No one could make me speak German for twenty years after the war
Irena Kršková was born in Hlinsko in the Přerov District on 8 May 1932. Her mother was Czech, her father German and they spoke Czech at home. The witness went to the Czech school in Hlinsko in September 1938 but in October she had to leave for a German school in Potštát due to an ordinance; her family moved there. The father was drafted to the Russian front as an interpreter and the mother got sick with tuberculosis. The three children were provided a German governess but since she spoke German to them, the mother arranged for the children’s Czech grandmother to take care of them. The mother’s brother provided shelter to guerrillas. At the end of the war, Irena Kršková witnessed a death march of Russian POW. The father was a POW after the war and the family first received news about him in late 1945. He was not expelled but his social status was difficult. The witness had been learning to play the piano since the war. After the war, she studied the Modern Language Institute for one year and then left for the Teaching Department of the Olomouc Music School. She taught music at Art Schools in Uničov, Olomouc, Hranice and Potštát. She married archivist and historian Ivan Krška in 1970. She fostered her deceased sister’s children. Irena Kršková invented musical education aids and is still teaching.