We were no kulaks; we didn’t even have milk left for coffee
Zdenka Blažková, neé Srbová, was born on May 3, 1944 in Lysolaje near Prague. The Serbs lived here and farmed on the birthplace of father František Srb, who took it over from his parents. After the February communist coup in 1948 and the establishment of a local state farm, an agricultural machinery was taken from the Srbs. Despite the forced high supplies they had to fulfill, they managed to farm on their own until 1962, when their father suffered a heart attack. After graduating from elementary school, Zdenka stayed with her parents on the farm, but in 1962, when they rented it free of charge to the state farm, she found a job in horticulture and graduated from a horticultural school in Mělník. She then worked in the state enterprise Sady, lesy a zahradnictví Praha. In 1979, she got married and went to a maternity leave. She then worked as a cleaner and saleswoman. The parents died before the revolution in 1989, the land in Lysolaje was returned to Zdenka. In the 1990s, developers were interested in them, buying land for commercial purposes, but Zdenka refused to sell them despite pressure.