Slovakia is still a developing country. The country of Slovakia was formed in 1993. Since 1993 the country of Slovakia has made much advancement. Some of these advancements were for the better of the country. However, some were for the worse. This essay will describe the country of Slovakia.
The country of Slovakia was formed in 1993. They formed after the separation from the country formally known as Czechoslovakia. This formation was separated after a political confrontation about race and language. The Czechs believed that German should be the main language of all Czechoslovakian’s. While the Slovakian’s believed that Slovak should be the main language. This created a large controversy between the two countries.
This great controversy, along with years of tensions, caused the Czech’s and the Slovakian’s to split effective January 1, 1993. After the “great split” Slovakia took several big hits to its economy. Some of which almost “crippled” the entire Slovak economy. After many years the Slovak economy had a revival.
Some of the traditions that are established in Slovakia are very unusual compared to other parts of the world. On Easter in Slovakia there are several events that occur, that women wait for all year long. At the start of the morning women are woken up while being drenched in water. After this first drenching in water, women must then change into dry close and wait to be drenched again.
The women being soaked in the water was to clear the body of all evil. They believed that being soaked in water would cause all the evil to flee the body. After being soaked in water by a male of the village, women would have to offer a present for the men who soaked her. Many of the women present hand-painted Easter eggs. However it is also accustom to give money or alcohol.
Afternoon all men must stop soaking the women. It is said that if you are to soak the women after noon that all the evil in the village will enter that women. The only way that you cannot be drenched is if you are married, or an elder of the village. Otherwise you will be drenched by the single men of the village.
This is one of the most unusual of all the holidays is Slovakia. There are many other days that are celebrated by the people of Slovakia.
One difference between the Hungarians and the Czechs was the effects of nationalism on the uprisings. Rooted in their history from 1848 Revolution against the Habsburg Empire, the Hungarians sought independence with the death of Stalin. Matyas Rakoski, a Stalin protégé, came to power as General Secretary of the Hungarian Worker’s Party in 1949. Using his authority as General Secretary, Rakoski oppressed the people of Hungary including purging political dissidents and killing 2,000 people of the total population. He used the State Protection Agency to carry out the purges bringing in an administration of absolute control and fear to the people of Hungary. But, the Hungarians would not completely abandon their nationalist hop...
The Eastern European country chosen for discussion is Belarus. This paper will first discuss the transition from communism based on the experience of living under communist rule. Second, the significant historical factors from 1920-1991 that led to the fall of communism will be given and traced as to how they affected the process of the transition. Finally, the choices made by Belarus during and after the transition period will be traced back to historical and transitional factors that influenced them. Inarguable evidence will be noted throughout the paper to prove the need for transition from communism and the problems with the transition. The country of Belarus is still in transition. How do they compare? Most if not all of the other former Soviet Republics have reached a post-transition status.
As the engue marked a pledge the ekdosis marked a transformation of the bride as she shifted from a child to an adult, a virgin to a wife. Actions that symbolized this transfer included cutting of the bride’s hair, removing the girdle she wore since puberty, and taking a ritual bath in water from a sacred spring.
...ween workers and intellectuals but between Czechs and Slovaks in opposition to Husak.” The citizens united against the regime for a better life and where victorious all with out bloodshed.
Although she got pregnant by someone other than her husband they did not look at the good and joyful moments the child could bring. Having a baby can be stressful, especially being that the village was not doing so great. The baby could have brought guilt, anger, depression, and loneliness to the aunt, family, and village lifestyle because having a baby from someone other than your husband was a disgrace to the village, based on the orientalism of women. Society expected the women to do certain things in the village and to behave a particular way. The author suggests that if her aunt got raped and the rapist was not different from her husband by exploiting "The other man was not, after all, much different from her husband. They both gave orders; she followed. ‘If you tell your family, I 'll beat you. I 'll kill you. Be, here again, next week." In her first version of the story, she says her aunt was a rape victim because "women in the old China did not choose with who they had sex with." She vilifies not only the rapist but all the village men because, she asserts, they victimized women as a rule. The Chinese culture erred the aunt because of her keeping silent, but her fear had to constant and inescapable. This made matters worse because the village was very small and the rapist could have been someone who the aunt dealt with on a daily basis. Maxine suggests that "he may have been a vendor
satisfied and in doing so, they created a new and improved Poland. Previous to the formation of
Nearing the end of the nineteenth century, talk truly begun about the South Slavs having their own nation. In the year of 1914, World War I was in full gear and a Yugoslav committee was formed in Rome. The
Before the Bosnian War, in 1990, the president of Serbia started to support the Serbs in war against everyone else in the republic of Yugoslavia. Sometime in 1991, both Slovenia and Croatia wanted independence from the republic. Since Croatia had a 12 percent Serbian population, they were not allowed to...
