progressive Judaism (WUPJ), the international network of Jewish communities, serving an estimated 1.8 million members worldwide in more than 1,250 congregations in over 50 countries.

Rabbi David Maxa at the Spanish Synagogue in Prague (Photo Courtesy: Sheila Pallay)

What factors influenced your decision to become a rabbi?

My father’s survival in the Holocaust profoundly shaped my identity, connecting my Jewish roots with poignant memories. After his passing, I embarked on a journey to explore my Jewish identity beyond the historical context. Studying Jewish Studies at Prague’s Charles University exposed me to the story of Rabbi Richard Feder, who accompanied the Czech Jewish community in Ghetto Terezín, ultimately inspiring me to pursue the path of becoming a rabbi. Along this transformative journey, I was fortunate to connect with individuals whose great inspiration and unwavering support became the cornerstone of my pursuit, which led me to study for the rabbinate in Germany and Israel. Additionally, I had the privilege of undertaking internships in the USA and the UK, broadening my understanding of global Jewish communities.

I achieved my rabbinic ordination in 2020.

Can you elaborate on the distinctions between Progressive Judaism and Orthodox Judaism?

Both streams share common roots, but they began diverging in the 18th and 19th centuries when confronted with the challenges of modernity. Progressive Judaism embraces necessary changes, exemplified by full gender equality in all religious questions, inclusivity of diverse Jewish backgrounds, and recognition of same-sex relationships – in contrast to the more conservative approach of Orthodox Judaism. Despite different approaches, it’s essential to note that both streams also have much in common as they share a commitment to tradition, a love for Judaism, and respect for the Torah. Additionally, it’s crucial to note that next to Orthodox Judaism, Progressive Judaism has deep historical roots in the Czech Republic, evident in landmarks like the Spanish Synagogue in Prague, constructed in 1868 as the centre of the local Progressive community. This historical context enriches our Progressive Jewish tradition with a unique connection to the local history and culture.

In your view, is a rabbi inherently a leader? How does this role evolve over time? Could you provide insights into your daily agenda?

Certainly, a rabbi must be a skilled leader, and the traditional notion of a rabbi solely devoted to study is outdated. As a community rabbi, I actively contribute to development strategies, support fundraising efforts, and initiate outreach projects to meet the evolving needs of our communities. Additionally, a rabbi serves as a leader of services and a spiritual guide. Beyond these roles, I am deeply involved in organizing interfaith and intercultural dialogues, as well as charity events. As an illustration, last November, in collaboration with the Israeli Embassy, our community organised a significant charity event for Kibbutz Kfar Azza in Israel, which was profoundly devastated by the Hamas terror attacks on the 7th of October 2023. The fundraiser received the honour of H.E. Anna Azari, the Israeli Ambassador in Prague, who graciously supported the event with her auspices.

Reflecting on your personal experience, what qualities do you believe are essential for aspiring rabbis?

Well, every rabbi is different, but I would say that every aspiring rabbi must respect Judaism and the Torah, long for knowledge in the broadest sense, do their best to understand the world and its changing needs, and care for people. And what about God? Love for God is truly important, but without approaching God through these previously mentioned skills, one would risk becoming a mere fanatic. Being an empathic listener, eloquent speaker, open-minded thinker, and humble leader are also important features, and sometimes a decent singing voice helps.

Rabbi David Maxa with some members of the Central European Beit Din, from right: Rabbi Anita Kantor from Hungary, Rabbi Misha Kapustin from Slovakia and Rabbi Tomáš Kučera from Germany (Photo Courtesy: Leona Kalvodová)

As the founder of the Progressive Jewish Community ’Ec chajim’, what key elements were crucial in building a successful community from scratch?

A successful start required a clear vision, team synergy, and the ability to analyse demands. I take great pride in our community’s cohesive team, understanding that leadership involves skilfully surrounding oneself with the right people who possess the right kind of skills. My deepest gratitude goes to those who trusted us and invested their time, energy, and financial resources in supporting our vision. This fundamental aspect remains paramount for every new project we launch. It’s important to acknowledge that thriving Jewish communities are essentially masterpieces of philanthropy, reflections of dedication and commitment from those aiming to leave a lasting legacy and support meaningful causes. The ability to effectively convince and inspire individuals to align with the vision becomes a pivotal aspect of community building.

What is your vision for the future of your community?

