Klíma was born Ivan Kauders in Prague on 9 September 1931. His early childhood in Prague was happy and uneventful, but this all changed with the
German invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1938, after the
Munich Agreement. In November 1941, first his father
Vilém Klíma and then, in December, he and his mother and brother were ordered to leave for the concentration camp at
Theriesenstadt (
Terezín), where he was to remain until its
liberation by the Red Army in May 1945. He and both his parents survived incarceration, even though Terezín, a holding camp for Jews from central and southern Europe, was regularly cleared of its overcrowded population by transports to "the East," that is, to death camps such as
Auschwitz. The family adopted the less German-sounding surname of Klíma after the war. He wrote that "anyone who has been through a concentration camp as a child, who has been completely dependent on an external power which can at any moment come in and beat or kill him and everyone around him, probably moves through life at least a bit differently from people who have been spared such an education. That life can be snapped like a piece of string - that was my daily lesson as a child." Eventually, his childhood hopes for the triumph of good over evil became an adult awareness that it was often "not the forces of good and evil that do battle with each other, but merely two different evils, in competition for the control of the world". The show trials and murders of those who opposed the new regime began, and Klíma's father was again imprisoned, this time by fellow countrymen. During the
Prague Spring of 1968, Klíma was a leading dissident. At the time of the
Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968, Klíma was in London, on his way to a teaching engagement in
Michigan. However, he returned to Prague in March 1970. Although he was then deprived of his passport and forced to work in menial jobs, he remained a member of the literary '
underground', smuggling books and getting involved in
samizdat. After the
overthrow of communism in 1989, Klíma became a prominent supporter of
Václav Havel. ==Personal life and death==