30. December 2019 at 17:40

Looking for salvation

Hope is needed to overcome Slovaks’ customary gloom about the state of their republic.

Michaela Terenzani

Editorial

“I am sad” reads a billboard from a late 2018 protest gathering in Bratislava, speaking the minds of many of Slovakia’s inhabitants in 2019. “I am sad” reads a billboard from a late 2018 protest gathering in Bratislava, speaking the minds of many of Slovakia’s inhabitants in 2019. (source: Sme)
Font size: A - | A +

When commentators anticipated last year, after power started shifting in the country following the murder of a journalist, that buckets of dirt would fly, it sounded like just another figure of speech.

SkryĹĄTurn off ads
SkryĹĄTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement
SkryĹĄTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement

In 2019, it became a reality, one that screamed at people from newspaper headlines, TV news and, mainly, their Facebook feeds.

If 2018 was a year that challenged us in shocking ways, 2019 was one that taught us a lot about this country, perhaps more than most of its inhabitants believed there was to learn.

The rest of this article is premium content at Spectator.sk
Subscribe now for full access

Subscription provides you with:

  • Immediate access to all locked articles (premium content) on Spectator.sk

  • Special weekly news summary + an audio recording with a weekly news summary to listen to at your convenience (received on a weekly basis directly to your e-mail)

  • PDF version of the latest issue of our newspaper, The Slovak Spectator, emailed directly to you

  • Access to all premium content on Sme.sk and Korzar.sk

SkryĹĄClose ad