Ludmila Petrová

* 1931

  • "In 1948 there was the first All-Sokol meeting. And in 1947 there were high school games in Prague and we went there from Znojmo, because it was like a high school. Not only food, but also clothes and shoes, everything was on tickets. So we got to buy something then and we had to back it up, these were vouchers, they called it, so we got one blue shorts, one yellow shirt, one white sneakers and one pair of white socks. And we were in Prague for almost a week, we always washed the socks in the evening, it didn't hold together at all, it was so bad, I mean. And what do you think we had for food in Prague? We stood in a queue there, so how... I don't know if you've ever been to some Sokol meeting, but that's when they do a parade, there's always a parade, so it's always lined up for half a day on some streets. And we stood there like that for the longest time too, and we didn't even have any drinks or any of that...and then all of a sudden a tractor came, you rarely saw a tractor, but it was a tractor, and the tractor had a full train of blue kohlrabi. So we could take that apart, so we were nibbling on it like that."

  • "Oh yeah, we were in the basement and everything. You know what was going on, we were so scared. All I remember is that it was on a Saturday when there was, it was in Prague on the fifth and that's when the train was there and we were all scared too. And then on Wednesday the first tanks and cars with Russian soldiers came here. That's when we stood on the... the lilac was blooming early then, we stood there on the town and we waved at them with those lilacs. Then everybody was around the church, they had these wagons and cars and horses and everything."

  • "Dad was a gendarme and one evening he came home from duty and said: 'Start packing' - I was six years old, I was in the first grade, seven - 'start packing, a truck will come here' - there weren't many of those moving trucks in those days - 'and we have to get out of here.' There was a station, there was a train, in Old Bohumin, there was no train. And we were three children, the fourth one was born after the war, later. And in that year 1939, my mother took a passenger train with us, with us three children, and behind us in the freight car were these things - and they moved... we came here to Luka and we had nowhere to put it, so at some Kremráčeks next door, there was a bakery and they had two rooms available, so they let us put the furniture there. That's the situation we had. In that... I think it was 1938."

  • "Here, sometime in the early twentieth century, the Countess had a nursery built, which was not called a kindergarten, but where the children went, and there were nurses who were in the Order of St. Hedwig as substitute teachers. And the Countess brought them here. And it was the Widmann family that financed the running of the nursery. And the Countess would go there once a year at the end of the school year and after Christmas, and we would always kiss her hand and she would give us a present and we had to, like, say a poem or a prayer or something. And I'm going to show you a photograph here of the Countess sitting amongst these children. The children went there from the age of three to the age of six, and they learned all kinds of things."

  • Celé nahrávky
  • 1

    Luky, 23.10.2023

    (audio)
    délka: 01:33:00
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu The Stories of Our Neigbours
Celé nahrávky jsou k dispozici pouze pro přihlášené uživatele.

With lilac in hand, I welcomed the soldiers of the liberator

Ludmila Petrova
Ludmila Petrova
zdroj: Ludmila Petrova archive

Ludmila Petrová, née Řehořová, was born on 20 July 1931 in Luky nad Jihlavou. She was the eldest of four siblings. She attended a kindergarten run by the local Widmann family. She started primary school in Bohumín, but after 1938, due to the Munich Agreement and the occupation of the border area, the family had to move, so she continued her schooling in Luky nad Jihlavou. Then the family moved to Brno, to Černá Hora, and then to Znojmo, where she completed a one-year apprenticeship in Micmanice and then a vocational school for women‘s professions. After two years at the school, she returned to Luka nad Jihlavou, where her maternal grandfather had a farm. She found work in the local knitting factory Pleas, then the Karel Havlíček Borovský factory. She was a member of Sokol, and theatre also played a role in her life. Today (2023) she lives in Luka nad Jihlavou, she is retired, a widow, but still active.