Being punks, they wouldn‘t let us get married anywhere
Stáhnout obrázek
Monika Proche was born in Děčín on 6 February 1967. Her father was strongly involved in anti-communist activities, and when she was four years old, he died in a forest under unexplained circumstances. Her mother then went through harsh State Security interrogations and with her daughter faced a life on the margin of society and a permanently impaired cadre profile. In spite of this, thanks to kind teachers, Monika Proche was admitted it to a high school of economics where she began developing her distinct style and inclined towards punk during her studies. In addition to two Sex Pistols concerts in Dresden, she also got to see The Plastic People of the Universe perform in Benešov near Prague in 1984. Shortly after completing high school, she met her future husband Roman and joined a South Moravian punk band‘s community. Being punks, they endured the unwelcome attention and power trips of the security apparatus, and in 1989 they immediately became involved in the revolution. They distributed banned literature, collected signatures for petitions and passed on information about the developments in Prague. After the Velvet Revolution, Monika Proche became involved in local politics as a Znojmo municipal deputy and helped primarily with social issues. As a missionary and humanitarian worker, she helped children from Ukraine and China for fifteen years. At the time of filming (2025) she lived in the village of Branžež near Mnichovo Hradiště.