Eduard Brda

* 1927

  • "The whole company was on a farm in the mountains. The guard must have been careless, or not watching well, and suddenly the shooting started when the Germans were very close. So there was a fight. Some of the boys were sleeping in the barn and resting. Fortunately we drove the Germans off, because it was probably a smaller group on reconnaissance. It was pretty quick, we fought them off, but those skirmishes were pretty frequent."

  • "I was a motorcycle clutch and went to Varaždin and Koprivnice almost every other day. At that time, in 1945, it was quite dangerous because there were crusaders who were again doing partysan warfare against us. So it was quite dangerous to ride a motorcycle alone as a soldier, knowing that they could shoot from ambush."

  • "In Ferlach we wanted to disarm the troops that were coming from Italy or Slovenia and did not want to surrender to us. They were very well armed, they were special motorised units with tanks and armoured vehicles. With everything. We had only light weapons and a small mortar at most. They didn't want to surrender to us, so we had one of the biggest battles there and the biggest losses."

  • Celé nahrávky
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    Mariánské Lázně, 29.10.2009

    (audio)
    délka: 55:11
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of 20th Century
Celé nahrávky jsou k dispozici pouze pro přihlášené uživatele.

I thought I could turn the world around

Eduard Brda
Eduard Brda
zdroj: Archive of the witness

Eduard Brda was born on 28 May 1927 in Banatski Karlovac, Serbia, into a Czech family. His father was born in Dežanovac near Daruvar and worked as a merchant. Mum was from Strážnice and helped her husband with the shop. Eduard Brda graduated from a municipal school and a gymnasium. On January 17, 1945, he joined the National Liberation Army of Yugoslavia and served in the 14th Strike Division in Slavko Šlander‘s brigade. With his unit he participated in the fighting in Slovenia and southern Austria against Italian and German soldiers. During his time with the partisans, he was wounded in the back by a mortar shell. The end of the war found Eduard Brda in the village of Ferlach near Klagenfurt, but he continued to serve in the army. First he served briefly in the Army of Occupation in Austria and from June 1945 to 1947 he fought in Croatia against the so-called Crusaders. He was demobilised in 1947 in Zagreb and the following year left for Czechoslovakia, where his parents had already emigrated in 1946. In Czechoslovakia, he worked as a mine inspector in the Jáchymov mines and, because of his origins in Yugoslavia, had considerable difficulties with the ruling regime of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. He retired in 1987. At the time of filming (2009) he lived in Mariánské Lázně.