“My sixteenth birthday in prison, then the seventeenth, eighteenth…”
Josef Křivka was born November 8, 1933 in Oldřiš near Polička. With his parents and two younger siblings he grew up in Budislav, where he also attended an elementary school. In 1948 he began with his vocational training as a locksmith in Litomyšl. When he was fifteen, he took part in several activities of an anticommunist group in the village. The activities included intimidating local communist officials, who were involved in bullying small entrepreneurs and farmers. This also involved shooting in the air against a district secretary of the communist party, and Křivka was accompanying older members of the group to a house of another party official, whom they planned to attack and obtain secret information from him However, these activities actually resembled more of an adventure rather than real resistance activity. On September 15, 1949 he was arrested together with his friend of the same age and taken to the State Police regional detention facility in Pardubice. He alternately spent 13 months here and in Chrudim. During that time, the police were investigating the groups´ activities, about which he knew nothing, and neither he was involved in its founding. In the trial with the ´Jánošíks from Budislav,´ as the group came to be called, he was sentenced to three years of imprisonment. As a minor he served his sentence in Pardubice, Chrudim and in an institute for young delinquents in Zámrsk.