Eva Hlavinková

* 1942

  • "That was the worst night of my life, where I was like, 'Should I stay, should I stay?' I didn't sleep all night because I already had some friends there, I could get caught up. I was working somewhere, I had the permit, maybe it could have been extended. But my mother was here and I'll tell you that the idea that... Like that, the Lesser Side is a diagnosis. And the idea that I would never walk on the Lesser Town again, on the Charles Bridge, that I wouldn't go for a glass of wine over there, I don't know, in Makarska. In short, I said no. In short, I was born here, I have to go back - and with that, I finally solved my emigration. I never regretted staying."

  • "My mother was against the Communists, of course, but nobody talked about politics in front of me. They were afraid to talk because I know that in the fifties, when they told jokes, I was never allowed to be there, lest I tell the jokes elsewhere. So that I wouldn't say that, I don't know, Clement Gottwald was... Yeah, I still remember my mother telling me about Zapotocký, about Tonda. She said: 'Yeah, Zapotocký, we always said, girls, come and see, he's standing leaning on the corner again, playing the accordion and talking. That man never worked, he just organised strikes.'"

  • "These are the memories of a three-year-old child. And all I know is that the situation in the revolution in the very places where we were, that is, near the Dělnická intersection, was very, very tense. Because as the Germans advanced from above over that bridge. They wanted to - and they almost got there, so they drove all the people out of the cellars, mothers, children - and they drove them in front of their tanks. So there was a lot of fear, and I know there was a lot of shooting, a lot of it was some explosive, because I was sleeping in the bathroom where there were no windows. My mother put a straw in the bathtub. And I don't know where my aunt and mother were, but maybe, I don't know, but I was isolated in that bathroom."

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    Praha, 05.06.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 01:10:10
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of 20th Century
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I said my joining the party wouldn‘t survive my mother

Little Eva in the arms of Red Army soldiers
Little Eva in the arms of Red Army soldiers
zdroj: archive of the witness

Eva Hlavinková was born on 1st May 1942 in Prague to a single mother Vlasta Štorkánová. She and her mother lived briefly in Kladno, but soon moved to Holešovice in Prague. As a child, she experienced the Prague Uprising and the liberation of the capital. She grew up in the Lesser Town, graduated from the Jan Neruda Gymnasium and later from the Charles University, where she studied physical education and divinity. In August 1968, as the mother of a young son, she was already involved in small resistance activities in the streets of Prague. A year later, while on a work placement in England, she considered emigrating, but eventually returned. From 1974 until her retirement, she taught Czech to foreigners at Charles University. Despite repeated pressure, she never joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ). In 2025 she was living in Prague.