The peace was signed in Berlin on Tuesday but Nazis kept on massacring people in the streets
Helena Jasná was born on 10 August 1931. Her father was ready to defend the nation during the mobilisation but was sadly unable to fight for a free Czechoslovakia due to the Munich Agreement. They suffered from a lack of food during the war so they raised a goose in their loggia. The father fought in the Prague Uprising. The women in their house cooked soup in an underground apartment that belonged to one of them and bring it to the men on the barricades. On Saturday 6 May 1945 the Nazis started massacring Czech citizens, such as chasing people with tanks towards barricades. The witness saw broken tram power lines, barricades and overturned trams full of paving bricks. Many Nazis refused to surrender and kept on killing. One of the worst episodes was in St. Antony‘s Church where Nazis took off their uniforms, climbed the tower and started shooting at people. Before Soviet soldiers made it to the church, they lay among the dead bodies and pretended being dead too.