
Club / News / Program

Registration opens for international conference in honour of laureate of 2025 Václav Havel Human Rights Prize 27/08/25
The Václav Havel Library is set to hold an international conference, subtitled Artists in Oppression, in honour of the laureate at the Technology Center of the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague on Wednesday 1 October. In addition to the laureate and finalists of the 2025 Václav Havel Human Rights Prize or their representatives, the guests of honour will include Belarusian writer and journalist Sasha Filipenko; Russian artist Aleksandra Skochilenko; artist and journalist Samantha Jirón from Nicaragua; Azerbaijani rapper and activist Jamal Ali; and Natalia Matskevich, who will introduce One of Us, a documentary about Sergey Tihanovski. All of these individuals live in exile as they have faced persecution and been jailed by the political regimes in their countries. Further programme details are available HERE To attend the conference, registration, free of charge, is required HERE More

Three candidates shortlisted for the 2025 Václav Havel Prize 26/08/25
Meeting in Prague, the panel – made up of independent figures from the world of human rights1 and chaired by the President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) Theodoros Rousopoulos – decided to shortlist the following three nominees, in alphabetical order: More

Economist, philosopher and writer Tomáš Sedláček takes over as head of Václav Havel Library 03/03/25
“I’m proud that I have been given the trust to develop and cultivate the legacy of Václav Havel and that I can join the Library’s great team. I intend to put all my energies into building a world-class platform that will face forward and be attractive to the new generation of people who care about the spirit of Europe. I would like to bring Havel-style optimism and values back to the public sphere. That is desperately needed right now, and that too is why I regard my new role as a major commitment,” Tomáš Sedláček said in connection with his appointment as director of the Vaclav Havel Library today. More

Change in Library leadership 23/10/24
Today, Wednesday 23 October 2024, Milan Babík decided to resign from the post of director of the Václav Havel Library for personal reasons. The Board of Trustees have accepted his explanation with understanding: “Milan Babík has done a great deal of work. Since June, when he took over, he has succeeded in enriching the Library’s activities, including the launch of projects that should culminate in 2026 in connection with the 90th anniversary of Václav Havel’s birth,” said the chairman of the Board of Trustees, Gabriel Eichler. Until a successor to Milan Babík is chosen, the Board of Trustees, as the statutory body, will assume some of his responsibilities, working closely with the Václav Havel Library team.
Program for November 2025<
entry-free

News Site Aktuálně.cz at 20: Where Next?
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 3, 2025, 18:00 – 20:00
Twenty years is a whole epoch in media terms. Aktuálně.cz was founded in 2005 as the first purely online news outlet in Czechia and has been present at all major events since, from election nights to floods to the war in Ukraine. How has Aktuálně.cz changed, and how have its readers changed? What does it mean to be a journalist in the age of social media, misinformation and growing distrust of public institutions? And what will the coming 20 years likely hold for news reporting? Aktuálně.cz editors Radek Bartoníček, Michaela Nováčková and Martin Denemark will take part in a discussion chaired by editor-in-chief Matyáš Zrno.

Martina Skala: From America via Prague to Mongolia
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 5, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
Interview with the author of the novel Klub kamzíků (The Club of Chamois) about her desire for a free life. Martina Skala studied history and scenography in Prague and later collaborated on films by Roman Polanski, Miloš Forman and Philip Kaufman in France. She then began writing children’s books and doing illustrations and moved to California. In 2024, she completed the world's longest horse race in Mongolia. Following the most recent US presidential election, she decided to leave the country after 30 years and return to Europe. A reading and discussion will be presented by Joachim Dvořák from the Labyrint publishing house.

Evenings with Reporters: Poland Beyond the Oder, the Czech Sudetenland
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 6, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
What should we know when heading to Baltic beaches or Jizera Mountains cross-country ski trails? A discussion between Polish reporter Zbigniew Rokita and journalist and writer Štěpán Kučera about territories “left behind by the Germans” that were settled by new inhabitants in the wake o f WWII. What role do they play in Polish and Czech historical narratives 80 years later? What is life like today in Gdańsk, Liberec, Wrocław, Jablonec and Opole, and do the locals feel at home there?

Before I Disappear: Magda Vášáryová on the Challenges of Today’s World
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 7, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
It is not only the war in Ukraine that shows we are living in a time of major change. Few people have as much to say about the crisis of liberal democracy or the rise of authoritarians and populists in Central Europe (and beyond) as Magda Vášáryová, the legendary Slovak sociologist, diplomat and politician. She will introduce Než zmizím (Before I Disappear), a book length interview in which she speaks openly about the most pressing issues of our time. Petr Šabata, who conducted the interview, will also take part in the discussion, which will be moderated by Jáchym Topol.

