I was the only Charter 77 signatory in the Semily district
Stáhnout obrázek
Miloš Cihelka was born in Jilemnice on 13 April 1969 to train dispatcher Miloš Cihelka and worker Ludmila Cihelková, née Tichá. He took interest in social affairs while in primary school. Due to his opinions and political views, he did not finish high school in Jihlava. This is where he became involved in anti-regime activities, met other local dissidents and took part in the publication of the 12th issue of the samizdat magazine Vokno. At the same time, he also got into punk music, which informed his anti-regime stance. He avoided military service by faking a suicide attempt. He was falsely accused of cronyism and sentenced to probation and a five-year ban from the Jihlava district. He went to Prague for a short time and signed Charter 77 in early 1988. He then relocated to his native Jilemnice and continued his anti-regime activities. Facing pressure and weekly interrogations by the State Security Service (StB), he moved back to Prague, taking part in protests and becoming one of the first signatories of the Independent Peace Association. An enthusiastic anarchist, he founded the Czechoslovak Anarchist Association with a friend in 1989. He was preventatively imprisoned along with Petr Uhl in mid-1989 not to take part in protests. The StB filed him as a ‚person under investigation‘ and opened a signal file on him, but the documents were destroyed. He experienced the Velvet Revolution in Prague, taking part in all protests except the one held on 17 November. He co-founded the Left Alternative movement in late 1989, which merged with the Civic Forum later on. After 1990, Miloš Cihelka worked as a journalist and dramaturge. He received a certificate of participation in the anti-communist resistance for his activities during the totalitarian era. He was living with his family in Prague at the time of filming in 2025.