As a 13-year-old, I felt what it was like to fear for my life
Josef Lacek was born on 17 July 1931 in a Catholic family in Božejov near Pelhřimov in Vysočina. His father was a blacksmith there. As a left-handed child, he was forcibly converted to a right-handed person in the municipal school. At the end of the Second World War, German SS commandos searched for partisans in Božejov. Josef Lacek had to stand with his parents and brother for two hours against a wall under machine guns. After the war, his family was one of the minority in Božejov who did not join the communists. His father was a National Socialist and a member of Sokol. Josef Lacek graduated in 1951 from the pedagogical secondary school in Jihlava. As a teacher, he got a job placement in Ostrava, where he stayed. He graduated from a higher pedagogical school in Opava. Until his retirement, he taught mathematics, chemistry and military education at higher primary schools in Ostrava-Poruba. He refused to join the Communist Party and regularly attended church. He married and had two daughters. In 2024 he was living in his house in Ostrava-Michálkovice.