Unsung Heroines: Female War Veterans and Wives of Veterans
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 10, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
On the eve of Veterans Day, the Václav Havel Library will offer an unconventional perspective on military service and returning from missions – through the eyes of women. What is it like to be a soldier in uniform and a mother at the same time? What is it like to live with someone who has returned from war a changed person? And how do women feel when they see their sons and daughters leaving for a mission? Female veterans, wives and mothers of Czech soldiers will speak about their experiences, strength and silent sacrifices.

Debate N: Disinformation and Hate Speech
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 11, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
Disinformation and hate speech are permeating the public sphere, from manipulation surrounding the war in Ukraine to attacks on minorities. How do they spread, what are their impacts and how can we counter them without threatening freedom of speech? These questions will be discussed at the launch of the book Dezinformace a hate speech (Disinformation and Hate Speech) (Academia) by its authors: philosopher of language Tomáš Koblížek from the Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences, security analyst Jakub Kalenský from the Helsinki-based Hybrid CoE, and lawyer Monika Hanych from the Czech Constitutional Court and Masaryk University. The event will be moderated by Studio N podcast host Filip Titlbach, while the book will be “baptised” by Klára Laurenčíková Šimáčková, who has served as the Czech government’s human rights commissioner.

The Gulag and Czechoslovakia: The Great Terror
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 12, 2025, 17:00 – 18:00
Gulag a Československo. Velký terror (The Gulag and Czechoslovakia: The Great Terror), the second instalment of a book series mapping the history of repression of Czechoslovaks in the Soviet Union, will be presented by leading Czech experts on the subject. During the evening, they will explore the fate of Czechoslovaks during the USSR’s bloodiest period, when, during the two years of the Great Terror, thousands were sentenced to death or many years of forced labour in the Gulag and exile. They will also discuss research in Ukraine and Russia during the ongoing war, documented places of memory and the commemoration of victims of the Soviet regime.
The debate will be moderated by Jáchym Topol.

Did They Vanish? On Women in the Polish and Czech Anti-Communist Opposition
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 12, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
While they formed a significant part of the dissident movement, few women remained in politics after 1989. Yet among them had been spokeswomen for Charter 77, organizers of the strike at the Gdańsk shipyards, members of Solidarity and committed anti-regime activists. Was the situation of women and men in the dissent different? Why do so few women in Central Europe get involved in politics? A debate between documentary filmmaker and writer Marta Dzido, director of a groundbreaking documentary about women in Poland’s Solidarity movement, sociologist Marcela Linková, co-author of a book of interviews with Czech dissidents and exhibition entitled The Revolution Begins at Home, and sociologist Oľga Gyárfášová, who conducted interviews with women from the Slovak anti-communist opposition for the book Ako sme žili v rokoch normalizácie (How We Lived During Normalization).
As part of Freedom Week, this is an accompanying event to the exhibition Everyday Courage: Polish, Czech, and Slovak Women in the Anti-Communist Opposition, 1968–1989, which is open to the public in the foyer of the Metro Palace (Národní 25) from 12 November to 15 December 2025.
In Polish, Czech and Slovak with simultaneous interpretation
In cooperation with the Polish Institute in Prague.

Michael Žantovský / Štěpánka Jislová: Havel – Playing with the Devil
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 14, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
The year 1977 was one of the most dramatic periods in the life of playwright, essayist and human rights activist Václav Havel. After several days of interrogation following the publication of the Charter 77 declaration, along with house searches, Havel, already famous at that time, ended up in investigative custody on charges of subversion and damaging the country’s interests abroad. He was released after four months and ended up in prison again two years later, this time for more than four years. This is the basis for a comic strip micro-drama in which the hero struggles not only with the machinations of a totalitarian regime but also with his own inner doubts and weaknesses. Havel. Hrátky s čertem (Havel – Playing with the Devil), a brand new graphic novel by Michael Žantovský and Štěpánka Jislová, will be launched at the Václav Havel Library. Jáchym Topol will serve as host for the evening.

17 November with the Václav Havel Library
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 17, 2025, 10:00 – 20:00
You can commemorate the Day of the Fight for Freedom and Democracy and International Students’ Day with us in the traditional Václav Havel Living Room on Národní třída, where Czech and Slovak personalities will read texts by Václav Havel and other authors throughout the day. You will also find a VHL stand with books and merchandise. We are preparing this event in cooperation with the association Díky, že můžem (Thanks That We Can) as part of the event Národní Promenade. An open day with a full program will run simultaneously from morning to evening at the Library at Ostrovní 13. For a detailed programme visit www.vaclavhavel.cz.

