Since being in the cradle, man has been getting only what the regime allows him
Andělín Kvapil was born on 26 May 1931 in Opava to a Czech woman, Růžena, née Bryjová, and a German man, Engelberd Kvapil. The family lived in a two-floor house in Hradec nad Moravicí, part called Městečko. Because of his father‘s German nationality, he entered a German primary school at the age of six. He witnessed the mobilisation of the conscripts in 1938 and the retreat of the Czechoslovak army in 1939. His father was killed at the end of World War II at the front in Romania. He, his mother and younger siblings were hiding in the woods while the front was crossing over. After the war, in 1945, he started working at the Branec Ironworks to support his family. He completed his education later. After the military recruitment in Rajhrad and transfer to Fulnek, he and other soldiers transported invalid money to Ostrava during the currency reform. After his marriage, he and his wife moved to Studénka, where he worked at the Tatra company. In 1958, he signed a cooperation with the Intelligence Administration of the General Staff of the Czechoslovak People‘s Army, received training and became an agent. The Prague Spring and the occupation by Soviet troops in 1968 became a turning point for him - he was followed, feared arrest and burned letters from his family in Germany. In 2024 he was living in Studénka.