Even then there were efforts to coexist
Stáhnout obrázek
Manfred Frey was born on 4 May 1940 in Jaroslavice (Joslowitz) into a German family. His family‘s life was affected by the dramatic events of the Second World War and the 1930s. His grandfather, Karl Frey, was a member of the Farmers‘ Union (Bund der Landwirten) and his father, Ewald Frey, was conscripted into the Wehrmacht. As a child, Manfred Frey experienced the liberation of Czechoslovakia by the Red Army. The gradual escalation of the situation after the end of the war led his mother, Johanna Frey, to leave the country with her three sons to avoid forced expulsion. After meeting the father in Austria, the family settled in Vienna. After studying and completing his military service, he joined the Austrian tax administration, where he worked his way up. In 2003 he became vice-president of the Austrian National Bank. He had been a regular visitor to Czechoslovakia since the communist era and followed events there with great interest. In the 1970s, he and his brother began to organise commemorative events in Zwingendorf, Austria, which they extended to the Czech side of the border, to their native Jaroslavice, in the 1990s. He was present at the historic opening of the border between Austria and Hungary in 1989 and also at the opening of the border between Austria and Czechoslovakia. In 2025 he lived in Hetzmannsdorf, where he remained active in cultural and public life.