Václav Havel European Dialogues - Human rights and Foreign Policy
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 19, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
In the aftermath of 1989, Vaclav Havel thought that human rights, democratic values and foreign policy could advance hand in hand. Today the dominant trend seems, on the contrary, to favour power politics at the expense of Havel’s legacy. The language of human rights, spoken in the past by dissidents, and still used today by lawyers and advocates for victims’ groups, is rarely shared by diplomats and the wider public. In an international arena marked by brutal conflict and war, human rights discourse seems increasingly inadequate. What is left of Havel’s legacy is the possibility to formulate a foreign policy that does not ignore the defence of human rights.

The Free Academy: Otto M. Urban
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 20, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
Up in Flames: Where Paintings Ignite and Shadows Speak

Adagir: Israeli Writer Lali Michaeli
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 21, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
The collection The Mad House (published in Czech as Mešuge dům) offers a new perspective on contemporary Israeli poetry. Reflective lyricism, combined with original music, expresses the restless soul of modern humanity – its hidden and revealed secrets alike. The author’s poetic language is uncompromisingly precise.

Education for Democracy: How to Develop Civic Know-How?
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 24, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
The discussion will focus on the role of education in protecting and nurturing democratic values. Guests will seek answers to questions such as how education can help foster dialogue, respect for different opinions and civic engagement in practice, and whether schools should focus more on performance or on developing social skills. The talk will also touch on the impact of the ongoing revision of framework educational programmes and their potential to change schools' approach to citizenship education.
Speakers: Tomáš Sedláček, director of the Václav Havel Library, Ivo Jupa, director of the National Pedagogical Institute, Karel Gamba, winner of the Global Teacher Prize CZ and teacher of social sciences, Alena Nosková, didactician and methodologist in the field of education, Man and Society (National Pedagogical Institute).
The debate will be moderated by Markéta Beková, editor-in-chief of EduRevue magazine.

Debate with Respekt: Czech Weapons for Ukraine
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 25, 2025, 19:00 – 21:00
Debate and signing session in connection with České zbraně pro Ukrajinu (Czech Weapons for Ukraine), a new book by Ondřej Kundra and Tomáš Brolík on the background to the most important mission in Czech history.

Memorials and Monuments to the Holocaust
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 26, 2025, 16:00 – 17:30
Every year 10 or so new plaques, monuments or memorials to the Holocaust appear in the Czech Republic at sites commemorating the tragic fate of Jews and Roma during WWII. The discussion will focus on the question of what purpose Holocaust memorials and monuments serve in the 21st century. The evening will conclude with the presentation of the book Pomníky a památníky holokaustu ve střední Evropě (Holocaust Memorials and Monuments in Central Europe).