Venezuela was one of the richest countries that emerged from the collapse of Gran Colombia in 1830 (the others being Colombia and Ecuador). For most of the first half of the 20th century, Venezuela was ruled by generally benevolent military strongmen, who promoted the oil industry and allowed for some social reforms. Democratically elected governments have held sway since 1959. Current concerns include: a polarized political environment, a politicized military, drug-related violence along the Colombian border, increasing internal drug consumption, overdependence on the petroleum industry with its price fluctuations, and irresponsible mining operations that are endangering the rain forest and indigenous peoples.
On Christmas Eve, they have a midnight mass and the bonfires they have. First off, in Spain they call midnight mass "La Misa Del Gallo" (The Mass of the Rooster). It is the ringing of the bells which call families together for a candlelit ceremony. They then have their bonfires. What people usually do at these bonfires is they jump over them to show that they have protection of illness. This type of tradition is mainly to be seen in Gr...
In the next section I will explore the history of Moldova and what set it up for the political and economic stress it incurred. Next I will look at the effects the economic crisis had on Moldova and how the poverty is produced affected the expansion of the sex trade in the country through migration, a massive orphan crisis and corrupt law enforcement. I will then analyze the political unrest in the countries...
In conclusion, Solidarity was a movement that helped change the course of two continents. It was a movement by the people and for the people. The iron grip of communism was destroyed, and democracy was born throughout Eastern Europe. Solidarity will always be remembered as the revolution that succeeded where so many others had failed. Today in Polish politics Solidarity's role is somewhat limited, and it has reverted back more toward the role of a more traditional trade union than a political party. The summer of 2005 marked the 25th anniversary of the Solidarity movement, and was a time to remember the hardships of its humble beginnings and to celebrate the changes those hardships inspired across the continent” (Local Life 1). Many of those changes are still being felt today across Eastern Europe.
The conflict between the Albanians and Serbs has been a continual issue since the fourteenth century. Ethnic conflicts rose again after the death of Tito who was the leader of Yugoslavia. Tito set up a national Yugoslav government and let the five Slavic nationalities (Serb, Croat, Slovene, Montenegrin, and Macedonian) govern their own part of Yugoslavia which suppressed any ethnic fighting (Andryszewski 14). After the death of Tito in 1980, ethnic conflicts began to come to surface again. Slobodan Milosevic gave a speech to the Serbs in Kosovo saying that “No one will dare to beat you again” (Andryszweski 18). In 1991, Croatia and Slovenia declared their independence from Yugoslavia which led to the outbreak of war since the Serb-dominated central government wanted to preserve the state. In 1995, the Dayton Peace Settlement was signed to end the war and Yugoslavia broke apart ove...
Throughout the chapter the text exerts more emphasis on the economical evaluation of a country's development rather than the alternative method. It begins to branch off quickly into the classification of countries deriving new topics all relating back to the economical approach. Beginning this discussion is the topic of underdevelopment.
Before the outbreak of World War I, Slovakia was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and declared its independence in October 1918, joining the Czech provinces of Bohemia, Moravia, and Silesia to form the Republic of Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia in the interwar period was the only functioning parliamentary democracy in eastern Europe. Even though it was the only functioning parliamentary democracy, the Czechs and Slovaks had issues that divided them from one another. In the Czech lands, they were more populated and industrialized than Slovakia’s. The Slovak population was also poorer, less educated, and extremely Catholic. The Prague government (Prague is the capital of Czechoslovakia; and why the government is called the Prague government) “attempted to address these economic inequalities by industrializing Slovakia in the 1920s but these efforts were cut short by the Great Depression (Merriman, Winter 2358). The result from the attempted fixes was the Slovaks grew resentful in the 1930s and a separatist movement began, which was led by Father Andrej Hlinka and Jozef Tiso.