My father defended the airport from the Russians. State Security wanted his son to follow him
Jan Dytrych was born on 23 July 1954 in Mladá Boleslav. His grandfather was interrogated by the Nazis and imprisoned in concentration camps for listening to foreign radio. His father Jan Dytrych Sr. became an air force officer and served in a reconnaissance regiment. During the invasion of Warsaw Pact troops in August 1968, he commanded the airport in Milovice and for over a week prevented the invaders from entering the area. Then State Security (StB) went after him and wanted him to denounce his colleagues, but he refused and was expelled from the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) and the army. His father was also prosecuted for allegedly having Soviet troop positions monitored, but the charges were not proven. During his studies at the Czech Technical University, State Security contacted Jan Dytrych Jr. and chose him as a confidant, using him to obtain information from the university environment. They also wanted him to follow his parents while they were attending receptions at the Chinese embassy, but this did not happen. After graduating from university, the witness joined the Setuza in Ustí nad Labem, got married and had a daughter. After the Velvet Revolution, he entered municipal politics and won his first election for the Green Party in Střekov, serving as deputy mayor. In 2023 he was living in Dobrovice.