Manifesto of the Seven
The Manifesto of the Seven was a protest by seven artists against the Bolshevization of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, after its 5th Congress in 1929. The text was written on the initiative of Ivan Olbracht and was published as a leaflet entitled Communist writers to communist workers. It called for the removal of the new Gottwaldova party leadership, which, in the opinion of the signatories, threatened the mass character and ability to act of the Communist Party.
History
In 1921, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia was founded. In 1925, the party decided to carry out a process of Bolshevization, it wanted to leave the course that had been relatively libertarian up to that point and to instead adopt the politics of the Comintern. The change of course was sealed by the election of Klement Gottwald as party leader at the 5th party congress in February 1929. Among other things, the primacy of politics in art was to be enforced in the future.Initiated by Ivan Olbracht, seven artists published the Manifesto of the Seven, first as a leaflet with addressed Spisovatelé komunisté komunistickým dělníkům. In this manifesto they expressed their fear that the planned strict orientation towards Moscow would jeopardize the party's mass character to date and, as a result, its ability to act in favor of a “faction hazard”; this is, according to the manifesto, "a suicidal policy" based on the mistakes of one's own comrades.
The seven signing authors, poets and literary critics were:
- Ivan Olbracht
- Helena Malířová
- Stanislav Kostka Neumann
- Josef Hora
- Jaroslav Seifert
- Marie Majerová
- Vladislav Vančura