We are committed to advancing the renewal of Progressive Judaism in Prague. With ’Ec chajim’ experiencing unprecedented growth, our strategies encompass addressing increasing demand, expanding our physical facilities, and diversifying our community’s portfolio of activities. This positive challenge motivates us to explore avenues for expansion and ensure that our community’s evolving needs are met, enabling us to continue thriving.

Chanukkah celebration at Maisel Synagogue in Prague, from left: Jakub Szántó, Czech journalist and writer; H. E. Anna Azari, Ambassador of the State of Israel; and Rabbi David Maxa (Photo Courtesy: Karel Cudlín)

Looking forwards, what do you perceive as the major challenges facing religious leaders?

In a world experiencing a pandemic of uncertainty, religious leaders must offer spiritual guidance amidst challenges like war conflicts, climate change, the rise of extremism and totalitarian regimes, and all sorts of crises. The endeavour to inspire people to lead fulfilling lives despite fears is a constant one, a commitment I make not only as a religious leader but particularly as a father of two children. Furthermore, the duty extends to actively contributing to global improvement and inspiring others to do so, guided by the wise Jewish saying: “It is not your duty to complete the work, but neither are you free to desist from it.” One tangible example involves addressing the unfortunate growth of antisemitism. Collaborating with others, I am working to convince Czech universities to adopt the IHRA definition of antisemitism, a pivotal measure in preventing antisemitism in the future, even though the task proves more challenging than anticipated.

Htuann Naung

“Being a diplomat is the greatest adventure of my life”

Mr. Htuann Naung, Chargé d’ Affaires of Myanmar

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

Myanmar is the largest inland area within the Southeast Asia region, with 56 million people. It offers an incredible cultural variety, and its diverse beauty ranges from snow-capped Himalayan mountaintops to vast underwater reefs. I would like to extend my invitation to the people of Czechia to visit Myanmar,” says Mr. Htuann Naung, Chargé d’ Affaires of Myanmar, adding: “I am certain that in the future we can further strengthen the friendship and mutually beneficial cooperation between the two countries.”

Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

I am currently taking responsibility as the Head of Mission of the Embassy of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar in Prague, in the capacity of Chargé d’ Affaires. Although I graduated in Veterinary Medicine, I decided in the end to serve my country and our people as a diplomat since I have always been interested in this field. That is also why I studied International Relations and Diplomacy at the Australian National University in Canberra. This is my second time in Europe, as I had previously attended the Federal Foreign Service Academy of Germany in 2010 for diplomatic training. I came to Prague together with my beloved wife.

You have been in the Czech Republic for about a year now. What are some of your impressions?

I arrived in this glorious city, Prague, on 7th August 2023. Since then, I have been enjoying life in this passionate country while learning about its history, culture, lifestyle, legendary traditional cuisine, well-preserved countryside with beautiful national parks, vast fields and gorges, as well as the heritage values of the Czech people. I am also impressed by the preservation of historical monuments, castles, and chateaus in this central European country, and its prestigious production of beer, crystals, and so on. Indeed, I have much respect for the technological advancements and innovative creativity here. Living in Prague is amazing! Its flowing river, famed bridges, and narrow cobbled streets are breathtaking and charming. The views of iconic sights such as Charles Bridge, Prague Castle, and elegant Wenceslas Square are an integral part of my daily working life now.

Myanmar is still rather an exotic and little-known country for Czechs. Would you like to give us some basic facts?

My country is famous for its rich history, culture, and lovely smiling people, as well as its natural resources such as oil, natural gas, teak, jade, gems, and other minerals. It is the largest inland area within the Southeast Asia region with 56 million people, neighbouring Bangladesh, India, China, Lao PDR, and Thailand. Myanmar is also known as “the golden land”, radiant with a crown of shimmering gold. It offers an incredible cultural variety, and its diverse beauty ranges from snow-capped Himalayan mountaintops to vast underwater reefs. In 1948, we gained independence from Britain. After that, Peace, Union spirit, and Solidarity have been taking vital roles for the interests of the state and people. Under the 2008 Constitution of Myanmar, the country practices a parliamentary-based multi-party democratic system. Ancient cities and historical sites across the country provide proof of the development of past civilizations and king dynasties. The country is recognised for having many colourful and exciting festivals throughout the year.

Myanmar is also a member of the ASEAN group. What activities does this organisation engage in?

