Karel Nerad

* 1933

  • "Probably because they needed me, they didn't take my job. But I couldn't do some of the things I was doing, like [going] abroad. And I had a so-called watchdog, the State security. An unknown person, he used to come to see me and we became quite friendly secretly. He always came, asked what and how. And I told him to take out his notebook, that he knew better. Tell me where I was, who I was working with, what I was doing. That's how we met, he was quite a nice guy. So he always told me what not to do. Those were the days, unfortunately." - "How long did you have his back?" - "Well about four years and then it stopped."

  • "The worst thing we remember, unfortunately not my wife today, was that the so-called senior party workers at the district party committee took revenge. I don't understand for what reasons they took revenge not on me directly, but on my family. My elder son, when he finished primary school, we enrolled him in the high school where my wife taught. He was banned from school. I asked why they didn't punish me. He said it was none of my business, he just wasn't allowed. My wife and I did not understand at all as to why they were punishing the children and not me. My wife teaches at the high school, and her son can't attend the school? My personnel officer at the factory was secretly cheering me on. One day she told me he was coming, I can't remember his name now, that he used to work in Chomutov. She said he was coming to visit, he was foreign minister in Russia. He asked me if I wanted to write to him. So I wrote to him, I asked him directly why they weren't punishing me, but the boy. That they'd raise a man who would hate the regime. A fortnight later, the phone rang. I just heard my wife say that it wasn't true. The director of the industrial school called and said that he had been ordered to accept our son."

  • "I was at home and we heard a terrible crashing and banging. I remember that my father was a machinist in Ústí because he had left the railroad, in the so-called Schicht factories. I always used to go to meet him. Unfortunately, at the time it blew, I was walking towards him. And what I saw on the way - horrible! I saw with my own eyes how they shot each other."

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    Chomutov, 20.09.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 01:20:27
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The Communists should have punished me, not my son

Fake wedding photo of Karel Nerad and Eva Reck taken in Czechoslovakia two years after their wedding in 1960
Fake wedding photo of Karel Nerad and Eva Reck taken in Czechoslovakia two years after their wedding in 1960
zdroj: witness

Karel Nerad was born on November 11, 1933 in Trmice near Ústí nad Labem to Czech parents Karel and Eliška Nerad. After the occupation of the Sudetenland, his father was not allowed to continue as a train driver and he had to go to a German school and gymnasium. At the end of the war, he did not finish the German grammar school and started working in Neštěmice in a soda factory. From there he was recommended to study at the Mining University in Ostrava, where he organized the first Majáles. He worked in the company of the Tube Rolling Mill and Ironworks in Chomutov. The 1968 invasion caught the family of the witness in Romania, and they considered emigrating. Later, he did not sign a consent to the invasion, was expelled from the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) and was not allowed to travel abroad for work. His son was not allowed to study at the gymnasium. In 2025, the deceased lived in a home for the elderly in Chomutov.