My memories of the Second World War are varied, but not any drastic
Václav Šimíček was born on December 6, 1932 in Hradec Králové. A few years after his birth, the family moved to the village of Urbanice, because his father got a job there. He completed the first four years of his eight-year basic schooling at the municipal school in Praskačka, and the next four years at the so-called burgher school, which the Germans called Hlavní and was located in Hradec Králové. School classes were often interrupted by air raids, during which children ran to hide outside the city. Towards the end of the war, the Germans turned the school into an infirmary, so the pupils went to the pub in Králové Hradec once a week for their homework, where they also handed in their homework from the previous week. After the end of the war, the veteran completed a so-called one-year learning course as compensation for missed schooling during the war years. After graduating from the burgher, he trained as a mechanical locksmith and then went on to a higher technical school, where he passed his high school diploma. He was then assigned to Hronovo, from where he left for the war. He was classified as an aircraft mechanic and later joined the so-called swarm of towed targets and served most of the war in the east of Slovakia. After it ended, he returned to Hronov, where he asked for a transfer to a research institute in Brno, where he worked until his retirement. In 2022, Václav Šimíček lived in Brno.