Of course, Myanmar is one of the members of ASEAN, sharing our belief in creating a peaceful and prosperous place together for our people. Myanmar has been actively participating and contributing to ASEAN, in our efforts to reach our common goals successfully and build one fine community to closely collaborate with other regional partners and multilateral institutions, including the European Union. Here, we have the ASEAN-Prague Committee of the six embassies of ASEAN member countries, in order to promote the image of ASEAN, share common views between ASEAN and EU, and enhance culture, food, and public diplomacy with the government of the Czech Republic. Last year, our committee conducted several events such as ASEAN Day, the ASEAN+3 Film Festival, a donation to the Czech Food Bank Federation, several engagements with both central and local Czech governments, a series of seminars and roundtable discussions in universities, and culture and food promotion and awareness activities across the country.

Does your personal lifestyle fit your diplomatic role well?

I can definitely say that there is an excellent match between my career and my dream lifestyle. A few years after my graduation, I made the best choice ever and decided to join the Foreign Service – after realising what my assumptions and perceptions were. Being a diplomat makes me motivated to put all my energy into the daily work, and take joy in performing diplomacy. There are different approaches to a diplomat’s life, but I am sure that the way I execute my duties is in line with my motivation and dreams.

What is the best adventure your diplomatic career has brought you?

A diplomat’s life itself has been the greatest adventure of my life. I have some great memories of taking part in peace negotiations, conference diplomacy, and multilateral engagements, as well as diplomacy in hard times.

I believe that learning from every single experience makes every little piece unforgettable for all diplomats.

“Both countries have great opportunities to cooperate.”

How do you spend your free time?

Exploring my nearest surroundings is one of my favourite activities to do in my spare time. It always allows me to learn something new about the host country, and to travel in order to observe the nature, history, and beautiful hearts of the local people. Reading also helps me think outside the box and use my imagination. Keeping myself fit and active by attending the gym is also an option.

Do you promote your country as a holiday destination?

Concerning tourism, Myanmar is surely a destination country for world travellers. There are so many charming places to be explored. I would like to extend my invitation to the people of Czechia to visit Myanmar. Enjoying every experience in my country in the most authentic way will be a lifetime memory for everybody. Myanmar – be enchanted! We offer a really unique Asian culture that differs from many other destinations, with towering mountains and untouched islands, and scattered with sparkling pagodas, British colonial architectural heritage sites, and much more to delve into.

What is the current status of Czech-Myanmar relations?

Our countries established diplomatic relations on 3rd January 1956, and it will be the 70th anniversary soon. With Czechoslovakia at the time, we had established extensive economic relations. There are factories producing tires, tractors, and fuel injection systems for engines, as well as a sugar mill, a brewery, and a hydropower station in Myanmar, all built by Czech companies. Both countries have great opportunities to cooperate, especially in agriculture, science and technology, the health sector, education, tourism, environmental conservation, and heritage site preservation. Nowadays, hundreds of Myanmar students are currently studying in the Czech Republic at different universities, ranging from engineering to economics, international relations to the sciences. We have been maintaining and promoting cooperation in all possible areas for the benefit of both countries and citizens. I believe there are many matters we could work out together in order to promote bilateral relations and harmonious development.

This interview is done on the occasion of your national day. What are you wishing for your country? And for the Czech Republic?

Our Independence Day, or National Day, commemorates the importance of the territory, sovereignty, and national identity of our country. This year, we are celebrating the 78th anniversary of gaining our own independent status and rights. I wish peace and wellbeing to all the citizens of Myanmar, and urge them to work together in shaping a Union based on trueness, democracy, and federalism, in order to forge the strength of our national unity. Although the country encountered different terrible dangers that posed threats to the disintegration of the Union and sovereignty, our Union spirit and Solidarity will always be essential to us and to the new generations. As far as the Czech Republic is concerned, I am certain that in the future we can further strengthen the friendship and mutually beneficial cooperation between the two countries, as well as construct bilateral cooperation in various areas for the benefit of our peoples, and in the interests of strengthening stability and security in the Indo-Pacific region.

H.E. Ayesha Ali

“Enhancing an already strong relationship”

H.E. Mrs. Ayesha Ali, Ambassador of Pakistan

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

“Pakistan is the fifth most populous country in the world, with a large middle class. We also have one of the best foreign direct investment regimes in the world, and collaboration possibilities are immense,” says H.E. Mrs. Ayesha Ali, Ambassador of Pakistan. “Next year we celebrate 75 years of the establishment of diplomatic relations between our two countries. I look forward to working with my Czech counterparts to further enhance our robust bilateral relationship.”

