Today I only see advantages that the Velvet Revolution gave us. I can work how I want, I can even not work at all. That wasn’t possible beforehand.
Lukáš Pollert, a doctor and a sportsman, was born on the 24th of March 1970 in Prague. According his own words, he grew up in surroundings marked by listening to the illegal broadcasts of Voice of America or Free Europe and by reading books prohibited by the communist regime. His father was a research worker, his mother a lab assistant. Pollert himself studied medicine and now works at the Central Military Hospital in Střešovice and at the Motol Faculty Hospital. He is more generally known as a successful sportsman. In 1992 he won a gold medal in slalom canoeing at the Summer Olympics in Barcelona, and earned a silver medal four years later in Atlanta. When the breakpoint year of 1989 arrived, nineteen-year-old Pollert was studying his second year at the Faculty of Medicine. He took part in the anti-regime demonstrations that had been taking place in Prague since 1988, and signed the Several Sentences (Několik vět) petition. He was at risk of being thrown out of university for the distribution of that same petition, but then came November 17th and the fall of the communist dictatorship. Lukáš took an active part in the students’ manifestation in Albertov. After the demonstration was brutally repressed and the student strike was announced, he became a member of the strike committee. He now remembers those events as “a nice time with a peculiar atmosphere”. Nowadays, MUDr. Lukáš Pollert applies himself not only to his medical profession, but also to communal politics in his native Prague 6.