A small reminder
Mar. 15th, 2009 02:21 pm70 years ago, 15th March 1939, the then Czechoslovakia ceased existing . Occupied by Nazists, it became a so called Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.This was a result of previous loss of the borderline to our neighbouring fasist countries after the Munchen Dictate in 1938. There was no war in our country but we lost our freedom (again - see Czech history). There were brave people who fought the occupants at the cost of their lives and lives ouf theid families. There were Lidice and Ležáky and Javoříčko and many other places of tragedy. This times shouldn´t be forgotten but I can see indifference and lack of knowledge around and I am ashamed. This is my country, it is not perfect but we live here and her history is like an open book.
You know, my grandfather was an old- fashioned social-democrat. This Party was a close equivalent of British Unions. My grandpa was a worker at the Railways and joined a small group of anti-Nazi movement, nothing big of heroic, just spreading some documments or doing some small sabotages. The group had been betrayed from inside, all members imprisoned. My Grandpa was in Terezín some time and then he was taken to a concentration camp in Flossenburg, it Germany. He had never returned, died in 1944, and his body is somewhere there forever.
The traitor was the first one who was executed after the end of the occupation - he sent to death more than 60 innocent people.
Fortunately my family was not punished any more. My parents told me some horrible stories from the end of the war in 1945 then.
I just felt like writing about it - Czechoslovakia was the first victim and then Poland - and then the war began. But the background of all this is enourmously complex and interesting.
You know, my grandfather was an old- fashioned social-democrat. This Party was a close equivalent of British Unions. My grandpa was a worker at the Railways and joined a small group of anti-Nazi movement, nothing big of heroic, just spreading some documments or doing some small sabotages. The group had been betrayed from inside, all members imprisoned. My Grandpa was in Terezín some time and then he was taken to a concentration camp in Flossenburg, it Germany. He had never returned, died in 1944, and his body is somewhere there forever.
The traitor was the first one who was executed after the end of the occupation - he sent to death more than 60 innocent people.
Fortunately my family was not punished any more. My parents told me some horrible stories from the end of the war in 1945 then.
I just felt like writing about it - Czechoslovakia was the first victim and then Poland - and then the war began. But the background of all this is enourmously complex and interesting.