JUDr. Marie Šírková

* 1946

  • "The Civic Forum [OF] was being founded and I was nominated by my colleagues to head it. I accepted, but the only thing my co-workers and the members of the OF of our organization were interested in was to make sure that the director was fired. I countered, 'More than half the people in this organization are people who opposed the annexation in 1968, were expelled from the party, or had other political problems. He hired all the people with signs that they wouldn't be hired elsewhere. Including me, I would never have been able to work as a lawyer in western Bohemia.' Besides, he was an excellent builder. I said, 'Please, you tell him to leave. I had nothing against him.' I lasted at the head of the OF for only about three or four days."

  • "In 1985 I was on night duty, I went to the toilet, there was water coming from the ceiling. I slipped and hit my head on the metal pipes. I was unconscious for a while. Then I came out and told the women I was sick, dizzy, to call the foreman, that I needed a doctor. Master Blažek came and said: 'So you are sick and need a doctor? No such thing!' As he said that, I got up and slammed myself on the floor. He started kicking me: 'Get up! Don't roll around!' His assistant came over, kicked me too, and the women from the line joined in. They said, 'She's faking it, she's fine.' I was shocked. After a while, the master saw that it wasn't faking. They picked me up and called an ambulance. The doctor said it was probably a concussion. The foreman added, 'Don't write it down as a work accident.' At the hospital, the doctor advised me to see a psychiatrist. I explained to her how I was being treated. She said, 'I'll write you a sick note, you can stay home as long as you need to,' and she told me I should change jobs."

  • "The last impulse to sober up was the situation of the Jonáš family in Tvrdoslav, where we lived. Their farm was next to ours. Mr. Jonáš was arrested because he was smuggling contraband into Germany. His wife, a tiny lady with two small children and four old parents - her and her husband's - stayed on the farm. The reaction of the Communists to her husband's arrest was that they wrote out such high deliveries to the farm that it could never meet them. They reckoned that he would lose the farm. I remember the whole village club together on those contributions of hers to be able to meet them. My father used to go to Prague and try to get Mr. Jonas out of prison. He argued that it was impossible for his wife to live there with her four grandparents and children and work the farm. It was the reactions he encountered that must have sobered him up. I remember - he was a terrible talker - talking to the guys outside the house and saying, 'We didn't want this.'"

  • Celé nahrávky
  • 1

    Plzeň, 19.02.2024

    (audio)
    délka: 02:30:18
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Příběhy regionu - PLZ REG ED
Celé nahrávky jsou k dispozici pouze pro přihlášené uživatele.

One signature changed her life

Marie Šírková in 2024
Marie Šírková in 2024
zdroj: Pilsen studio

Marie Šírková was born on 19 May 1946 in Nemilkov near Velhartice in Šumava. Her parents met during forced labour in Germany, her father came from a poor family from Nemilkov, her mother was Ukrainian. Her father, Josef Šírek, was a pre-war communist who believed that the communists would bring a better life to the poor. But his outspokenness was a stumbling block, he lost his job as director of a tractor factory, yet later he stood up for the persecuted family of a landowner from the village where he lived. Mother Maria Kovalyuk was from the village of Maryevka in the central part of Ukraine; both her parents were from wealthy estates. However, the Communists took the family‘s property, sending the father to the gold mines and the rest of the family to the Donbas. They returned to their native village during the famine. Marie Šírková studied at the Faculty of Law of Charles University, but did not finish it due to the illness of her son Martin (1967), she was a single mother. Because her mother was from the Soviet Union, she also considered this country her homeland. She changed her mind in 1968 after the August occupation. Her mother believed Soviet disinformation, and her cousin served in the occupation army. In 1971, Marie Šírková joined Sola Sušice as a worker and studied at the Faculty of Law of the Charles University by distance learning in 1975-1980. During her studies, she advised colleagues in labour disputes and dissidents in Susice on how to trick State Security Service (StB). In 1980, she signed a petition demanding that a commemorative plaque thanking the US army for the liberation of the town be returned to the museum on the square in Susice. She was not allowed to take her state exam in 1980 and was suspended from the law faculty. She passed it a year later thanks to the fact that the then dean of Prague law Josef Mečl refused to submit to the communist dictate. However, she did not find a job in the field and continued to work as a worker at the Solo company. There she experienced bullying by her superiors and after an incident when she became sick and her boss and colleagues kicked her on the floor, she moved from Sušice to Ústí nad Labem. Thanks to the helpful director of the investor-engineering organisation in Ústí nad Labem, which represented the state as an investor, she was able to start working as a lawyer there. After November 1989, she briefly headed the Civic Forum in the Ústí nad Labem branch of the company, but was disappointed that her colleagues were only interested in how to oust the director, who had employed many people during the regime who would otherwise not have found work in the field because of the political problems. In the early 1990s, she joined the Chamber of Commercial Lawyers and started working as an independent lawyer. Her clients were mainly restitution lawyers. Even in retirement (2024) she provides legal services, especially to poor people in cases where she feels injustice.