VÁCLAV HAVEL SCHOLARSHIP 

Supporting Roma children to get good quality education at the English College in Prague 


"Hope is not the conviction that something is going to turn out good, but a certainty that something has purpose, no matter how it will end up."


Václav Havel

2024 Concert

CONCERT AND AUCTION

  15. 3. 2024 from 6pm, Dominikánský klášter, Praha


 

 


This Year's Concert and Auction supporting the Václav Havel Scholarship will take place in March 2024. More details will be released later. We are looking forward to seeing you.


🙂

Dear children from all around the country,

we cannot wait for your pictures to decorate our walls with. We are eagerly awaiting the postman! 

(see the info about the competition below)

Art ART COMPETITION - TŘIKRÁT CO!

THREE ABOUT ME 

Art competition's Three About Me's topics for 2023/2023 are:


See the poster here.

Karel Schwarzenberg - the patron of 

Václav Havel Scholarship


With great sadness we learned on 12th November 2023 that Karel Schwarzenberg,  our patron, has passed away. The organization team of the Václav Havel scholarship prepared a presentation for the whole school to commemorate Mr. Schwarzenberg's work and lifelong effort. We will  miss our great supporter but we will keep his mission going. 

See the text for the presentation which Václav Havel scholarship team prepared for the school community here


Karel Schwarzenberg.pptx

INTERVIEW WITH KAREL SCHWARZENBERG

Our students had the honour of interviewing Karel Schwarzenberg on the subject of Roma integration in the Czech Republic. We found out why the Lety memorial in particular is so important to him.


Karel Schwarzenberg is a very inspiring person so we recommend you read his views on the Roma question in this interview.

By David Jehlička and Selma Kaymakci, 21.1.2020


The Václav Havel Scholarschip is suported by Karel Schwanzenberg for a long time. We are very grateful for his moral and financial support; it is important and bounding for us.

Our students had the honour of doing an interview with Karel Schwarzenberg on the topic of Roma integration in the Czech Republic. We found out why, why the Lety memorial, in particular, is so important to him.

Karel Schwarzenberg is a very inspiring person so we recommend you read his views on the Roma question in this interview.


What do you think of discrimination against the Roma people in the Czech Republic? 

I spent a lot of time on it. During my whole life. I grew up in Orlik and Cimelice. Five kilometres from Orlik there is a village called Lety. And in Lety there was a Roma concentration camp. I had a very unusual childhood experience there. 

When I was a child we used to ride in carriages or we would ride horses because our cars got confiscated by the Nazis. I was a total freak for horses. The best thing for me was when I would drive the carriage myself and control the horses. My dad taught me all this. My father was not allowed to go to Orlik during the Protectorate era. He was banned from there. We were evicted. Right after the war, we were allowed to go to Orlik once again. And so we drove, and I remember how excited I was. Suddenly, an uneasy feeling hit me. It was so terrible that even though I was a nine year old boy I remember it to this day. Terrible anxiety. I turned to my father and asked him what was there. Dad looked at me with a serious face and said: "Awful things happened here. I will explain it to you when you grow up. " That was when we were driving past the Lety camp. And that influenced me. I still remember how some of the prisoners from Lety worked on the future Zdar bridge which was being built at that time, before they got transferred to Osvetim. That was when I first saw our policeman not only with a gun but also with a fixed bayonet on him. 

When I was elected as the head of the Helsinki Federation for Human rights, news was reported about what was happening with the Roma people here. Well, that communist regime for example sterilized women violently without asking them. It just robbed them of their ability to have children and things like that. We behaved cruelly. And it turned out accordingly. 

Barely the old regime fell and the citizens and towns, especially from the south, agreed on moving out Roma people from the centre of the city and settle them in neglected buildings on the outskirts of the city. They created a ghetto. And ghetto is always a way down. Many problems occurred from this: criminality, drugs, whatever you want to say. We have treated the Gypsies unacceptably and even worse very terribly. And that is why it ended the way it did.

And do you think that the Vaclav Havel Scholarship at our school which is for a Roma student is a step in the right direction?

Of course. They can be very successful if they have an opportunity to study. I am glad. Do you know who is Miss Czech Republic now? She is a Roma, who studied! And she is proud to be a Roma. That is the future! They achieve such things when they are fully integrated. And she is studying, her father also studied. Look at this.

So you think that studying is the foundation?

Always school, Always school. If you don't go to school you won't get a reasonable job. They are not smarter nor dumber than us. So they have the right to get as good of an education as we do.

And do you think that Roma people have the same access to quality education as others?

No, the children have never been put to the same school with other children. Instead, they were put into a special school. And that is how it started. The discrimination began at school age. Hardly one of them got into a gymnasium because of this and so on.... Whether they are blacks in America or Romas here, it is the same thing.

Why do you think that Czechs behave towards Romas in this way? Prejudices for centuries, prejudices for centuries.

And how can we overcome these prejudices? What should we do?

Enlightenment and Roma. As soon as they become lawyers or doctors it will stop. Also, the awareness of the so called whites. That is the most important thing. And talking about the issue. Talking about it openly at school. The most important thing is to address the problems.

Thank you for the interview.

 Learn more about the Scholarship through an interview with Marek Horvath

 Previous Concerts and Auctions

The Story of David Jehlička

David Jehlicka is one of the most distinguished former students of ECP and a member of the Vaclav Havel Scholarship Team.

Throughout his studies, David was the leader of the Václav Havel Scholarship team that organised the annual concert at Anežský klášter to raise money to enable a Roma student to study at the English College. For his contributions, David won the British Ambassador's Award - Young Person of the Year" Award.

David grew up in a foster home without his parents, and due to his dedication, he has now secured a place at the prestigious university, the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Click here to read more about his story and watch this intriguing interview.


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