Vlasta Novotná

* 1935

  • "It's such a sad day... We had a worker who no longer worked at the glassworks and instead fed the pigs. She stole one of the pigs, so they searched her house. They saw so many cut glass things on her cupboard... And she, if she had been a bit clever, would have said she got it from her uncle, who had worked in the glassworks as a manager before he died, so nothing would have happened at all. But she said she got it from the forewoman. Well, I was the one who was the forewoman and Vera Frintová was the forewoman in handling, so we were both locked up for ten days."

  • "As a class, we were given the task of decorating... or creating a sort of remembrance ceremony for Stalin. It was at the Jirkovský pub Na Tvrzi, where there was a pub with a big hall where all the balls used to be held. But because it was an old hall, everything was wooden'. And there was also a wooden catafalque with a bust of Stalin. There were also tables on which we had to make various pictures of Stalin's life. And we kids were pushing each other and suddenly the 'nice' Stalin fell down and broke. But the teachers, Mrs. Doležalová and Mrs. Stejskalová - they froze on the spot. They were out of their minds about what had happened. And now - who's going to tell Vokoun?! The closest to the catafalque was Miluna Bačinová, who didn't even get her school report until about August."

  • "I know we went to Suté Břehy after the war with my grandfather to pick mushrooms. He overlooked the 'No Trespassing' sign and I'm not really lying, we were walking on unexploded bombs. Grandpa says, 'They've exploded long ago. You can walk here.‘ He went to light a cigarette on the road and a military car was driving by and a general got out." - "An officer?" - "More like an officer, I think, and he said, 'What are you doing here?' And right on the car and that they were going to take him away with them because they thought maybe he was a German. When Růža and I saw that they were going to take Grandpa away, we came out of the young forest and cried. Now the officer says: 'For God's sake, he even has children here! Old man, damn it, get out of here!' And we were hurrying out of the woods. I know at home my dad said, 'Well, Grandpa, you've survived the war and you're doing this,' and Grandpa stayed locked up in the house for maybe a week and didn't even come out, how ashamed he was."

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    Hradec Králové, 17.02.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 02:07:05
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Příběhy regionu - HRK REG ED
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Evangelical faith has shaped me all my life

Vlasta Novotná, 1950s
Vlasta Novotná, 1950s
zdroj: witness´s archive

Vlasta Novotná, née Jeremiášová, was born on 23 November 1935 in Hradec Králové. Her parents, Jaroslav Jeremiáš and Marie, née Mrázková, raised her in the evangelical faith. She lived all her life in Třebechovice pod Orebem. During World War II, the family accommodated two Red Army officers. She experienced the liberation of Třebechovice pod Orebem by the Red Army. Because of her father‘s political membership in the Czech National Social Party and her faith, she was not allowed to study. After the February 1948 coup d‘état, her aunt and uncle had their textile shop confiscated. As a pupil she took part in the XI All-Sokol Meeting in 1948. She trained in the Poděbrady glassworks. She remained in her profession throughout her working life. She is the author of the design and co-author of the vase for the 60th birthday of Emil Zátopek. At the time of recording for Memory of Nations, in 2025, she lived in Třebechovice pod Orebem.