Jiří Breu

* 1960

  • "We had to be careful because there were always people lurking everywhere who were willing to snitch on you. I'm surprised that there wasn't more trouble, that we weren't so called picked out and that we could exist. I know that once a person who cooperated with State Security got among us. But fortunately I managed to find out in time and we got rid of him. Sometimes it also happened that, for example, they invited you and said, 'If you go to church, you won't be able to study.' Some people lost their jobs. Or they weren't allowed to do the job they wanted to do. So college students had to go into blue-collar jobs and things like that. So it was very difficult. But we survived."

  • "That was, if I am not mistaken, in 2009, on 28 September, Czech Statehood Day. At that time, Benedict XVI was the Pope, who had unfortunately passed away. Well, I was offered the position along with other colleagues in the deacon ministry. I wondered if I would like to be present at the service in Stará Boleslav. I had no idea what was coming. So we came to Stará Boleslav to the place where the service was to take place. We went over the "script". I mean, we were told what was going to be where. Well, the next morning at six o'clock I had to be in Stará Boleslav. The VIP sign, of course. There we were given a special tag where it was specified in paint what area we could and couldn't enter, because there were tough security measures. Well, Benedict XVI arrived, he greeted us. And I already knew that I would be right next to him at the altar. So we arrived, and what fascinated me was that Benedict came out of his papamobile and went to greet Václav Klaus. And he wished him happy birthday that day. And then we held a service..."

  • "We had a garden a short distance from where we lived where we kept poultry, and one morning we went to feed them, and when we were coming back home, a tank was driving down the road towards us. So I can still see to this day the barrel of that tank and how my mother just pulled us aside so we wouldn't run into them. So you remember experiences like that, too. And later, when we were in our senior years in the seventies, we visited the barracks where the grammar school is today. For example, where bikes used to be stored, there was the so-called Hall of Traditions where the eternal flame was burning. None of the students today know that anymore, only we who were there a long time ago remember that."

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    Proboštov, 12.03.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 01:11:07
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu The Stories of Our Neigbours
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Being a believer under socialism was playing with fire. They threatened that we wouldn‘t be allowed to study

Jiří Breu with daughter
Jiří Breu with daughter
zdroj: Witness´s archive

Jiří Breu was born on 6 May 1960 in Teplice. As a young boy he lived with his parents and his younger sister in Dubí. His mother brought him up in the Catholic faith, which has accompanied him throughout his life. He completed primary school in Dubí and then graduated from grammar school in Teplice. At that time he also attended religious school. He experienced threats from State Security that if he attended church he would not be allowed to study. Nevertheless, he studied Czech language and social sciences at the Faculty of Education in Ústí nad Labem. He then worked as a teacher in Teplice and since 1994 has been teaching at the Bishop‘s Grammar School in Bohosudov. After the Velvet Revolution, he graduated from the Faculty of Theology in Prague and was ordained a deacon in the Roman Catholic Church in 2001. In September 2009, he had the opportunity to celebrate mass with Pope Benedict XVI in Stara Boleslav. He is now (2025) retired, but still teaches at the Episcopal College and is dedicated to the diaconate. Jiří Breu lives in Proboštov.