Until the 1960s I lived in blissful ignorance thinking that socialism was the best and fairest system in the world
Stáhnout obrázek
Ivan Pelíšek was born on 18 May 1954 in Prague, the younger of two sons of Václav Pelíšek and Věra Pelíšková. Both his parents joined the Communist Party after the war. His father, Václav Pelíšek, held the high post of Deputy Minister of Education and Culture in the 1950s. In the late 1960s he joined the reform movement within the Communist Party and in 1968 he publicly testified about the wiretapping of artists in the theatre dressing rooms by State Security. After the occupation of Czechoslovakia in August 1968, he emigrated to Italy, where he died in 1981. Ivan Pelíšek trained as an artistic carpenter in 1974. From his youth he played percussion instruments. In the mid-1970s, he managed to pass the so-called test performance, i.e. to obtain official approval for public concerts, and from 1976 he worked as a professional drummer with a freelance worker registration on his ID card. For the first two years he played with Petr Novák‘s band, and from 1978 to 1984 he was a member of Abraxas. In the second half of the 1970s, he became close to the Czech underground, became friends with the dissident Catholic Kaplan family and established contacts with the underground church. At the age of 27 he was baptized, and his godfather was the Jesuit František Lízna. In 1983 he moved with his family to Dolánky in northern Bohemia, where they lived in the local parish house. A year before the Velvet Revolution they moved to Čestice in South Bohemia. In 1988 he signed Charter 77 and became a member of the Movement for Civil Liberty. He was actively involved in the events of the Velvet Revolution and co-founded the Civic Forum in Čestice. In 1990 he founded the Peelwood company, which successfully specialises in the production of drumsticks for drummers. In 2026 he was living in Čestice.