She lived through the war in Serbia. She helped compatriots who fought against Hitler
Františka Skoupá, neé Davidová, was born on 27 December 1920 in Kamenice nad Lipou. At the age of fifteen she went to live with her aunt and uncle in Ćuprija, Serbia. She worked in the local Czech sugar factory, was active in the local community and attended Sokol. In 1939 and 1940, she and other compatriots helped Czechoslovaks who were going across the Balkans to fight in England and France against the Nazis. She lived through the occupation and liberation of Yugoslavia during World War II, as well as the fighting among local partisans. Her uncle was briefly imprisoned after liberation because he interpreted for the Germans during the war. In 1945, all three returned to Czechoslovakia; on the way, the witness contracted typhus. She lived briefly in Kamenice nad Lipou, then went to Karlovy Vary, where she settled and started a family. Her husband had to close his plumbing company after 1948 and pay a fine to the Communists. Despite this, the Skoupý couple joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia and left the party after the invasion of Warsaw Pact troops in 1968. In 2023, the witness lived in Dalovice.