Ing. Ivo Dostál

* 1947

  • "It was also interesting at the Green Square. Because there [was] also another area where there can be a lot of people, so it was quite edgy there. I personally saw a guy getting beaten up there. And some old man was scolding the policeman not to beat him. So they beat him up, too, and shoved him into the Anton. Then I went down the street to Jakub. There I remember that they were shooting tear grenades from the side of Svoboda Square, and whoever it rolled up to caught it and threw it back. So it was still within some kind of limits. Such, well, I don't want to say recession, but such just not so sharp yet."

  • "I grew up, now it's called ecology or the environmental movement, but by liking botany or ornithology or animal science in general... I grew up on the Bečva River in Hranice and I saw how the flow was getting... the water was full of fish and then suddenly it wasn't. We also went on an excursion to Kralický Sněžník, for example, and when you see how the grass there is pockmarked with yellow dots, that means it's raining sulfuric acid, or DDT, how it's destroying all life. There was no way for a person to think that was good."

  • "Those people just confirmed it to us that Dyje used to be cleaned. There was a suction dredger that used to go there and extract gravel, which was sold, of course. The surrounding countryside was crisscrossed with a network of drainage canals. When there was a flood, because a flood always comes, no matter where it is, and no defences can ever help. So the water quickly went down those canals into that river, which carried the water away. But since the displacement, it stopped doing that, the dredge was still going there sometime in the 50s, those canals got overgrown and now any water that was just a little bit in the spring, as water used to be, it would always get dredged up, flooded the meadows, they were mostly there, or possibly the fields, because the land was fertile. So the idea came up that there should be this reservoir built in that flat landscape that would permanently flood what was flooded."

  • "Look, in such a large community, they look out for each other. And everybody's scared, mostly. So we, when we were there on an occasional visit, and as a child, we didn't talk about it. And the co-op that was formed there, the one that I remember, it was terrible for the relatives, because there they valued the work by the number of units, and the units were of some very minimal value, so they lived in terrible poverty. I know this one aunt used to go barefoot all the time, and her hands were hard, just smashed and so on. And I just know that my dad told them to just hang on, that it would get better, like I know it was there, to just hang on, which was true. That then it really kind of, because one, it was rich, the land, so they were doing pretty well then, and I know that maybe they had their first television right here, this auntie who used to go barefoot."

  • Full recordings
  • 1

    Brno, 28.05.2024

    (audio)
    duration: 01:35:37
    media recorded in project Stories of 20th Century
  • 2

    Brno, 10.06.2024

    (audio)
    duration: 02:05:41
    media recorded in project Stories of 20th Century
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Someone has to keep that flame burning

Ivo Dostál, graduation photo, 1967
Ivo Dostál, graduation photo, 1967
photo: archive of a witness

Ivo Dostál was born on 13 October 1947 in Hranice na Moravě. Both parents, Alois Dostál and Jiřina, née Zlámalová, came from the Haná countryside. Ivo Dostál graduated from a forestry apprenticeship school, a forestry high school and the Faculty of Forestry at the University of Agriculture in Brno. During his university studies he worked in 1968 and 1969 as editor and editor-in-chief of the important student magazine LEF. After graduation and a short stint in forestry, he worked as a hydrologist at the Czech Hydrometeorological Institute in Brno until his retirement in 2009. In the 1970s and 1980s he participated in the formation of the Czechoslovak ecological movement as a member of TIS and later cooperated with CSOP. After the Velvet Revolution he wrote for many years for the non-state magazine of nature and landscape conservationists Veronica. He participated in planning of ecological stability units and mapping of rare plant and animal species. He was also curator of many exhibitions and editor and co-author of many publications, not only scientific ones. In 2024 he lived in Brno.