I obtained my Rhine captain‘s license during the totalitarian era, just to be on the safe side
Stáhnout obrázek
František Fleischmann was born on 4 March 1946 in Prague. His father came from a poor Šumava background and despite his Czech roots had a positive attitude towards German and Germans in general. During the war he went to Germany to work, and when he was called to the Děčín region for the removal of Germans, after a few days he asked for a transfer. František spent his childhood in Libeň, Prague, where he grew up within sight of the poor housing quarters. When he was only fourteen years old, he went to Děčín to board at the boarding school of the Czechoslovakian Labe Sailing Company, later the Labe-Odra Sailing Company. His stay at the boarding school and his first voyages as a ship boy gave him such a hard training that the subsequent war did not seem difficult at all. He began to take the regular route to Hamburg and explored West Germany. August 1968 found him in Prague, where he witnessed tanks firing on the National Museum building. Although the occupation was a turning point for him, as Communist Party loyalists came to the management of the shipping company and working conditions changed, he never considered emigrating. He gradually worked his way up from ship boy to shipmaster and later to captain. Thanks to the vision of the CEO of the ČSPLO, he earned a captain‘s licence on the Rhine. Although this put him in the focus of State Security, after the revolution in November 1989 he was able to immediately use his expertise and start sailing for the German company Peute Reederei on the Rhine. He retired in 2013, living with his wife in Prague in 2025.