In the Shadow of Totalitarism: Sport and the Olympic Movement in the "Visegrad" Countries

supported by Visegrad Fund

Number: 21020106

Duration: Januar 2011 - March 2012

Coordinator of Project: Faculty of Physical Education and Sport of Charles University

Research director: Prof. PhDr. Marek Waic CSc. - director of the Department of Kinanthropology, Humanities and Sport Management at the Faculty of Physical Education and Sport of Charles University

Researches: PhDr. František Kolář, CSc. - Director of Olympic Studies and Information Center of the Czech Olympic Committee, Assistant Prof. of Faculty of Physical Education and Sport of Charles University

Mgr. Bc. Kristina Jakubcová – Posgraduate Student of Faculty of Physical Education and Sport of Charles University

Partners:

1. Extramural Faculty of Physical Education in Gorzow Wlkp. of The Eugeniusz Piasecki University School of Physical Education in Poznan

Researchers: Prof. Dr. hab.Tomasz Jurek – Dean of Extramural Faculty of Physical Education in Gorzow Wlkp.

Prof. Dr. hab.Bernard Woltmann, head of the Department of History of Olympism and Polish Physical Culture

of Faculty of Physical Education in Gorzow Wlkp.

2. Prof. Dr. Katalin Szikora, Head of the Department of Social Science Faculty of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Semmelweis University;

3. Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava.

Researcher: Prof. PhDr. Miroslav Bobrík CSc., Head of the Department of Physical Education, Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava.

Publications:

Monograph: In the Shadow of Totalitarianism: Sport and the Olympic Movement in the "Visegrád" Countries. Prague : Charles University 2012 /in print/

Marek Waic et al.

Contens:

Preface

Marek Waic: Sport in Czechoslovakia 1945–1989

František Kolář: The Czechoslovak Olympic Movement 19451989

Tomasz Jurek: Sport and the Olympic Movement in Poland 19441989

Katalin Szikora: Sport and the Olympic Movement in Hungary 19451989

Summary:

The presented monograph brings both a comparative analysis and a synthetic view on the development of sport, mainly of the Olympic movement, in the so called Visegrad countries. It focuses mainly on the position and role of sport in the development of the totalitarian regimes of the Central Europe. After the usurpation of the political power by the communists in Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Hungary, both the sport and Olympic movement were quite fast put into the service of the communist ideology and politics. The sport politization in the Soviet block countries has strengthened after the Olympic Games in Helsinki in 1952. The USSR representants were very successful at their first Olympic appearance, while 16 gold, 10 silver, and 16 bronze medals were also the best Olympic result of the Hungarian sportsmen. This excellent result made born the theory that the sport successes prove the qualities of the social system in question, i.e. of communism. Sport was supposed to become one of the main propagandistic aces in the cold war, and therefore mostly the highest level sport was supported and constantly controlled by the regimes. Since the end of 1940’s, sport was centralized, and e.g. in Poland, it was directly controlled by the state organs. This Soviet model was accepted in the highest personality cult time, in the beginning of the 1950’s. In 1975, this system was changed in Czechoslovakia, but of course, the communists kept the control over sport.

The research has proved also interesting differences in the development of sport and of the Olympic movement in the individual countries. The Polish sport kept its national mission, which is proved by the text “Poland” on the Polish sportsmen’ jerseys and by the special institution of the Polish games, co-organized by the Polish Olympic Committee and by the Association for the Expatriate Poles.

The emigration accompanies the development of sport in all the studied countries, it appears continuously, but it is at its highest level at the time of the anti-communist appraisal in 1956 and after the five armies’ invasion into Czechoslovakia in August 1968. At these historical moments, the public of both mentioned countries understand the sport successes at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics and in 1968 Mexico City as a symbol of the resistance against the hated Soviet occupants.

The common research of the Czech, Slovak, Polish, and Hungarian historian shows the multi-level social role of sport in the Central Europe in the time when its major part was subjected by the communist regimes.

Articles:

Jakubcová, K.:Olympism in Poland in System of communist Sport and his Rennaisance after 1989. In.: Acta universitatis Carolinae Kinanthropologica. 2011 /in print/

Jakubcová, K: Proměny maďarského sportu a olympijského hnutí vkontextu společenských změn po druhé světové válce. In.: Studia Kinanthropologica. 2011 /in print/

Konference:

The international conference In the Shadow of Totalitarianism: Sport and the Olympic Movement in Countries of Central Europe 1945-1989, attended by all the researchers and other historians from Germany and Austria, took place on September 4th. Among the guests taking part in it were the president of the Visegrad Fund Petr Vágner, dean of the FTVS Vladimír Süss, vicepresident of the Czech Olympic Committee Josef Dovalil, seven lecturers (historians from Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Germany) and other participants – historians of sport – from the universities in Olomouc, Hradec Králové, Vienna and students of the FTVS UK.

Project Results:

All the planned objectives were fulfilled:

The research has provided new knowledge primarily thanks to the use of archival documents that haven’t been studied before by historians. It revealed many common features of the development of sport and the Olympic Movement in the Visegrad countries during the communist regimes. It significantly enriched European historiography of sports and methodology, especially in the field of comparative history.

Results of the research will certainly enrich the lectures on history of sport at the studies of physical education and sport in all countries of the "Visegrad Four".

The research helped in propagation of the contribution of the V4 countries to the development of the modern Olympic movement and of the Central European notion of body among wider European expert public.

Expected follow-up in further research: In March 2012, a new scientific grant application on The Sport’s Contribution to the Creation of Modern Society in Central Europe - Common past of sport in Visegrad countries. Common future? was submitted for another support by the Visegrad fund.