Petr Langr

* 1941

  • "And then we got to visit. It was a room just downstairs, near the gate. We sat there for a while and then they instructed us not to ask certain things, but I don't remember which ones. Then they brought dad in. The guard stood a short distance between us and dad. We sat at the table [not talking], over some bars. It was another terrible experience and shock. I didn't know my father like that at all. A pale man who had completely lost his sovereignty, confidence and swagger. He gave the impression of a very obedient man. He was clutching a cloth cap in his hand. Eyes full of tears on both sides. The debate, I don't even know anymore, but it must have been awkward because what was there to [discuss]... you're not allowed to get into anything, it just didn't go, how are they treating you? No way. We didn't find that out until my dad came back that his legs were completely smashed. He didn't want to talk about it, probably signed some kind of promise not to talk about it. But they [the prisoners] said that when they stood somewhere, they always faced the wall with their legs spread out, and if it was not enough, the jailers would come and just kick their legs."

  • "You know, I have such memories, like when we finally got to the Valdice prison, which is near Jičín, after a long time. Originally a monastery with thick walls and a terrible gate. When we arrived there, I didn't sleep for almost two days afterwards because after about a year or maybe two, I don't remember, I saw my father and he was a completely changed man."

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    Hradec Králové, 19.08.2024

    (audio)
    délka: 02:27:55
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Příběhy regionu - HRK REG ED
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We judge past events through the lens of the present, and that doesn‘t work

Photograph of Petr Langr from the time of his studies with the academic painter František Vincenc Danihelka, 1963
Photograph of Petr Langr from the time of his studies with the academic painter František Vincenc Danihelka, 1963
zdroj: archive of a witness

Petr Langr was born on 27 April 1941 in Mikulovice near Pardubice. His father, Josef Langr, was a People‘s Party politician and later regional secretary of the National Union in Pardubice. His mother Ema Langrová took care of the children and the household. Grandfather Alois Fryček owned the Kašpar brickyard in Mikulovice, on whose land the family villa was located. His parents, Jan and Anna Langrovi on his father‘s side, managed the family farm in Vysočina region. After 1948 the brickyard and the villa were expropriated from the family. A harsh fate did not escape the paternal grandparents who refused to join the JZD (Unified agriculture cooperative), so in 1955 they were evicted from the farm and both uncles of Petr Langr ended up in prison. In 1954, six years after his entry into politics, Josef Langr was sentenced to ten years for treason in a mock trial. Due to an unfavourable personnel report, both Langr brothers were forbidden to study. Petr Langr decided to develop his artistic talent in the private studio of the academic painter F. V. Danihelka. For many years, he worked as a stoker or as a painter. In 1983 he successfully graduated from the Secondary Industrial School of Construction. He was able to devote himself fully to artistic work only after the fall of the communist regime. In 1968, his cousin Adolf Toman emigrated to Canada. Josef Langr, the witness‘s father, did not live to see his name cleared and rehabilitated. At the time of filming, in 2024, the witness lived in Jezbořice near Pardubice.