When one goes alone, one can go through many things
Svatopluk Morávek was born on 16 July 1948 in Mikulčice to his parents Augustin and Milada. His parents owned a farm in Mikulčice with four hectares of fields and two vineyards. His father was a member of the Czechoslovak National Social Party and served on the village council. After the communist regime took over, he became inconvenient for local officials. Allegedly, it was for this reason that his brother Jaroslav was arrested in 1948 and sentenced to several years in prison in a mock trial. Jaroslav Morávek died on 8 April 1953 after a mining accident in shaft No. 3 in the Jáchymov uranium mines. His funeral in Mikulčice became a silent manifesto and was attended by thousands of people. Svatopluk Morávek got into the grammar school in Hodonín (at that time the so-called twelve-year school) despite initial difficulties due to his cadre profile. After graduating, he studied psychology at Palacký University (UP) in Olomouc and in 1972 took up a position as a psychologist in a psychiatric surgery clinic in Šumperk, initially as the only psychologist in the entire district. He also got married in Šumperk and he and his wife raised their two children there. In 1977, he completed his doctorate, became a graduate psychologist and from that year also lectured psychology at the Palackého University in Olomouc. From 1981 to 1992 he worked at the psychiatric surgery ward in Šumperk. He co-founded a pedagogical-psychological counselling centre in the town and a marriage counselling centre in Olomouc. He repeatedly refused offers to join the Communist Party. He continued his practice after the fall of the communist regime, but took advantage of the open opportunities. He had a foreign internship in Zurich, Switzerland, twice spent time in the jungle in Peru as part of his self-therapy, and walked a thousand kilometres in five weeks on a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. At the time of filming in 2023, he was still practicing medicine.