Krystyna Krauze on the Melantrich balcony on 4 December 1989 when Mirosław Jasiński of the Polish-Czechoslovak Solidarity Party spoke and Karel Kryl sang the national anthem with Karel Gott. The photograph was taken by photographer Jan Jindra, who called it the 'contrast between an individual and the crowd'
Krystyna Krauze on the Melantrich balcony on 4 December 1989 when Mirosław Jasiński of the Polish-Czechoslovak Solidarity Party spoke and Karel Kryl sang the national anthem with Karel Gott. The photograph was taken by photographer Jan Jindra, who called it the 'contrast between an individual and the crowd'
Krystyna Krauze with Petr Placák before the Velvet Revolution at the Na Klamovce pub in Prague-Košíře, the unofficial underground hub in the 1980s. The witness interviewed Petr Placák, the founder of the monarchist-anarchist movement Czech Children
Krystyna Krauze with Petr Placák before the Velvet Revolution at the Na Klamovce pub in Prague-Košíře, the unofficial underground hub in the 1980s. The witness interviewed Petr Placák, the founder of the monarchist-anarchist movement Czech Children
Krystyna Krauze during a student strike at the University of Gdańsk in June 1988, organised by the Independent Students' Association (NZS). The witness studied political science and became a spokeswoman for the strike committee
Krystyna Krauze during a student strike at the University of Gdańsk in June 1988, organised by the Independent Students' Association (NZS). The witness studied political science and became a spokeswoman for the strike committee
"Undesirable in Czechoslovakia" stamp valid until 18 November 1990, which she received when she was expelled from Czechoslovakia in Náchod on 18 November 1989 after her arrest at the Helsinki Committee meeting in Prague
"Undesirable in Czechoslovakia" stamp valid until 18 November 1990, which she received when she was expelled from Czechoslovakia in Náchod on 18 November 1989 after her arrest at the Helsinki Committee meeting in Prague