Can you tell us about yourself?

Thank you for the opportunity. I am a Pakistani diplomat. It’s been over five months now since I arrived here to take up my responsibilities as the Ambassador. The Czech Republic is a wonderfully dynamic country, and I look forward to working with my Czech counterparts to further enhance our robust bilateral relationship.

Which countries did you serve in before your current assignment?

Before coming to the Czech Republic, I had the honour of serving my country in several capitals of the world including Tokyo, Washington, D.C. and New Delhi. In my last assignment I served as Consul General in New York.

You have been in Prague for only about five months. What is on the top of your to do list?

The Czech Republic is a very important country for Pakistan. It is the heart of Central Europe, and is important both bilaterally and as a member of the European Union. Pakistan has had a longstanding cooperative partnership with the Czech Republic, which has expanded over the decades to all segments of the bilateral relationship, including political, trade, economic, cultural, and people-to-people interaction. It is a country with a rich history, and dynamic people and economy. I look forward to building on the strong relationship between our two countries in all these areas.

The wild beauty of Pakistan may be very tempting for Czech tourists. Do you work on promoting your country here as a holiday destination?

Yes, Pakistan is a country of varied landscapes, which also makes it a very attractive destination for tourism and adventure sports. The Embassy works with several local partners to promote Pakistan’s rich culture, tourism, and culinary and sports heritage. We engage with several tourism / cultural and other organizations in the diplomatic community and beyond, and are focused on increasing people-to-people interaction through visits, exhibitions etc. Our special focus is on the young people of the Czech Republic – in this context we intend to reach out to universities, schools, and colleges to inform them about Pakistan, and encourage them to visit. We have some of the highest peaks in the world, and it is an area of special interest for Czech mountaineers. We look forward to increasing tourism collaboration between the two countries.

What is the most difficult part of being an ambassador?

Being a Representative / Ambassador of a country is a big responsibility. All Ambassadors endeavour to maintain the best possible relationships with the country of their accreditation, keeping the ties strong and enhancing them through their endeavours.

“I look forward to working with my Czech counterparts.”

What is the best adventure you have ever had thanks to your diplomatic career?

It is always challenging, in a positive way, to live and work in a country other than your own. The diplomatic life offers you several such opportunities, which go a long way towards personal and institutional capacity building. The Czech Republic, with its unique language and history, offers several such opportunities, and I am excited to be here.

What do you do in your free time?

I like to read books and work out. I am increasingly focused on my health goals, and on promoting a healthy lifestyle in Pakistan.

The Czech-Pakistani Chamber of Commerce was created and registered in May 2020, pursuant to the consistent economic outreach by the Embassy of Pakistan. What can Pakistan offer to Czech businesses and industries?

Pakistan and the Czech Republic have a strong economic and trade relationship that continues to grow. Pakistan is the fifth most populous country in the world, with a large middle class. Pakistan also has one of the best foreign direct investment regimes in the world, and offers opportunities for investment in all possible sectors, including automotive, machines & tools, mining, agriculture, and IT & energy (to name a few). As these are also strong-performing sectors of the Czech economy, collaboration possibilities are immense. We welcome Czech investment, and want to expand our bilateral trade ties beyond the traditional and into new areas for mutual benefit. The Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) of Pakistan, in this context, is very important, and we have been sensitizing our Czech counterparts regarding opportunities offered by the SIFC.

To conclude, how do you see the state of relations between our two countries?

Pakistan is a diverse, dynamic, and resilient country, with strong institutions and a robust network of international partners. We are focused on building a strong economically dynamic future for our younger generation. We look forward to continuing to play our responsible and leading role in the community of nations as a reliable partner for all our friends, including the Czech Republic. Pakistan and the Czech Republic have a long history of cooperative partnership, spread over decades. Next year we celebrate 75 years of the establishment of diplomatic relations between our two countries. Both sides are focused on enhancing bilateral ties in all areas of cooperation, to the mutual benefit of the people of both countries.

