“It was in the afternoon, around two o’clock when an alarm was raised in the village because one villager, Mr. Drápela, went to see the field and he saw many soldiers on the hill there. He believed that they were Germans, because it seemed to him that the army looked dark. And so he quickly ran to the village and he shouted that Gestapo was there. All the people got scared and they hid or they ran away. I was grazing the geese and some woman, Mrs. Svobodová, told me: ‘Mařenka, take your geese and run home, there are many Gestapo men at Famfula’s wood, so run away and hide somewhere.’ I was running home, at home they already knew it and we wanted to run away outside to the fields. But we could already hear the galloping horses and my father was quite courageous and he looked up from our garden, because the road was below our garden, and he found out that they were Soviets. And so he called out: ‘They are our people!’ and people in the neighbouring houses heard it, because in moments like this one is listening to what is happening, right. They came out of their houses, and up there they already knew it, too, an they were giving a welcome to the Red Army. I hid myself behind a small apple tree, but I summoned courage and I could see that there were about five horses in the first row and in the middle there was a white horse and a woman was sitting on it. And our soldiers were galloping behind it. At first there were soldiers riding horses, and they followed by cars with soldiers, and with pontoon cars, too. At that time nobody actually knew what it was. The old soldiers from World War I were arguing what it was. They were talking about the weapons of those soldiers, too, they did not know the Kalashnikovs. And they had some cannons, too, but there were no tanks, the tanks did not pass through our village. It took about two hours and I know that my father commented: ‘Why this Joseph - he meant Stalin - why this Joseph has so many soldiers with him?’ Well, there were many of thehm.”