Located in the middle of Prague (a few kilometers in all directions), super beautiful, it is easy to forget in a modern Czech country. This museum is a good reminder of what happened in the Czech Republic in the 20th century. The point is that communism began in the Czech Republic when other Western countries isolated Czech and Slovakia, and allowed the Nazis to occupy the country.
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Located in the middle of Prague (a few kilometers in all directions), super beautiful, it is easy to forget in a modern Czech country. This museum is a good reminder of what happened in the Czech Republic in the 20th century. The point is that communism began in the Czech Republic when other Western countries isolated Czech and Slovakia, and allowed the Nazis to occupy the country.
There are many displays in the Communist Museum, there are also many exhibition rooms, some exhibition rooms are arranged, just like the conference room of the year, it feels very historic and very story-like,
Prague has a small communist museum. The main entrance of the museum is three words "Dream, Reality, Nightmare". These three words have already explained the intention of the museum. The Czech Republic is a country experiencing hardships, unlike the Western European revolutions in which workers and peasants are the main subjects. More revolutionary subjects in Eastern Europe were young students. In World War II, Britain, France and Germany held a meeting, saying that we had no opinion on Germany robbing Czech land. The Czech Republic did not know what happened, and the territory was occupied the next day; Later in the Cold War, the "Prague Spring" occurred, Czech students took to the streets to demand freedom from Soviet control, the Soviet Union occupied Prague with a fighter jet per minute. The president, prime minister, and secretary of the country were all captured in Moscow. The Czech leader was soft that day, saying, Big brother, Rao Xiaodi's life, the big brother's punishment is right, we are not making trouble. Germany has a mouth, the Soviet Union has a whirlwind leg. These small Eastern European countries are really miserable [embarrassment]
Prague's Museum of Communism is disappointing. It is not a museum, but at most a red Czech showroom. Its physical objects are very few, mainly text descriptions, plus a few not unusual photos, far worse than the red age showroom of Jianchuan Museum!
The Museum of Communism in Prague is so much about who we were born before the 1970s that everything is almost the same as what we were 40 years ago, as if we were back in the red years of our youth, and it is a lot of thought.
Very distinctive and attractive museum, retaining the Czechoslovak era of Prague communism, with images and precious records in many directions. Still worth seeing