Presentation of Climate Change Communication Prize
- Where: Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, Prague 110 00
- When: November 27, 2025, 16:00 – 18:00
This year the Václav Havel Library is hosting the seventh Climate Change Communication Prize in Czechia, a prestigious award for scientists and experts on climate change organized by the United Nations Information Office for Czechia and the Learned Society of the Czech Republic. The Inspiration from Abroad prize will also be presented, for the second time, as part of this project. It will be bestowed on Hannah Ritchie, data scientist, Oxford University researcher and deputy editor-in-chief of the Our World in Data project. She will deliver a lecture, as will the winner of the main award for 2025. The event will be moderated by Daniela Vrbová of Czech Radio.
Havel Channel
Havel Channel je audiovizuální projekt Knihovny Václava Havla, jehož cílem je šířit myšlenkový, literární a politický odkaz Václava Havla, bez ohledu na vzdálenost, zeměpisné hranice či nouzové stavy. Jeho páteř tvoří debaty, vzdělávací projekty a rozhovory. Velký prostor je věnován též konferencím, autorským čtením, záznamům divadelních inscenací a koncertům. Audiovizuální projekt Knihovny Václava Havla Havel Channel se uskutečňuje díky laskavé podpoře Karel Komárek Family Foundation.
Publications / E-shop
The central focus of the Library’s publishing programme is the life and work of Václav Havel, his family and close collaborators and friends. For clarity, the programme is divided into six series: Václav Havel Library Notebooks, Václav Havel Library Editions, Student Line, Talks from Lány, Václav Havel Documents, Works of Pavel Juráček and Václav Havel Library Conferences. Titles that cannot be incorporated into any of the given series but which are nonetheless important for the Library’s publishing activities are issued independently, outside the series framework.
Care of the State
229,- CZK
Pin-back button with a heart motif
50,- CZK
Magnet "Havel to the castle"
60,- CZK
Postcard: Václav Havel, 1970s
15,- CZK
Conferences & prizes
Václav Havel European Dialogues
The Václav Havel European Dialogues is an international project that aims to initiate and stimulate a discussion about issues determining the direction of contemporary Europe while referring to the European spiritual legacy of Václav Havel. This idea takes its main inspiration from Václav Havel’s essay “Power of the Powerless”. More than other similarly focused projects, the Václav Havel European Dialogues aims to offer the “powerless” a platform to express themselves and in so doing to boost their position within Europe.
The Václav Havel European Dialogues is planned as a long-term project and involves cooperation with other organisations in various European cities. Individual meetings, which take the form of a conference, are targeted primarily at secondary and third-level students, as well as specialists and members of the public interested in European issues.
Olomouc Prague 2023Warszawa 2022Prague 2022PragueMnichov 2020Brussels 2020Prague 2019Brussels 2019Prague 2018Brussels 2018Europe at the Crossroads (e-book)Prague 2017Brussels 2017Prague 2016Brussels 2016Prague 2015Brussels 2015Brussels 2014Berlin 2014Prague 2014 - J. GauckBruges 2014Prague 2014
Václav Havel Human Rights Prize
The Václav Havel Human Rights Prize is awarded each year by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) in partnership with the Václav Havel Library and the Charta 77 Foundation to reward outstanding civil society action in the defence of human rights in Europe and beyond.
12th Year of the Prize (2024)13th Year of the Prize (2025)11th Year of the Prize (2023)10th Year of the Prize (2022)9th Year of the Prize (2021)8th Year of the Prize (2020)7th Year of the Prize (2019)6th Year of the Prize (2018)5th Year of the Prize (2017)4th Year of the Prize (2016)3rd Year of the Prize (2015)2nd Year of the Prize (2014)1st Year of the Prize (2013)History of the prize
Havel - Albright Transatlantic Dialogues
Since the first Václav Havel Transatlantic Dialogues at GLOBSEC and FORUM 2000 conferences last year, we have lost another stalwart advocate of the transatlantic bond and of the need to face threats to democracy and international order together on both sides of the Atlantic, the former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. In view of the close bond between Václav Havel and Madeleine Albright and, after Havel's death, between the Secretary and the Library, the Václav Havel Library, with the approval of Madeleine Albright's family, renamed and rebranded the program as The Havel-Albright Transatlantic Dialogues (HATD), after the two major figures with roots in Central Europe who have personified the bond. Together, Václav Havel and Madeleine Albright symbolize the transatlantic relationship and the fundamental values underpinning it perhaps better than any other two people in recent history. The upcoming Dialogues “The Indispensable Woman: The Legacy of Madeleine K. Albright”, at the FORUM 2000 conference on September 1, and at the “Havel and our Crisis” conference at Colby College, ME, on September 28, will thus become venues for a well-deserved tribute to the pair we all respected and admired.
Transatlantic Dialogues 2021Transatlantic Dialogues 2022HATD 2022 Prague
Václav Havel
Václav Havel
* 5. 10. 1936 Praha
† 18. 12. 2011 Hrádeček u Trutnova
- spisovatel a dramatik, publicista a filozof
- jeden z trojice prvních mluvčích Charty 77
- vůdčí autorita československé společenské změny v listopadu 1989
- poslední prezident Československa a
- první prezident České republiky
- celoživotní zastánce lidských práv a svobod doma i ve světě.
Educational projects
Archive / Documentation centre / Research projects

