Hedvika Špačková

* 1944

  • "Yet you knew that when the war was over, some guys were working as financial guards and that they were looting cottages [from the Germans]. You knew they had it at home. Our neighbours next door had cupboards full of white linen, bedding, everything... They were pulling it all from the borderland, they were driving trucks at night."

  • "One sister ended up somewhere in Austria, she said, maybe... They tried to get them through the Red Cross, but it didn't work. So I only know of one sister who was here in '68. They went to see them in Chlupatá Ves. She [Aunt Hány] was completely devastated. Because all they found there was a piece of a shield from the gate and a number that she recognized. She was completely shocked."

  • Celé nahrávky
  • 1

    Horní Stropnice, 05.09.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 12:42
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Field reports
  • 2

    Dobrá Voda u Horní Stropnice, 03.10.2025

    (audio)
    délka: 01:01:53
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of 20th Century
Celé nahrávky jsou k dispozici pouze pro přihlášené uživatele.

My father‘s family was so split up that they didn‘t even know about each other

Hedvika Špačková, 1960s
Hedvika Špačková, 1960s
zdroj: Security Services Archive

Hedvika Špačková was born on 1 April 1944 in Trhové Sviny as the younger of two children. Her father František Grill came from a German family from Chlupatá Ves, her mother Hedvika Grillová was a Czech from Besednice. At the beginning of the war, her father had to enlist in the German army as a German citizen. After returning from the war, he was interned for some time in a German internment camp in České Budějovice and the family was threatened with deportation. Her mother was able to prove that father was not a Nazi sympathizer or a member of any pro-German political party. In addition, the fact that both his children and his wife were of Czech nationality was taken into account and the family was allowed to remain in the rpublic. In contrast, all eight of his siblings had to leave the country. František Grill never met any of his relatives again. After the death of his father in 1953, the family‘s German origins and the deportation of relatives across the border became a family taboo. Hedvika Špačková still does not know where her relatives on her father‘s side live. Because of her father‘s German origin, she experienced bullying and humiliation in primary school. In 1962, she trained as a confectioner, a profession she pursued for many years, after which she worked in other businesses. In 2025, she lived in a senior home in Dobrá Voda near Horní Stropnice.