Věra Blažková

* 1919

  • "I said, 'Mr. Chairman, who is going to buy [the hotel] when nationalization is going to happen soon?' and he said, 'Come on, we'll do it somehow.' Nationalization came within a week 'Since you're not taking care of the building,' which wasn't true at all, 'we're nationalizing it.' And so they took it away without a crown paid. And then they gave my mother a hundred and fifty crowns a month out of mercy. But my main concern was that she should have insurance, a doctor, because if she had to go to the hospital, there would be no money for that. So there were two of us at home, and that didn't sit well with some people who said I was slacking off at home."

  • "So it was very nice, [the teacher] told us about Russia, how they fought there and how they fought their way to Vladivostok when the [first] war was over and they had to wait there until a big ship came to take them home."

  • "Daddy came down with the flu and somehow it got to his head, I think, and he died. So my mum was left on her own to run the business for twenty years. And it wasn't so easy when she was on her own with those people, so I didn't even want to leave her when I saw that Mummy would be all alone. Well, I got married at nineteen."

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    Letohrad, 05.03.2014

    (audio)
    délka: 01:01:55
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Soutěž Příběhy 20. století
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Our hotel was my parents‘ whole life. Then the communists took it away

Wedding photo of Věra Blažková from 1938
Wedding photo of Věra Blažková from 1938
zdroj: Witness´s archive

Věra Blažková was born into the Forch family of tradesmen in Letohrad (then Kyšperk) on 3 August 1919. Her father ran a restaurant on the square until 1929 and later a hotel near the railway station, which is still called U Forchů. Her happy childhood was disturbed by the untimely death of her father in 1933. From then on, her mother ran the hotel herself, with the help of her daughter and staff. After completing municipal school, Věra spent one year in a school for girls run by the Order of the Ursulines in Jeseník (then Frývaldov). She wanted to study at the teachers‘ institute, but her mother needed her help in the hotel. In 1938 she married a teacher, Jiří Blažek from Letohrad. During the Protectorate she was officially listed as an agricultural worker on a farm in Lukavice to avoid forced labour. In 1943, a son, Václav, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Blažek, and three years later a son, Jiří. After the communists came to power in 1948, the Hotel U Forchů first lost all its staff and mother and Vera did all the work themselves. At the beginning of the 1950s it was nationalized in favour of the Czechoslovak Railways. After her mother‘s death in 1957, Věra started working, first as a saleswoman in a hardware store and then as a cashier at the station. Both sons had problems getting into university because of their trade backgrounds, but Václav eventually studied engineering and Jiří economics. Son Václav died tragically in a car accident when he was an adult.