Miroslav Lebduška

* 1944

  • "They invited me to come in for a background check. I can't remember the name of the chairman, but I knew him well. When the Russians came, he was the one who referred to them as Huns and Avars, and then he became the chairman of the vetting committee. They asked me, 'How is it?' And I said, 'Good, there's enough work.' And they said, 'How do you like it?' I replied, "Why wouldn’t I like it? Bread has two crusts everywhere." That made them laugh. Then they asked, "What do you think about [Gustáv] Husák?" At the time, he had just become the General Secretary [of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia] after [Alexander] Dubček. I answered, "Is he some kind of new builder? Because I don’t know him." They looked at me strangely and said, "You know what? Come back in a week and tell us something about Husák." Two weeks later, I came back, and they asked me, "So, how are things?" I replied, "Good, great, there’s plenty of work." They said, "You had a task to do..." I responded, "Yes, I know, that builder Husák. Look, I searched the entire factory, and I couldn’t find him anywhere." They stared at me and asked, "You’re joking with us, aren’t you?" To which I replied, "You probably want me to submit my resignation, right?" They said, "Well, that would be wise." So, I handed it in because I already had a job lined up with Plynostav.

  • "My dad helped my uncle, my mom's youngest brother, towards the end of the forties, in 1949. He took him across the border in Most, which had not yet been wired. He lived in Olešnice. His name was the same as my grandfather, Antonín Stonjek. Since he was the only boy in the family, he must have been named after my grandfather. He worked in the forests for the forester as an adjutant. In 1967, my uncle came to us and told me why he had emigrated. He had a friend, Dalibor Ksandr, who suddenly ran away. It was that the gamekeeper, a German, I don't know his name, hid Russian prisoners who had escaped from captivity during the war. After the war, they left. Well, then the Russians came to my then eighteen-year-old uncle to see if he would take them to the gamekeeper, that they wanted to thank him. He led them there and they shot the gamekeeper. He [gamekeeper] had sons abroad who threatened my uncle that they would deal with him if he betrayed my father, which he had not the slightest intention of doing. So [the uncle] packed up and emigrated. When he was in a refugee camp in Austria, he met his friend Dalibor Ksander there. Then the story went around that they emigrated together, but they didn't tell each other, and it was only there that they met."

  • "When the Russians drove past the People's House or the National House in Hostinné, they drove through the intersection with people standing around it. Russian tanks and trucks were coming from Náchod. Everyone was shouting at them to get off the tank and go back home. They turned the signs around so they wouldn't miss, and sometimes they wrote on them how many kilometers away Moscow was. And as I was looking at it, I said, 'How about we stand on the other side?' As soon as I finished, everybody stood on the other side. They actually went the other way, and they got to Čermné, where there are serpentines and a narrow road. They couldn't turn around there with the tanks, they were hiking the cars all night and then coming back."

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    Hradec Králové, 19.07.2024

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    duration: 02:46:29
    media recorded in project Příběhy regionu - HRK REG ED
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Sokol is not just about sport. It’s always been ready to defend our country

Miroslav Lebduška in the theatre performance Cyrano of Bergerac, 1960
Miroslav Lebduška in the theatre performance Cyrano of Bergerac, 1960
photo: archive of a witness

Miroslav Lebduška was born on 20 June 1944 in Kameničky as the middle of three sons of the Lebduška couple. Because of his father’s lucrative job offer as a miner, the family lived for two years in Albrechtice in Most. After graduating from the primary school in Trhová Kamenice, he continued his studies at the apprenticeship in Nové Město na Moravě, which he did not complete, as he decided to enter the secondary school of food processing, from which he was expelled at the end of his final year. Later, he entered the secondary school of construction, which he successfully completed in 1985. His immediate family was not in favour of the communist regime at that time. An uncle and one of Miroslav Lebduška’s brothers emigrated and his father wrote a letter asking for a pardon for JUDr. Milada Horáková. Miroslav Lebduška’s anti-Communist attitude caused the break-up of his first marriage, the loss of financial bonuses in his job and earned him the calling card of a so-called “westerner”. His parents were proud members of Sokol. He decided to follow in their footsteps and became a full member as well. Later he contributed to the renaissance of Sokol in Slatiňany, held the position of mayor and became the initiator of the award and also the author of the artwork of the Karel Pippich medal. His entire professional life was devoted to geology and construction activities.