When a problem arose, they put the blame on open borders
Erwin Kreuzwieser was born on 26 July 1948 in the Lower Austrian village of Waldkirchen an der Thaya, about six kilometres from the then state border with Czechoslovakia. His parents Josef and Matylda had a farm. He inherited the farming profession from his parents, graduated from an agricultural school and worked in agriculture and fish farming. It was not until after the fall of the Iron Curtain that he first could come to nearby Czechoslovakia. At that time he started working for the Czech-Austrian association Arge Grenznutzen, which mediated contacts between businessmen on the Czechoslovak and Austrian sides of the border. It was there that he met Vladimír Špidla, who served as the first chairman. Erwin Kreuzwieser thus brought together dozens of businessmen and witnessed many more or less successful Czech-Austrian business ventures. Today (in 2022) he lives in the Lower Austrian village of Reitzenschlag near the border with the Czech Republic.