I have respect for Judaism because of the people who paid for it with their lives
Hana Nová, a judge and a family law expert, was born on 20 March 1949 in the village of Běhařov in the Šumava region. Both her parents, František Schnurmacher and Vally Schnurmacher, née Bloch, were Holocaust survivors. Her father farmed the family farm, which he had to leave during collectivization, and then worked for a local poultry and dairy factory. Hana grew up in an idyllic and loving environment that was nevertheless marked by the trauma of the Holocaust, and her parents maintained contact with many friends who had similarly distressing memories. In 1963, the family moved to Domažlice, where Hana finished grammar school. In 1967, she entered the Faculty of Law at Charles University, where she experienced the occupation strike after the invasion of the Warsaw Pact troops and participated in the organization of the procession for the funeral of Jan Palach. In 1969 she visited Israel for two months. At the end of her studies, a classmate wrote a negative assessment of her, marked by anti-Semitism. Hana was therefore unable to take up her dream career as a judge and worked first at the district prosecutor’s office for Prague 2, where she was in charge of general and civil court supervision. Since 1987, she was working on this agenda at the Prague City Prosecutor’s Office. She increasingly specialized in family law and children’s rights. In 1975 she married lawyer Karel Nový and they had a daughter Klára (1976) and a son Viktor (1978). She never joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, which hindered her career advancement in the judiciary before 1989. After the fall of the communist regime, she began working as a custody judge at the District Court for Prague 8, where she remained until 2019. She was involved in a major amendment to the Family Law in 1998. In 2010 she received the Lawyer of the Year award in the field of family law. She is still active in assistance, advice and teaching.