Magazine
Slovaks living in the Czech Republic are returning home in their droves, a Czech artist has made it into the Guinness Book of Records for producing the world's smallest book of portraits, and what animal does Prague's mayor want to use as a mascot for the city's Olympic bid? Find out more in this week's Magazine.
Czechs and Slovaks have lived side by side and enjoyed a close
relationship
for centuries. For hundreds of years, there have always been tens of
thousands of Slovaks living in the Czech Lands, most of whom were
attracted by the prospect of work in their more industrially developed
western neighbour. Even after Czechoslovakia split in a so-called Velvet
Divorce not long after the Velvet Revolution, there were still around
200,000 Slovaks living in the Czech Republic in the 1990s, many of whom
came here to get work while the Slovak economy floundered. Until very
recently, it was totally normal to hear Slovak accents in places like
shops, restaurants and building sites. Now, however, many of these
migrants are packing their bags and heading home. The reason for this is
that the Slovak economy is booming. Unemployment rates there have
plummeted, taxes are lower and the Slovak crown is much stronger than it
used to be. This means that Slovakia is now a more attractive place to
live and Slovaks are returning home in their droves as a result. Some
business sectors like the construction and service industries are
experiencing labour shortages as a result. It seems that Slovaks no longer
view the Czech Republic as a "home away from home" but as just
another foreign country, which they'd only consider moving to if the pay
they can get is better than what they have in Slovakia.
If you have ever been to Prague or towns in the Czech Republic, you'll
probably have seen a number of "trafika" stores - the small
little shops or huts on most street corners where Czechs buy their
newspapers and cigarettes. Apparently the Czech Republic has more of these
shops per capita than any other country in Europe, but that could be about
to change. Last year 1200 trafikas closed down. Trafika owners say the low
profit margins on newspapers, magazines and cigarettes means they are
struggling to make ends meet. If this trend continues it seems the local
trafika store could soon be a thing of the past and Czechs will have to
buy their fags and papers in the supermarket along with their groceries.
Lubomir Vanek, photo: www.lubomirvanek.cz
Czech caricaturist Lubomir Vanek from Brno seems to have made a career out
of setting unusual records. He is already listed in the Guinness Book of
Records for painting 175 caricatures in one hour - the most anybody has
managed up to now. For good measure he is also listed in the same
publication for doing 382 caricatures in three hours. Now another of Mr
Vanek's feats is to be entered in the Guinness Book of Records. After
months of painstaking work, he has finally produced the smallest book of
miniature portraits in the world.
Photo: www.lubomirvanek.cz
The book - which is just four
millimetres long, three millimetres wide and one and a half millimetres
thick - contains pictures of all ten Czechoslovak and Czech presidents. Mr
Vanek had to use a special magnifying glass and a micro pen with superfine
tip to draw the pictures. When he's not setting new world records, Mr
Vanek spends a lot of his time doing stunts like drawing caricatures while
playing the drums with his feet or painting while driving.
If you've been listening to our programme regularly this week, you'll have
heard that the city of Prague has decided to lodge a bid to host the
Olympic Games in 2016. The people behind the bid naturally have many tough
decisions to make in the coming months such as where to locate the Olympic
village and the track-and-field stadium. Perhaps one of the toughest calls
the bidding committee will have to make is what to choose as the city's
Olympic mascot along the lines of Seoul's tiger or Beijing's Panda. If
Prague mayor Pavel Bem has his way, it will be a gopher. "What,"
you ask, "does a gopher have to do with Prague?" Well,
surprisingly, one of the country's biggest gopher colonies lies near
Prague airport, which is home to 600 of the animals. The gopher is
actually an endangered species in Europe and the Prague colony is a
protected area. Mayor Bem's suggestion has met with a very positive
response although one councillor is afraid that any artist's impression of
the gopher used for the Olympics might not be instantly recognisable as
the
cute little rodent. Apparently, he is worried people might mistake the
gopher for a rat, an animal which also has a sizable population in the
Czech capital!
You may remember the reports we ran in January on the havoc wreaked by the
so-called Hurricane Kyril on Czech forests, which saw thousands of trees
destroyed. Well, it has since transpired that a very special tree was also
blown over on that fateful night. A 260-year-old spruce tree - known as
the
"king of the spruces" because of its age and size - was found
lying on its side last week in the Sumava forest. Foresters believe it
fell during Hurricane Kyril, but this fact was only discovered weeks later
because it lies in a very remote area. The king of the spruces was thought
to be the biggest spruce tree in the country. It was 164 feet (50 m) high
with a girth of more than four feet (130 cm). The largest spruce ever
recorded in the Czech lands was the tree known as the Wunderfichte or
"miraculous spruce". This 200-foot-high spruce was felled in
1865 at 442 years of age.
Photo: www.parukarka.cz
Almost every city has a few underground clubs, which are frequented by
lovers of alternative music and culture, but few can boast an underground
club like the one that has recently opened in Prague. This new venue is
quite literally underground. It is situated 60 feet below the surface of a
hillside in Prague's Zizkov area in an old nuclear bomb shelter, which was
built at the height of the Cold War in the 1950s. It was originally
designed to hold two and a half thousand people and has its own separate
electricity and water supply. The shelter also still has an emergency
radio broadcast studio, which was last used by Czech radio to transmit
reports abroad during the Russian invasion of 1968. Altogether Prague has
800 underground shelters, which were designed to hold around 400,000
people.






