Dubček returns to public life during the Velvet Revolution
On 24 November 1989, amid the Velvet Revolution, Alexander Dubček returned dramatically to public political life as communist authority collapsed across Czechoslovakia. His reappearance carried enormous symbolic weight because he represented the unfinished democratic promise of 1968. For many citizens, the upheaval of 1989 was not only a break with late communist rule but also a delayed vindication of the Prague Spring’s attempt to create a freer and more humane political order. Dubček’s rehabilitation showed that the memory of 1968 had survived two decades of official suppression. The event also revealed the long legacy of the Prague Spring: even after military defeat, its ideals remained a reference point for democratic renewal in Central Europe.