The water was fair, the regime was not. Mother was locked up for five years, father for fifteen
Gabriel Janoušek was born on 29 November 1940 in Turnov. He had a sister a year older than him and at home he was called nothing but Borek, which carried over into his whole life. His father, Gabriel Janoušek, was an officer in the Czechoslovak army before the war, and during the war he joined the resistance. In the spring of 1944, he was arrested by the Gestapo and imprisoned by the Nazis in Terezín, from where he was taken to the concentration camps of Flossenburg and Dachau. In May 1945, he returned home alive, but his children did not recognize him. After the communist coup in February 1948, Gabriel Janoušek started a resistance against the totalitarian regime. After his arrest, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison for high treason. His wife, Božena, was imprisoned for five years because she had not denounced her husband. The children were brought up separately by their aunts, their father’s and their mother’s sisters. Mother spent the whole five years in prison, and father was released after ten years in an amnesty in 1960. After elementary school, Gabriel Janoušek entered the electrical engineering apprenticeship for precision equipments, because as the son of a traitor he was not allowed to study high school. Only then was he allowed to study at an eleven-year night school, which was a grammar school at that time. After two years of compulsory military service and after several attempts he managed to get into distance studies at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering of the Czech Technical University in Prague (ČVUT). From childhood he was involved in canoeing. At the 1965 World Championships in Spittal an der Drau, Austria, he won a gold medal in the mixed pairs canoe and a silver medal in the patrol race with Lída Sirotková. At the 1967 World Championships in Czechoslovakia, he and Milan Horyna won silver medals in both the wildwater canoeing and slalom. He and Milan Horyna finished third at the 1969 World Championships in France and second at the 1971 World Championships in Italy. At the 1972 Summer Olympics in the Federal Republic of Germany their boat capsized in the penultimate gate, otherwise they would not have missed a medal. They finished in 11th place. After the Olympics, he retired from the national team. He worked at the ČVUT as a researcher, his specialization was cybernetics. Because of his parents’ imprisonment in the 1950s, he was not allowed to teach until the fall of communism in 1989. Then his dream came true, and he became a lecturer at ČVUT. He retired in 2010. In 2022 he lived alternately in Prague and Špindlerův Mlýn. He still rafted with his friends and participated in dragon boat races. He and his wife raised a son, one grandson is a snowboarder, the other a hockey player.