Zdeněk Bartl

* 1950

  • "I walked slowly into the courtroom. I sat down at the table and waited to be called. I was called. Something along the lines of what I had allowed myself to do and that I was already in my eighties. Anyway... they shooed me out into the corridor and told me to wait for the court to deliberate and then they would call me. I just sat down in the corridor, and as if by chance Lieutenant Váňa, who at that time was questioning me about [Hašek's] Lipnice, walked by, then again... it was he who rushed me to work. Just Lieutenant Váňa. Now he just sat down and said to me: 'So what? You are in the army now, right? I said: 'Yes, in the army.' And he said: 'Where are you?' I said: 'Well, in Josefov as a guard, even as a dog handler.' And he said: 'Oh, you could join us when you come back from the army. Look, two and a half thousand in hand. And I said to him, 'And if I go to the station, I'll get a free ticket and a deputy's coal.' So he shut up, got up and said, 'Anyway. Make up your mind.' And he walked away. I don't think I've seen him since."

  • "I came home from a big tramp at the end of the summer [of 1969]. My dad was holding his head and my mom was too. They told me: 'The SS are looking for you here every day, you have to come to them.' I finished in the hostel in Jihlava and went to the, as they used to say, fízlárna. When I got there, they immediately started asking me how it was possible that I wasn't working anywhere. 'You will be working somewhere by Wednesday or you go directly to jail.'

  • "I ran to the factory. The guys from Strojtex were all pulling into the square. A big hooha - and they didn't know what. I don't know if it was the same day or the next day, but I remember that the guys from the SSM in Havlíčkův Brod dragged me to their office - the headquarters, which was under the church. That's where they started painting posters [that said] 'Go home, Ivan' and such... I remember that they took me there to paint something for them, but I don't remember exactly what it was."

  • Celé nahrávky
  • 1

    Praha, 24.01.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 02:07:09
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of the 20th Century TV
Celé nahrávky jsou k dispozici pouze pro přihlášené uživatele.

State Security fired me, saying I had to go to work

Zdeněk Bartl performing at Hašek's Lipnice, summer 1969
Zdeněk Bartl performing at Hašek's Lipnice, summer 1969
zdroj: archive of a witness

Zdeněk Bartl, known as Fakír in the tramp community, was born on March 1, 1950 in Havlíčkův Brod. His father Zdeněk Bartl was a musician and worked as a promotion manager in Pleas. His mother Marie Bartlová (née Hoffmanová) was a confectioner. After primary school he fell into tramping and apprenticed at Strojtex in Havlíčkův Brod. After the events of August 1968, his father Zdeněk Bartl resigned from the Communist Party and the People‘s Militia. He was interrogated by State Security for his musical performance at Hašek Lipnice in 1969 and later sentenced to two years of probation. He married Marcela (née) Pospíšilová in 1977. At the time of filming (2025) he lived in Kutná Hora and worked as a security guard at the Central Bohemian Region Gallery.