In May 1945 all was good and in October the communists came
Agáta Kolínková, née Petričevićová, was born on 10 September, 1927 in Horšovský Týn as the youngest out of three daughters in a family of a doctor, Paul Petričević. Agáta grew up in a villa with a large orchard. Daddy had a private office with a dentist laboratory and X-ray. Carefree school years at the elementary and secondary school were exchanged for forced labour at a famer in Meclov, where Agáta spent three years (1941-1944). The family started to encounter problems already at the time, when the power of Sudeten German party raised. The peak was at the father´s arrest and his following deployment in Chlum Svaté Máří. After liberation of Horšovký Týn by the American army the father got a permit to enter the American zone and joined his family again. Soon after liberation the father was taken to Domažlice by the local communists, who used temporary chaos in border for his own enrichment. Due to anti-fascist card he could later return. After the communists took over the power in the country, uncomfortable doctor Petričević was removed by medical chamber to Radonice in the Northern Bohemia. Agáta began working at the state farm in Vintířov as an accountant and met her future husband there. In 1950 they married and moved to Chomutov. There she worked as a shop assistant in the grocery shop. With her husband she raised two children, Milan and Libuška.