Czechs were beating wounded Germans head to head
Stáhnout obrázek
Jaroslava Jandová, née Mizerová, was born on April 8, 1933 in Zbiroh. Her parents moved to Prague in 1935, first to Maiselova Street to the synagogue, from where they moved to the vicinity of the Na Františku Hospital in 1939. During her childhood she attended Sokol, and remembers the funeral of T. G. Masaryk and the mobilisation in 1938. She survived the Prague Uprising in May 1945 with her parents in the cellar. When they came out, they saw with their own eyes the burning Old Town Hall and the subsequent brutality of the Revolutionary Guards against the defeated Germans. After graduating from the business academy, she worked in the secret department of the Trade Bank, later transferring to the Commercial Bank thanks to her knowledge of English. She met her future husband Jiří Janda in 1949, a year later he was unjustly convicted of possessing goods from the shop of his former employer Rudolf Mašek. He spent nine months in Jáchymov, then had to serve in the army and do compulsory construction work, so they were not able to marry until 1954. After the invasion of Warsaw Pact troops, they managed to travel to London for three days before the cage fell and normalisation began. During the Velvet Revolution, the witness took part in a demonstration in Wenceslas Square. In 2025 she lived in Prague.