Back then, any man who didn’t join the Army lacked courage

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Corporal in retirement Rostislav Čech was born in the village Dubno in Volynia in 1925. His father was a blacksmith. R. Čech had three siblings. Having finished the primary school he got trained as a locksmith. In Dubno he experienced both the Soviet occupation from 1939 and the German one from June 1941. As a teenager he was forced to watch the executions of his Jewish neighbours. After the Soviets conquered Volynia for the second time in winter 1944, the mobilization for the Red Army started. However, R. Čech decided to join the Czechoslovak Foreign Army. He was conscripted to Rovno in March 1944. He went through the infantry training in Romania. The infantry training was carried out in a tough way by the Soviet officers. Then he was sent to fight in Krosno, but his head was badly hurt when advancing through the Dukla Pass. Afer healing, he fell ill with pleuritis. He enrolled in driving school in mid November and he obtained the driving license for Studebakers. He was placed as a driver to the Fifth Artillery Regiment. He took part in Jaslo operation and the liberation of Slovakia. He experienced the end of the war in Olomouc. After the war he was transferred to the Polish border at Ostrava where he also demobilized after the Czech-Polish relations had calmed down. He settled down in Kolešovice in Rakovník region and he became a private farmer. He refused to join the JZD (Collective Farming). He avoided imprisonment only due to Zápotocký presidential amnesty. Died in 2010.