People threw stones at my grandmother in the street, she only went to work at night
Stáhnout obrázek
Zdeňka Dušková was born on 16 November 1959 in Rumburk into a family with a troubled past. From an early age, she perceived people‘s distant behaviour towards her mother and herself and did not understand why. She was the granddaughter of the leader of the resistance group under the name of Dr. Eduard Beneš, which was active in Rumburk and its surroundings. Her mother‘s father, Bedřich Judytka, was a victim of judicial murder during the communist regime. And the label of the enemies of the regime was worn all her life by her mother, her sisters and finally by Zdeňka Dušková herself. In her cadre profile she had such a reference that it was almost impossible for her to study. However, she applied to the Secondary Pedagogical School in Most and only thanks to the intercession of a teacher who came from the Šluknov foothills was she allowed to study. She worked first as a teacher in the children‘s home in Lipová u Šluknova, then in the same position at the primary school in Velký Šenov. Subsequently, she worked at the same school as a teacher. Although she had no idea why such a large shadow was cast over her family, she had always felt distrust and reluctance to join the Communist Party. After the Velvet Revolution, she began to untangle her family history, thanks to the writer Marie Rút Křížková, who had dedicated herself to her grandfather‘s story. In 2016, she received a certificate from the Ministry of Defense that rehabilitated Bedřich Judytka and identified him as a participant in the resistance and resistance against communism. She and her husband raised two children, and in 2025 she was still living and working as a teacher in Velký Šenov in the Děčín region. We were able to record the story of Zdeňka Dušková thanks to the support of the town of Rumburk.