Václav Vrtal

* 1940

  • “He was on his way from Prague with three friends. They were taking some weapons to the partisans, whom they were helping. And they stopped them there and shot three of them. My father had two shots through his head, and the third bullet was lodged in his head. So that’s what he died of those six days later. They found him there on the tenth. I know it a bit from the telling.”

  • “Because they helped the partisans in Stará Huť near Dobříš. They took them food and all kinds of things. They’d been given the weapons by a friend, that man Sirovský who died with him. He worked at a barracks somewhere in Zbraslav, so they were taking [the weapons] from there. It was risky because the Germans were on the run. Well, it was lucky it even worked out like this.”

  • “Later on I applied for compensation, but they said that if he died on 16 May, it was out of the question, because the war ended on 9 May. Even though they had found him on the tenth, and he’d been shot on the ninth, so he was pretty much killed when on his way from Prague with those friends. Apparently, the Germans climbed out and started firing, that’s what the gamekeeper’s daughter told me. I spoke with her and she said that’s where they had been shot.”

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    Praha, 12.03.2015

    (audio)
    délka: 21:26
    nahrávka pořízena v rámci projektu Stories of the 20th Century TV
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They shot my father while he was taking weapons to the partisans

Václav Vrtal, 2017
Václav Vrtal, 2017
zdroj: autoři natáčení

Václav Vrtal was born on 20 September 1940 in Prague. His mother Růžena was a hairdresser, and his father Ferdinand Vrtal was a mechanic at the Walter Works who raced on motorbikes in his free time. The witness lost his father in the final days of World War II. Ferdinand Vrtal had been taking weapons to the partisans camped outside of Prague. On 9 May 1945 he was intercepted by German soldiers on the hill between Voznice and Dobříš while supplying weapons. The Germans shot him three times. Some people found him heavily injured a day later. He was taken to hospital, but all rescue efforts were unsuccessful. Václav Vrtal grew up with his mother and his three-year-older sister in poverty. Because his father had died after the official end of the war, the family was denied any compensation. Václav Vrtal trained as an electrician of high-voltage equipment. He worked at a tractor station, where he suffered an injury after falling off a scaffold. He has been a disability pensioner since 1973.