Sekyra Foundation

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The Sekyra Foundation
Loga Sekyra foundation PANTONE-page-001.jpg
EstablishedJuly 31, 2018; 3 years ago (2018-07-31)
FounderLuděk Sekyra
Founded atPrague
Legal statusFoundation
PurposePhilanthropy
Location
  • U Sluncové 666/12A, Karlín, 186 00, Prague
Tomáš Halík, Michael Žantovský, Jiřina Šiklová, Jiří Pehe, Martin Palouš,
Key people
Supervisory board: Jiří Přibáň, Jakub Jirsa, Václav Štětka
Websitehttps://www.sekyrafoundation.com/en/

The Sekyra Foundation is a private foundation created in 2018 by Czech entrepreneur Luděk Sekyra[1][2] in support of moral universalism, liberal values, and civil society. The foundation receives funds for its activity from gifts by individuals and corporations, asset management, and business activity.[citation needed]

Purpose[]

The foundation is focused on support for civil society, the development of critical and philosophical thought, support for academic institutions and educational projects, sustainable development and protection of the environment, lectures, and publishing the works of important thinkers. Another mission of the foundation is the defense of political freedom, human rights, and cultural and religious diversity. In collaboration with leading universities around the world and Europaeum, the foundation is cultivating the legacy of key philosophers of the 20th century like John Rawls and Ludwig Wittgenstein, as well as intellectuals associated with Central and Eastern Europe, such as Isaiah Berlin, Leszek Kołakowski, Jan Patočka, and Karl Popper.

The Sekyra Foundation offers month-long stays at the University of Oxford for students at Charles University in Prague and reciprocal stays for English students in Prague. The renovated building of Sekyra House, part of Oxford’s Harris Manchester College, had its opening ceremony on November 6, 2014, to commemorate the anniversary of the Velvet Revolution[3] and contains student housing as well as three study halls. Also in the building is a lecture hall named for Tomáš Halík. Luděk Sekyra is a member of the board of Harris Manchester College and one of its Foundation Fellows,[4] as well as a member of Oxford’s Vice-Chancellor’s Circle and the Aristotelian Society in London.

Past projects[]

The Sekyra Foundation has supported several projects for the development of philosophical and intellectual dialogue, including “Jan Patočka and the Grounds for Political Action: Phenomenology, the Arts, and Civil Society”, a conference organized by The Rimbaud and Verlaine Foundation (2019);[5] “Culture and Value after Wittgenstein”, a conference held at The Queen's College, Oxford (2019);[6] “Inequality, Religion, and Society: John Rawls and After”, a conference dedicated to the philosophical legacy of the most significant political philosopher of the 20th century, John Rawls, which took place in early 2019 at Harvard University;[7]

“Two Visions of Europe: What Sources of Hope for the Future?”, an international conference and seminar in the Cracking Borders, Rising Walls Series organized by Kultura Liberalna in Warsaw;[8] the annual Central European Forum in Bratislava, a discussion conference founded by Václav Havel; a conference on Trust and Understanding organized by the Broumov Monastery;[9] and “Margaret Thatcher in historical perspective”, a lecture organized by the Centre for Political Philosophy, Ethics and Religion at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague.[10]

The Sekyra Foundation sponsored a project at the Institute for Human Sciences (Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen) in Vienna called the “Annual International Editors’ Roundtable”, which includes authors and editors from prestigious intellectual non-academic periodicals from across the political spectrum (The Economist, The Week, openDemocracy, Eurozine, Esprit, FAZ, and Süddeutsche Zeitung) and the 57th International Congress of European Journalists, which took place in Prague for the first time in 2019[11] and was organized by former RFE/RL journalist Lída Rakušanová. It also arranged an evening discussion at the Václav Havel Library with the CEO of The New York Times Company Mark Thompson, and leading representatives of the Czech media.[12]

The Sekyra Foundation supports the idea to erect a new building for the Czech National Library, recently revived by the Czech Centre of the PEN International and The Jan and Meda Mládek Foundation.[13] One potential location is the former Žižkov freight railway station, part of which will be the site of a new neighborhood built by the Sekyra Group.

The Foundation is contributing to the publication of a three-volume set of memoirs of Dr. Emil Ščuka, who played an important role in the emancipation of the Roma national minority in the Czech Republic (published by the Václav Havel Library, 2019).

Partners[]

Supported organizations[]

Sponsorship of the 30th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution[]

  • Festival of Freedom
  • Concert for the Future

Notes[]

External links[]

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