Zdeňka Lukašíková

* 1929

  • "The communists told their own members at meetings that nothing of the sort [monetary reform] would happen. I still remember that we had an office on the square in Třebíč and on the lower side there were shops where people went to buy textiles, food and everything. Our manager, a convinced communist, used to say to us and point to the people in the office, 'Look how crazy these people are.' The communists told the communists that there would be no currency reform. And suddenly it happened. I remember that my manager came into the office devastated. The communists told them that no money would fall."

  • "When the leaving exams were in 1949, the maths exam fell on a Saturday. I went to the headmaster and I said, 'No, Mr. Headmaster, there's no way I'm going on Saturday.' But wait, you're what? But wait, what are you? Write to the ministry.‘ I wrote to the ministry of Education saying that I was a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and that I was observing Saturday, which is the seventh day, and that the mathematics exams were to be on Saturday, so I asked that they reschedule them for another day. And the miracle happened. The ministry under communism moved my math exam to the following week on Tuesday. Isn't that something miraculous?"

  • "It was a great comfort that we had no idea and did not experience how many people were out of work at that time. My mother liked to cook soup, and when the beggars came, they came every now and then, but they were very quiet, my mother would give them soup or money. If she gave a crown, there were five rolls for it, and those people were happy."

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    Uherský Brod, 24.08.2022

    (audio)
    délka: 01:05:48
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of the region - Central Moravia
Celé nahrávky jsou k dispozici pouze pro přihlášené uživatele.

The communists allowed me to observe Saturday as a day of rest. A miracle happened.

Zdeňka Lukašíková travelling after 1989
Zdeňka Lukašíková travelling after 1989
zdroj: Witness´s archive

Zdeňka Lukašíková was born on 27 May 1929 in the Baťa Hospital in Zlín to her mother Amálie, who was a seamstress, and her father Stanislav, who was the head of the shoe workshop at the Baťa family. Together with her parents and brothers Stanislav and Miroslav, the witness moved to Třebíč in 1932, where her father was stationed in the new branch of the Bata factory. In her childhood she saw the consequences of the Great Depression, experienced the war years and the liberation by the Red Army, which she describes as a peaceful exchange of troops. As a follower of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, she recalls the time when their church was banned, and how her life story is interwoven with her efforts to keep Saturdays free, as it is done in her church, even during communism. At the time of recording, Zdeňka Lukašíková was living in a home for the elderly in Slovácko and believes that every person has a gift that they must develop throughout their life.