Horses have been with me all my life
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Zdeněk Hlačík was born on 7 September 1935 in Vrbátky near Prostějov where his parents Josef Hlačík and Aloisie Hlačíková owned a mid-sized farm. From an early age, the environment he grew up in shaped his lifelong relationship to agriculture and breeding, especially horses. He encountered them on the farm and saw them with German and Soviet soldiers during World War II. He studied at a higher school of agriculture in Olomouc and the University of Agriculture in Brno. In 1948 he attended the first post-war (and, for a long time, the last) All-Sokol gathering. Interested in horses, he started working as a zootechnician on a stud farm in Netolice in Šumava after his military service. In the spring of 1968, he took over as the director on recommendation from his predecessor. In a period promising social reforms, he met the essential requirement, joining the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ). Due to his disagreement with the Warsaw Pact invasion in August 1968 and the subsequent normalisation, he was dismissed and went to work at the stud farm in Tlumačov as a horse breeder in 1973. Three years later, he took over as director of the Napajedla stud farm where he worked for 30 years. He greatly contributed towards the local thoroughbred tradition being upheld even after the 1990s privatisation. At the time of the filming in 2024, he was actively involved in its restoration.