Rita Klímová

Rita Klímová, née Rita Budinova (10 December 1931-30 December 1993) was a Czech economist and politician. She was Czechoslovakia's last ambassador to the United States before that country's breakup in 1992.

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Early life

Klímová was born in Romania. Her father was Stanislav Budin, a prominent Communist writer who used the pen name Batya Bat.[1] Her family fled to the United States not long after Nazi Germany invaded Czechoslovakia in 1938. She spent most of her youth in New York City and returned to Czechoslovakia after World War II to finish her education.[2]

Academic career

Like many Central Europeans of her generation, Klímová was initially an ardent Communist.[3] She joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia in 1948.[2] While still a university student, she took a job in a factory in order to get closer to the working class. Also while still in school, she married the intellectual Zdeněk Mlynář.[4]

After graduation, she rose high in the academic world, becoming an economics lecturer at Charles University. Initially a strict Stalinist, she helped purge many of her more liberal colleagues from Charles University during the 1950s and early 1960s. However, during the Prague Spring of 1968, she was very attracted to Alexander Dubcek's reform program and helped supply inside information to the Western media. She continued to support reform after the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, and was fired from her university post in 1968 and expelled from the party in 1970.[1]

Dissident

Like many prominent academics who supported the Prague Spring, Klímová found it all but impossible to have a livelihood for much of the Normalization era. She eventually found work as a translator, but lost that job in 1977 after her father, who had also become disillusioned with Communism, signed Charter 77. Years later, she said that she wanted to sign as well, but Mlynář (who had divorced her in 1967) told her they didn't want her signature.[4]

During the 1970s and 1980s, she became one of the more prominent Czechoslovak dissidents, and one of the main contacts between the dissidents and the Western media. She frequently hosted meetings of dissident economists in her apartment. One of the attendees was future Czech prime minister and president Vaclav Klaus. By this time, she had become convinced of the need to adopt a market economy; she wrote many samizdat articles on economic matters under the pen name "Adam Kovárc"—Czech for Adam Smith.[5]

She became a household name during the Velvet Revolution, when her longtime friend Vaclav Havel asked her to translate for him. Havel was looking for someone who could convey Civic Forum's message to English-speaking audiences. He chose Klímová because she spoke perfect American English (with a marked New York accent), and he thought she'd play very well with American audiences. She was actually the first person to coin the term "Velvet Revolution."[3]

Ambassador to the United States

Just months after the collapse of the Communist regime, newly sworn-in Foreign Minister Jiří Dienstbier, another longtime friend, asked Klímová to become the new regime's ambassador to the United States, even though she had no diplomatic experience.[4]

During her tenure, she did much to win support for the democratizing regime.[5] She resigned in August 1992, four months before her country's breakup.[2]

Death

Klímová was diagnosed with leukemia not long after taking up her ambassadorial post. She finally died of the disease on December 30, 1993.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Davy, Richard. Obituary: Rita Klimova. The Independent, 1994-01-07.
  2. ^ a b c d Lyons, Richard D. Rita Klimova, 62, Czech Dissident Who Became Ambassador to U.S. New York Times, 1993-12-30.
  3. ^ a b Sebetsyen, Victor (2009). Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. New York City: Pantheon Books. ISBN 0375425322. 
  4. ^ a b c Nelson, Lars-Erik. New Czechoslovakian Leaders Are As Stunned As Their People. New York Daily News, 1990-02-21.
  5. ^ a b Havel, Vaclav (translated by Paul Wilson). On Rita Klímová (1931–1993) New York Review of Books, 1994-01-06.