He participated actively in the
Velvet Revolution, this non-violent period of upheaval and transition which led to the transition of power in what was then Czechoslovakia. On 17 February 1990 he participated in the founding congress of the first Christian democratic party in Slovakia, the "Christian Democratic Movement" (
Kresťanskodemokratické hnutie, KDH). From 1992 to 2000 he was President of the Slovak branch of the
International Paneuropean Union, the oldest European unification movement, created in 1923 by Count Richard Nikolaus von Coudenhove-Kalergi's, based on the principles of liberalism, Christianity, social responsibility, and pro-Europeanism. In 1992 he was elected member of the Slovak National Parliament "
National Council" (
Národná rada Slovenskej republiky), where he became President of the Health Committee. In January 1993 he ran for
Slovak presidency. However, he only received 27 out of 90 needed votes in the first round of the
Slovak presidential election in the National Council. In the second ballot,
Michal Kováč was elected. On 29 January 1993 he was elected Honorary President of the Slovak political party "Christian Democratic Movement" (
Kresťanskodemokratické hnutie, KDH). In 1994 he was chosen to represent his country as ambassador at the Vatican (
Holy See). In 1998 he returned to Slovakia and created with Martin Luteran the
Ladislav Hanus Fellowship (SLH), a civic association for students, who embrace the vision to actively contribute to understanding and developing Christian faith and culture in Slovakia. Together with Rudolf Lesňák, he published in 2000 his autobiography "Liečiť zlo láskou" (Healing evil through love). From 2001 to 2004 he was President of the Confederation of Political Prisoners of Slovakia (Konfederácie politických väzňov Slovenska). After having visited his daughter
Anna Záborská in
Strasbourg after her election as Member of the
European Parliament, he died five days later on 21 September 2004 in
Bojnice, where he was buried in the family grave. On the fifth anniversary of his death, on 21 September 2009, the Collegium of Anton Neuwirth (CAN) was founded in order to honour his legacy to educate young Christian undergraduates through educational programs. ==References==