H.E. Albesjana Iberhysaj-Kapitaj

“Euro-Atlantic integration remains the strategic orientation of my country”

H.E. Ms. Albesjana Iberhysaj-Kapitaj, Ambassador of Kosovo submitting letter of credentials to the Czech President Petr Pavel

Text: Martina Hošková, M.Zisso; Photo: Archive

“At the age of 16, the Republic of Kosovo stands as the most pro-EU country in the region and beyond, with over 95% of our citizens expressing an unwavering desire to join the European Union,” declares H.E. Ms. Albesjana Iberhysaj-Kapitaj, the first Ambassador of Kosovo in Czechia. She further emphasises: “Kosovo is committed to actively pursuing our independence and democracy and integrating into the European Union and NATO, while fostering a profound friendship with the USA.”

Can you please introduce yourself to our readers?

I am a career diplomat who was lucky enough to join the diplomatic service 15 years ago, just a few months after the establishment of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Being a lawyer profiled in international relations coupled with a Master’s degree in French language and literature, I embarked on my diplomatic journey in the Department for Legal Affairs and International Agreements. The initial years of my career were undeniably golden, providing invaluable personal experience and significance for both the institution and my young country, which had only declared its independence a year prior.

What was some of that valuable experience collected during those early years?

Those early years were marked by colossal and intense work undertaken alongside my colleagues at the ministry, filled with great pleasure and, above all, immense pride. From the beginning, we constituted the foundations of a pivotal department tasked with crafting the initial legal framework, from drafting laws to conducting exchanges of verbal notes. It’s worth noting the privilege of collaborating with a director from whom I learned a lot. Additionally, I must underscore the invaluable support extended by our international allies, particularly the Americans, who generously shared their expertise with us. Throughout that period, I seized the opportunity to attend advanced diplomatic courses offered by prestigious academies such as the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna, the National School of Administration/ENA, and the Clingendael Institute of the Netherlands, among others.

How many countries have you served in up until now?

The Czech Republic is the third country I have served in so far. I commenced my first foreign assignment at our Embassy in Paris as a Counsellor. Alongside diplomatic duties, I also undertook the crucial responsibility of operationalizing Kosovo’s visa system for countries under the visa regime.

After a few months of service in Paris, at the suggestion of the Ministry, I transitioned to the General Consulate in Strasbourg. For us, it represented the foundational unit of our forthcoming permanent mission at the Council of Europe. As Kosovo’s membership in this significant international organisation, renowned as the guardian of human rights, stands as a priority for us this year, I would like to express the following:

The Republic of Kosovo’s full membership in the Council of Europe (CoE) is imperative to strenghten the protection of human rights and the well-being of citizens without discrimination. Hence, I take this opportunity to extend my gratitude to the countries that supported our successful first phase of membership last year and kindly ask member states to back us through their representatives in the CoE, aiming to bring the ongoing process to a successful conclusion.

Most recently, after a year of returning to Pristina, where I served as the head of the Department for Legal Issues and Treaties, I assumed a position in New York. At the Consulate General of the Republic of Kosovo in New York (2020-2022), I served as the Deputy Head of Mission. Aligned with the country’s strategic objectives, I focused on enhancing visibility and engagement with the United Nations, coordinating the Security Council’s periodic reporting agenda, and fostering relations with Permanent Missions accredited to the UN.

Both missions, in Strasbourg and New York, were a special experience professionally and personally. The experience gained in multilateral missions, where the primary work is the advancement of relations with the states represented in the organisation, is unique.

H.E. Ms. Albesjana Iberhysaj-Kapitaj, Ambassador of Kosovo together with Dr. Vjosa Osmani-Sadriu, President of the Republic of Kosovo at the forum 2000
INTERVIEWS

Tell us about your country.

It’s a privilege and honour to represent Kosovo in a welcoming nation like the Czech Republic. Known as the land of the youngest Europeans, Kosovo epitomises exceptional talent, and unwavering European fervour. Despite the scars of war that once ravaged our land, Kosovo has risen to become one of the most vibrant democracies in the region. With the support of our friends and allies, the Republic of Kosovo has consolidated its democratic institutions and elevated its international subjectivity as a trustworthy and committed partner to democracy, human rights, and liberal democratic values. At the age of 16, the Republic of Kosovo remains the most pro-EU country in the region and beyond, with over 95% of our people expressing their uncompromising desire to join the EU. Euro-Atlantic integration remains the strategic orientation of my country.