The Václav Havel Library is gradually gathering, digitizing, and making accessible written materials, photographs, sound recordings and other materials linked to the person of Václav Havel.
- 86393 records in total
- 32194 of events in the VH's life
- 3842 of VH's texts
- 2244 of photos
- 414of videos
- 569of audios
- 6559of letters
- 15001of texts about VH
- 8709 of books
- 45097of bibliography records
Access to the database of the VHL’s archives is free and possible after registering as a user. Accessing archival materials that exist in an unreadable form is only possible at the reading room of the Václav Havel Library, Ostrovní 13, 110 00 Prague 1, every Tuesday (except state holidays) from 9:00 to 17:00, or by prior appointment.
We will be glad to answer your queries at archiv@vaclavhavel-library.org.
Sign in (registered users only)
Havel in a nutshell
The virtual exhibition Václav Havel in a Nutshell places the life story of Václav Havel in the broader cultural and historic context in four chronologically distinct chapters with rich visual accompaniment. The exhibition is supplemented by the interactive map Flying the World with Václav Havel, which captures in physical form Havel’s global “footprint”.
Gallery of key figures of Oldřich Škácha
The Gallery of Key Figures of Oldřich Škácha presents unique and previously unknown photographs of Ludvík Vaculík, Jan Werich, Milan Kundera, Marta Kubišová and many other important personalities as an authentic and original source of knowledge about our modern history.
Vladimir Hanzel's revolution
Collage of recollections, images and sound recordings from Vladimír Hanzel, President Václav Havel’s personal secretary, bringing the feverish atmosphere of the Velvet Revolution to life.
Václav Havel Interviews
A database of all accessible interviews given to print media outlets by the dramatist, writer and political activist Václav Havel between the 1960s and 1989. The resulting collection documents the extraordinary life story of an individual, as well as capturing a specific picture of modern Czechoslovak history at a time when being a free-thinker was more likely to lead to jail than an official public post.
Pavel Juráček Archive
The Pavel Juráček Archive arose in February 2014 when his son Marek Juráček handed over six banana boxes and a typewriter case from his father’s estate to the Václav Havel Library. Thousands of pages of manuscripts, typescripts, photographs, documents and personal and official correspondence are gradually being classified and digitalised. The result of this work should be not only to map the life and work of one of the key figures of the New Wave of Czechoslovak film in the 1960s, but also to make his literary works accessible in the book series The Works of Pavel Juráček.
The aim of the Václav Havel Library is to ensure that Pavel Juráček finds a place in the broader cultural consciousness and to notionally build on the deep friendship he shared with Václav Havel. Soon after Juráček’s death in 1989 Havel said of him: “Pavel was a friend of mine whom I liked very much. He was one of the most sensitive and gentle people I have known – that’s why I cannot write more about him.”
All about Library
The Václav Havel Library works to preserve the legacy of Václav Havel, literary, theatrical and also political, in particular his struggle for freedom, democracy and the defence of human rights. It supports research and education on the life, values and times of Václav Havel as well as the enduring significance of his ideas for both the present and future.
The Václav Havel Library also strives to develop civil society and active civic life, serving as a platform for discussion on issues related to the support and defence of liberty and democracy, both in the Czech Republic and internationally.
The main aims of the Václav Havel Library include
- Organizing archival, archival-research, documentary, museum and library activities focused on the work of Vaclav Havel and documents or objects related to his activities, and carries out professional analysis of their influence on the life and self-reflection of society
- Serving, in a suitable manner, such as through exhibitions, the purpose of education and popularisation functions, thus presenting to the public the historical significance of the fight for human rights and freedoms in the totalitarian period and the formation of civil society during the establishment of democracy
- Organizing scientific research and publication activities in its areas of interest
Support us
We are well aware that freedom and democracy must be nurtured. Here at Ostrovní 13, but also on the audiovisual platform Havel Channel, we strive to do so through our own educational programmes, talks, discussion meetings, books, exhibitions, concerts, theatre performances. We honour Václav Havel's legacy and wish that the Library be a living organism and open to all. That is why our programme is free of charge for everyone. This would not be possible without regular financial support from our supporters. Become one of them...
Support us with a financial donation
Does our work make sense to you and do you want to support the activities of the Vaclav Havel Library?
You can easily make a one-time payment by scanning the QR code.
Would you like to contribute regularly? Then we invite you to become a member of the Vaclav Havel Library Friends Club. What are the benefits of membership? Find out more.
Help us expand the archive
The Vaclav Havel Library manages an archive of writings, documents, photographs, video recordings and other materials related to the life and work of Vaclav Havel. This archive is predominantly in digital form. If you or someone close to you owns any original texts, correspondence, photographs, speeches or any other work by Vaclav Havel, we would be grateful if you could contact us.
You can donate in other ways too
Supporting a specific charitable or public benefit organization whose activities you appreciate or have been supporting for a long time is also possible through a will. This form of donation is quite common abroad, but in the Czech Republic this tradition is only just taking root.
Share information about us
The Vaclav Havel Library is open to media and promotional cooperation, mutual sharing of links, publishing our banners or information about our events.
For more information, please contact us.
Donations have their rules
At the Vaclav Havel Library, we uphold a transparent, responsible and ethical way of dealing with all those who contribute to fulfilling our purpose and implementing our strategy. Our code of ethics summarizes the basic rules of donations.
Get involved in volunteering
Would you like to get involved as a volunteer? That's great. We welcome anyone who wants to help our work.

























































