I can´t trust the Germans, although I know they are not all the same
Dana Zháňalová was born on March 11th 1937 in Brno. Her father, Karel Svák, had a successful real estate agency. In 1939, her mother had passed away. After that, her father joined the anti-Nazi resistance. He had been helping people in danger to leave the Protectorate. He had been betrayed, arrested, sentenced for treason in Nuremberg in March 1942 and executed by guillotine in Berlin in September 1942. Orphaned Dana had been adopted by her older sister and her husband who took her in and raised her. At the end of the Second World War, the family moved from Brno to Zlín. The witness lived through the bombing of both cities. She found out how her father died as an eighteen-years-old. In Zlín, know as Gottwaldow at that time, she passed the secondary school leaving exams and went on to study German and English in Brno. However, she dropped out from the university. She had been working as a translator and an interpreter from German at Ground Constructions (Pozemní stavby) and Barumprojekt Gottwaldov national enterprises. She gave birth to a son. Her second husband, Bohumír Zháňal, was a Czechoslovak national team runner. After 1989, she received compensation as a daughter of an executed resistance fighter.