Nadpraporčík v.v. Vladislav Klečka

* 1922  †︎ 2017

  • “Well, at that time there was already the so-called German Reich. We thus became citizens of Germany, our district and our village as well. What immediately happened was that the Germans started with drafts of young people to the German army. I had to join the army due to my father. I was only nineteen or twenty at that time, and thus I was under the authority of my parents and my parents simply accepted the so-called Volkskliste.”

  • “During the operation at Dunkerque we were being assigned to various attacks against the German positions. Obviously, I always took part in these attacks, and I was assigned every time. Not only I, but our entire unit. Thus we got into combat, into direct contact with the German army.”

  • “During 1942, yes, it was in 1942, [I got to] France. Then I was in France until [1944], all the time until the invasion and during the invasion I got to our foreign unit in England.”

  • Celé nahrávky
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    Praha, 02.02.2006

    (audio)
    délka: 36:15
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of 20th Century
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Under heavy artillery fire I used my own weapon and I sent my guard where he belonged

Senior Warrant Officer in retirement Vladislav Klečka was born January 24, 1922 in Dolní Tošanovice near Český Těšín in the then Czechoslovakia. After completing elementary school he worked for the railways and in 1942 he was drafted to the wehrmacht as a Volksdeutsche. Vladislav underwent training in Germany and then he was assigned to La Rochelle and other places in France. Vladislav also took part in guarding the Atlantic Wall. After the Allied landing in Normandy on June 6, 1944 when his unit was retreating from France, Vladislav deserted near the city of Lille and he defected to the Allied army. He was captured by American soldiers and subsequently interned in Naples in Italy. While there, he established contact with the Czechoslovak military mission. It was agreed that he would be transported to Liverpool in England, where he then joined the 1st Czechoslovak Armoured Brigade on November 4, 1944. With this brigade he took part in the siege of the French port Dunkerque. When the operation was over, Vladislav returned to Czechoslovakia with his unit and he began working for the railways again. He worked as a telegraph operator, station dispatcher and eventually as a stationmaster. He lived in Pilsen, died on July, 27th, 2017.