As a young nation, we proudly celebrate the tenure of our second female president, alongside a record of two women serving as deputy prime ministers, one of whom also holds one of the five ministerial positions held by women. Moreover, our parliament boasts 43 female members, with 34 of them elected without the need for quotas. This marks a historic achievement, with women occupying nearly 40 percent of the total parliamentary seats.

For potential foreign investors, Kosovo offers an environment rich with highly talented, techsavvy, and multilingual youth, with 70% of the population under the age of 35. Our nation boasts a low and fiercely competitive tax system, coupled with a modern legal infrastructure aligned with EU legislation. Kosovo leads the region with the highest rate of internet users, with 93% of the population having access, propelling the ICT sector to remarkable heights. A testament to our skilled youth, particularly in the ICT sector, is the success story of hightech company Gjirafa, a fusion of Kosovo talent and Czech and US investment.

Today, Kosovo is not merely taking steps but rather leaps toward democratisation, as recognized by international indexes in areas such as the rule of law and transparency. In essence, Kosovo is showcasing its transformative spirit to the world across various sectors, including the economy and beyond.

What was your path to becoming the Ambassador of Kosovo?

My journey to becoming the Ambassador of Kosovo was deeply influenced by my early interest in international politics, which manifested itself from a young age. Even as my peers pursued different interests, I found myself drawn to following news editions, much to the amusement of some friends.

My childhood was spent enduring the challenges of living under the regime of Serbia, where opportunities were scarce, and isolation from the rest of the world was pervasive. School buildings catered primarily to the Serbian community, leaving us, the Albanian majority, to endure lessons in overcrowded classrooms with shortened schedules and inadequate resources. At that time, my country, my community, did not have ambassadors to represent us – even in local institutions, the representation was done by others for us. Being under constant repression, our only option was strengthening ties with powerful countries, with friendly countries such as the USA and European democracies.

Our aim was to establish strategic alliances with democratic countries who listened to our concerns, and, as they proved, were ready to help us gain our freedom.

Guided by the motto ‘An independent, democratic, integrated Kosovo in the European Union and in NATO, in permanent friendship with the USA,’ our esteemed leader Ibrahim Rugova, and the peaceful movement he championed, paved the way for Kosovo to forge meaningful friendships and powerful alliances. Through our liberation war, following the NATO intervention to put a halt to Serbia’s war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide against the people of Kosovo, and the support of the democratic world, we achieved our goal of freedom and independence.

What truly inspired my path toward diplomacy was the desire to bolster the international presence of my country and garner support from friendly nations like the Czech Republic. Additionally, I was driven by the goal of advancing Kosovo’s Euro-Atlantic integration and fostering strong bonds between our two nations.

H.E. Ms. Albesjana Iberhysaj-Kapitaj, Ambassador of Kosovo with Karel Schwarzenberg, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Czechia

Can you share some of your diplomatic work highlights?

Undoubtedly, my two-year tenure in the Czech Republic has been an exceptional experience. Diplomatic engagement in Czechia is dynamic, underpinned by a steadfast commitment to democracy and human rights. Notably, we closely monitored the Czech presidency of the European Union, during which I commend our Czech friends for their successful presidency.

It was during the Czech presidency of the Council of the European Union that we achieved a breakthrough in the protracted visa liberalisation process for Kosovo. This achievement was largely due to the commitment and strategic vision of the Czech government for the future of the European Union. Consequently, we entrusted Kosovo’s application for EU membership to the Czech Presidency, marking a historic stride toward our integration into the European Union.

Additionally, we closely observed the Russian aggression against Ukraine. In this context, we admire the unequivocal support of the government of Petr Fiala for Ukraine, including its commendable efforts in welcoming a record number of refugees.

What is the most difficult part of being a diplomat?

The most challenging aspect of being a diplomat lies in the profound impact it has on our families. While diplomacy offers numerous opportunities and privileges, it also entails immense responsibility. Our assignments and relocations affect not just us, but our families too, particularly our spouses, who often make sacrifices in their own careers to support us. I am fortunate to have a supportive husband and children who stand by me during my missions abroad, facilitating my commitments. Despite the benefits of forging new connections, the constant upheaval of relocating poses a significant challenge for us all.

How do you spend your free time?

As an ambassador, my role often demands a significant portion of my time and attention, given the responsibilities associated with representing my country and fostering diplomatic relations.

