
Over the next few months The Two Thousand Words became a petition which attracted thousands more signatures; however, not everyone supported Vaculík's programme. While progressives from the lower ranks of the Communist Party and other reform-minded intellectuals, writers and workers wrote letters in support of the manifesto, senior part officials and hardliners denounced Vaculík and set in motion the procedures for banning him from the party. As well as polarising opinion at home, the manifesto caused disquiet in other parts of the Soviet Bloc, particularly in Moscow where the Soviet hierarchy were becoming increasingly concerned by Dubček's reform programme, concerns that would eventually result in Russian intervention in Czechoslovakia.
An English translation of The Two Thousand Words is available at ThinkQuest.
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Warsaw Pact troops invaded Czechoslovakia: 21st August 1968
The Brezhnev Doctrine: 13th November 1968
Also on this day in history
First electronic Automatic Teller Machine installed, 1967
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