After decades of no freedom, the revolution came, but some mistook it for wantonness
Magdaléna Smělá, née Strnadová, was born in Prague on 28 September 1939. As a child, she was a Sokol member and took part in the XI national rally in 1948. Her father František Strnad owned a textile shop in the 1940s; he closed the shop after the communist coup and found an office job. He was forced to leave the job in the 1950s as part of the project of reassigning 70,000 people to worker positions. The father hid some of the goods at their cabin in Krhanice, and mother Vlasta Strnadová (née Bucháčková) used them to sew clothes to help the very modest family budget. While in primary school, Magdaléna Smělá witnessed the persecution of teachers who stayed true to the First Republic traditions and ideals. She completed her studies at the High School of Applied Art and then the Academy of Art, Architecture and Design in Prague (UMPRUM). Along with creating her own art, she worked as a teacher for years at the high school in Prague-Žižkov where she had studied. She married Václav Smělý in 1960. Despite his qualification, her husband was banned from higher job positions due to his background until the 1980s – he was not a CPC member and used to serve with the Auxiliary Technical Battalion (PTP).