Hearing the mothers and children of Ležáky crying - it was the most drastic thing I’ve ever experienced
Vladimír Dušek was born on October 11, 1932 in Švihov near Nasavrky where he spent his childhood on the family farm. As a ten year old boy, he witnessed the Nazis burning down the neighbouring village of Ležáky. He remembers running accross the village with a friend to see what was going on. Shortly after the war, he formed a Scout group with his friends from the village. Although scouting was illegal at the time, they didn’t encounter any problems with the communist authorities. For him, the year 1948 passed without any notice. Although his father had to give away part of his harvest to the Agricultural Production Community, he was still allowed to keep the largest farm in the village, because the rest of the village respected his father so immensely. Vladimír remembers the currency reform, a day before it came, a friend of his father’s suggested the family invest all their money somewhere. His father thus bought cobblestones from a local stone quarry and gave them to relatives all over the area, who then used them for their courtyards. Vladimir Dušek himself worked in agriculture his entire life, first in Čáslav and then as a livestock specialist and chairman in the Agricultural Production Community in Dolní Bučice. From 1982 to 1989, he was the mayor of the village. Mr. Dušek knows the stories of three boys, who escaped from Ležáky shortly before the Nazi persecution. He recalled many episodes of what had happened in his native village of Švihov during the war - how his father helped the partisans and was denounced by his neighbour for it, how the main collaborator wanted to lynch an owner of a pub, who knew about his connections to the Germans. He talked a lot about what kind of troubles he had to deal with during his service as a chairman of the Agricultural Production Community and as a mayor.