Self-immolation is not only the act of setting yourself on fire, but also of sacrificing yourself this way. Though self-immolations are quite rare, they are almost always carried out in public, to point out your discontent with a current (political) situation and how sure you are about your point of view. Most self-immolations in modern history happened between 1963 and 1979. Here's a list of the most memorable and important ones:
- June 11, 1963: Thich Quang Duc (66), a buddhist monk, burnt himself in Saigon to protest against the persecution of Buddhists in Vietnam at that time. Though violence against oneself is strongly discouraged in buddhism his act was followed by a few other monks.
- Between 1965 and 1970, the Americans Norman Morrison (in front of the Pentagon), Roger Allen LaPorte (22, in front of the United Nations building in New York City) and George Winne Jr. (20, in his dorm room at the University of California, San Diego) burnt themselves in order to protest against the Vietnam War.
- January 16, 1969: Czech philosophy student Jan Palach (20) burnt himself on Wenceslas Square in the center of Prague to protest against the dictatorship of the USSR.
- February 25, 1969: Jan Zajíc (18) immolated himself only one month later near to the spot where Palach died.
- August 18, 1976: Pastor Oskar Brüsewitz (47) burnt himself in Halle, Germany to protest against the political situation in East Germany.
- Mai 23, 1989: German hacker Karl Koch (23), famous because of the so-called KGB Hack burnt himself in a forest near Hannover. Reasons for this are unknown, as well as whether it really happened without external influence.
- Following the imprisonment of Abdullah Öcalan on November 15, 1999 there was a wave of self-immolations among Kurds.
Though self-immolation is a very painful and slow process it is sometimes also used to commit suicide without any form of political protest (suicide itself is always a protest).