The Communists took away our shop, they jailed my father and I was scared ever since
Jana Soferová, née Pospíchalová, was born in 1939 to a family of booksellers. Her grandfather and then her father had a bookstore on the main square in Louny. In 1949, the Communists misappropriated their shop and their house and her father was sentenced to 17 years of imprisonment for having sold paper for printing leaflets against the Communist régime. After having gone through the basic school and a two year accounting course, Jana was not allowed to study at an university. She thus started to work in the North-Bohemian Brickworks in Teplice. Shortly after, her father died. She worked as an accountant in the brick factory for all her life. In 1960, she married Ivan Sofer and they had two children, son Luděk and daughter Jana. During the August 1968 occupation by the Warsaw Pact armies, she was on holiday in Bulgaria and due to the situation, she needed to prolong her stay there. When her family got their house on the Louny main square back, Jana sold it, divided the money to her family and she and her husband travelled across the whole world. In 2022, Jana lived in Louny and was active at the University of the Third Age. We were able to record the story of the witness thanks to the support of the Louny town council.