We lived inside one big prison
Vladimír Trlida was born on the 7thof July 1962 in Gottwaldov (known as Zlín today). He trained to become a bricklayer and made his attitude clear since a young age. He grew his hair long and wore clothes typical for a group of people referred to as máničkyback then. On the weekends he would join underground festivals and more than once he witnessed police interventions. After meeting Stanislav Devátý he started actively participating in the resistance movement against the communist regime. He helped with printing and distribution of samizdat literature, he signed Charter 77, and became one of the founding members of the Society of Friends of the USA (“Společnost přátel USA”, SPUSA). Vladimír regularly visited Prague to join anti-regime protests, experienced police brutality and was detained for forty-eight hours several times. As a courier he secretly exchanged samizdat documents with Poles at the borders, in the forests of Rychlebské Mountains. During his last meeting with them on the 18thof November 1989 he was arrested and let go the following day. It was only after returning to Gottwaldov that he found out about the protests at Národní třída in Prague which led to the fall of the communist regime. Following the revolution, he married Radka Chovancová and together they ran a clothing business. The marriage, however, fell apart and Vladimír Trlida went back to bricklaying. Today he is on disability pension and still lives in Zlín. He was officially recognised for his role of a member of the anti-communist resistance and opposition.