Stay human. Stick to the Ten Commandments.
Zdena Krejčíková (née Kürbisová) was born on 5 May 1932 in Prague in the family of the owner of a small car transport company. During the war, she and her friends founded the Silver Horseshoe Club, where they read Foglar’s novels and were inspired by their ideas. In June 1945, she joined the 34th Girl Scout Group, led by Milena Michalcová, in Prague-Pankrác, Zelená Liška. Later the group was run by Dagmar Zinková. Zdena took the Scout oath on 12 June 1946 in the crypt of St. Wenceslas in Stará Boleslav. After the Junák (i.e. Czechoslovak Scout) was dissolved in 1950, secret meetings of girl scouts continued to take place, but the activity gradually waned. In 1951, Zdena finished medical school, graduated, and received a mandatory placement in a hospital in Cheb. Here she was involved in sports and theatre, got married, and had a daughter. In 1968, after her divorce, she returned to Prague and participated in the renewal of Junák in Prague 4. The members of the renewed 34th Club were mostly daughters of its former pupils. In April 1970, she took over the leadership of the 34th Ostříž Centre. After the second ban of Junák, she continued her activities with the youth and joined Sokol Lhotka with the group, and later joined ČSTV (i.e. Czechoslovak Union of Physical Education), where she and other members of the tourism department built Youth Tourist Clubs (TOM). For about four years she was the head of TOM Prague. During this period she led 26 youth camps and organized other activities related to hiking and outdoors. In Prague, she initially worked at the Thomayer Hospital and later at the hygiene station. She retired in January 1989. After the revolution in 1989, she actively helped in the third renewal of Junák in Prague 4, the Ostříž Centre, and the 34th Girl Scout Group. She is also a member of the Svojsík Group, Velen Fanderlik Group, and a member of the Guardians of Svojsík’s Grave.