I did not know that it was my mum on that photograph
Jana Černá was born on the 20th of May in 1954 in Prague. She was an only child, her parents raised her in Catholic faith but at the same time, she was subject to the political propaganda of the 1950’s and the 1960’s at school. The parents tried to protect her and almost isolated her from the outside world, they themselves kept away from anything happening outside their family. Her father became like this only after Jana was born, though. Only during the work on Jana’s story for the Memory of the Nations, some facts about her father Bartoloměj Černý came to light. During the Second World War, he was imprisoned in the Small Fortress in Terezín for a short time because he had escaped from the forced labour in one of arms factories in Germany. During the Prague Uprising, he took part in the fights and shortly after the liberation, he became a member of the First Emergency Batallion of the National Security which served in the troubled and somewhat dangerous borderlands. Jana’s mother, Anežka, was the subject of a famous photograph by an unknown photographer taken at the end of the WWII. A part of the memories of the Protectorate and the Prague Uprising is based on the family chronicle which was kept by Jana’s grandmother. For all her life, Jana has taught dance and piano. She is divorced, she raised two children and at the time of recording in 2023, she lived in Prague.