They shoved me into a cell and there I was interrogated by K. H. Frank
Kuneš Sonntag was born in Brno on August 17, 1919. His father (named Kuneš Sonntag as well) was a member of the Moravian Agrarian Party under the Austria-Hungarian Empire and he became the minister of finance after the establishment of the independent Czechoslovak Republic. For this reason, the family moved to Prague. However, after father‘s death in 1931 the Sonntag family returned to Moravia to Střelice near Uničov. Kuneš Sonntag studied at the grammar school in Litovel. Among others, he met Jan Opletal there, who an excellent student and a member of Sokol. Kuneš was an active Sokol and a Boy Scout member as well. From 1937 he studied at the Law Faculty of Charles University in Prague and he became elected in the National Union of Czechoslovak Students. After Opletal‘s funeral he was among the twelve Union officials who were arrested. Nine of them were executed by the Gestapo. The others were transported to the prison in Prague-Ruzyně and from there to the concentration camp Sachsenhausen. Kuneš Sonntag was released in 1942. After the war he worked in education and he supported the restoration of the university in Olomouc. In the 1950s he spent several years in prison for alleged high treason and espionage. He lived in the Haná region until his death in 2010 and he was an influential personage in the regional culture scene.