Despite the demanding nature of my position, I am passionate about reading. While my schedule may be hectic, I prioritise time for reading, which serves both as a leisure activity and a professional pursuit. Specifically, I am drawn to books with themes rooted in international relations, geopolitics, and current events. Exploring this kind of literature not only enhances my understanding of global affairs but also enriches my perspectives as an ambassador. Beyond reading, I cherish opportunities to explore historical sites and immerse myself in nature. Prague, with its rich history and abundance of museums, offers a myriad of cultural experiences. Yet, it’s not just Prague; other cities like Český Krumlov, Karlovy Vary, and Liberec have captivated me with their natural splendour and fascinating histories.

What is the current status of Czechia – Kosovo relations? You have already worked in the Prague Kosovo Embassy for some years, but only became an ambassador a few months ago. What has changed?

I proudly emphasize that the Czech Republic was one of the first countries to recognize the independence of Kosovo, just three months after the Declaration of our Independence.

Czechia remains dedicated to facilitating Kosovo’s membership in international organizations and integration into Euro-Atlantic institutions. Over the years, bilateral relations between our countries have flourished, evident in the heightened frequency of official visits and the unwavering support from across the political spectrum in both nations.

Furthermore, we observe a growing dynamism in economic exchanges and people-to-people contacts, underscoring the depth and breadth of our partnership.

It was during the Czech Presidency of the European Union Council that the commitment and strategic vision of the Czech government paved the way to finally conclude the protracted visa liberalization process for Kosovo, a milestone for which we will always be grateful. Consequently, it was under the Czech Presidency of the EU that we entrusted the submission of Kosovo’s application for membership in the European Union, symbolising a historic stride toward our European future.

While the relations between our countries have evolved over the years, the bilateral relationship between Kosovo and the Czech Republic has been marked by a specific dynamic due to opposing attitudes towards Kosovo’s independence from former Czech Presidents. Their divergent positions created challenges that hindered the elevation of diplomatic representation to an Ambassadorial level between our two nations.

Due to these challenges surrounding the opposing attitudes towards Kosovo’s independence, I was initially accredited as Charge d’ Affaires en pied until October 7th of last year. On that significant date, I had the honour of submitting my letter of credentials to President Pavel, whose invaluable support enabled me to become the first accredited Ambassador of Kosovo in the Czech Republic. This accreditation marked an extraordinary moment of pride, manifesting a significant milestone in our bilateral relations. Today, I am proud to assert that our bilateral relations are historically at their peak, reflecting the mutual dedication and collaboration between our two nations.

Can you share some of your impressions of becoming the first accredited Ambassador of Kosovo in Czechia?

Becoming the first accredited Ambassador of Kosovo in Czechia was an immensely historic and emotional moment for me. The handover ceremony, along with the Czech protocol, was truly magnificent. I extend my heartfelt gratitude to all the staff involved in organising the ceremony, both from the office of President Pavel and from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. I am deeply thankful to everyone who attended the ceremony and offered their support. The warmth and smiles on the faces of those present, as captured in the photos from that day, demonstrated their shared emotions and support during this significant occasion. I want to express my sincere appreciation publicly to all involved and commend the flawless organisation of the ceremony. It was a moment I will cherish forever, marking a new chapter in the diplomatic relations between Kosovo and Czechia.

This interview is done on the occasion of your national day. What are you wishing for your country? And for the Czech Republic?

As we approach the celebration of February 17th, 2008, a pivotal day in the history of Kosovo, marked by a new era for our people, I reflect on the remarkable journey that has brought us to where we stand today. On this important occasion, we honour our past, recognizing the determination, perseverance, and liberation struggle of our people, which paved the way for the emergence of a sovereign, democratic, and multi-ethnic state.

Our independence was achieved through the unwavering belief in our right to self-determination, statehood, freedom, and democracy, supported by our friends and allies, including the Czech Republic. To all our compatriots, I extend warm wishes for a joyous Independence Day, filled with the hope for new successes and achievements.

To our esteemed Czech friends, I express heartfelt gratitude for their steadfast support and partnership. I am proud and honoured to serve in the Czech Republic, witnessing the deepening of our bilateral and multilateral cooperation across diplomatic, economic, and people-to-people spheres.

I am confident that the enduring partnership between the Republic of Kosovo and the Czech Republic will continue to flourish and thrive in the years ahead.