The theme of this blog entry is Jaroslav Hašek and his activities in
the aftermath of the Russian February Revolution. The information is mostly taken from
Cecil Parrott's "The Bad Bohemian" and Jaroslav Křížek's "Jaroslav Hašek v revolučním Rusko".
"Za svobodu" vol. I (Vaněk,Holeček,Medek) and Radlo Pytlík's "Toulavé house" have also
been consulted. Material from PNP (fond B. Hůla) has also been consulted.
It is possible to think aloud, but some times it can have grave consequences. Jaroslav Hašek was prone
to think very loudly and he didn't care at all who listened. He repeatedly bit the hand that fed, and
he was also an expert on shooting himself in the foot. With the infamous satire "The Czech Pickwick Club"
he achieved all three ...
The black hand
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The first issue of "Revolution" contained "The Czech Pickwick Club" |
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From the archive of PNP (fond Bretislav Hůla): Hašek and Hájek ordered to report to their regiments. |
During January and February he had been involved in a couple of episodes that reflected badly on the whole "Club of co-workers" (see the previous blog entry). On 20 April Hašek and another "Black Hand" member (Ivan Hájek) were ordered to report to their regiment within a week. Hašek was told by that this was only due to his association with "Black Hand", to which he retorted that he was victimised by the second group in the club, which he termed the "Dirty Hand". On 3 May he handed in a hand-written manuscript to "Revoluce" and together with Hájek left for the front. Jaroslav Křížek claims that the two men were sent away from Kiev on request from the Čs. Brigade to prevent them from attending the upcoming 3rd meeting of the "Union of Czechoslovak Association in Russia", but he leaves is in the dark as to why these two particular members of "Black Hand" were singled out.
Klub Českých Pickwicků
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Josef Patejdl became a prominent figure in Czechoslovakia and ended his life in Dachau. |
Arrest and trial
The reaction was swift: Hašek was arrested, and at the 1st regiment HQ at Remczyca he appeared
before a honorary court on May 16. Here he was forced to issue an apology. He read it out loud to the court members, and apparently did it with such an innocent and sincere face that the
court members broke out in laughter. Still Bohdan Pavlů, editor of "Czechoslovák", and one of the insulted
party, refused to print the apology. The article had also made him unpopular amongst other Czech volunteers.
Writing "The Czech Pickwick Club" was the culmination of a troubled start to 1917. As we have seen Hašek was stripped of his
journalistic and recruiting duties, and demoted to an ordinary soldier. He was also ousted from the
"Club of co-workers" and thereby lost fixed income. A soldier is what he had wanted to become in
June the previous year, but was declared unfit. Now he was apparently fit enough. He was moved around from
post to post during May until he was finally assigned to the 1st regiments machine gun detachment. It was in
this capacity he was sent to the front in June in preparation for the so-called Kerensky offensive.
The fall-out with his colleagues could have proved fatal for Hašek. By that we should not assume that there was any danger that Hašek would have executed by the "brothers" (the Czech volunteers referred to each others as brothers) in the Czechoslovak Army. But now he was
a common soldier which in itself was a perilous occupation.
At the end of June, during and after the Kerensky offensive, fighting in Eastern Galicia flared up again
and more than 100 brothers lost their lives in the ensuing battles that lasted until the end of
July.
Fortunately Hašek survived this time, but regrettably didn't live long enough to tell us his version of events around the Pickwick Club. It is easy to imagine Marek sitting down to tell Švejk and others about his ordeal in front of the honorary court at Remczyca. It would surely have been as hilarious as any other episode in the novel ...
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From Remczyca |
Consequences
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Fortunately Hašek didn't share the fate of some of his fellow brothers. |
Fortunately Hašek survived this time, but regrettably didn't live long enough to tell us his version of events around the Pickwick Club. It is easy to imagine Marek sitting down to tell Švejk and others about his ordeal in front of the honorary court at Remczyca. It would surely have been as hilarious as any other episode in the novel ...
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