Ing. Josef Otisk

* 1940

  • "Now he's just getting various metals in memoriam. In Prague..., they invite me to Prague, there is a crypt every year for the end of the Commandos training. Those soldiers get a certificate that they are Commandos and the best one gets a Commandos dagger. So they invite me there because my father, when Commandos was founded in the Czech Republic, got the number 1 badge of the Czech commando. Then he got the Cross of the Defence of the Fatherland from the Minister of National Defence. "

  • "Robert Matula worked in Šumperk in Moravolen and wrote articles for the racing magazine. It was called How We Fought. I didn't read it until sometime after I could read, probably in the third grade. Truth is, my father didn't read much before me. He knew how he was, that he was being watched. So I wouldn't accidentally say something. I used to tell my friends my dad was a partisan and a paratrooper, but nothing else. After the war, Dad was still in uniform, he was a captain then. We went with my father to the church in Líšeň and I was holding his hand and some guy spoke up: "Why are you holding onto him?" and I said proudly that it was my dad."

  • "My grandfather, who was a merchant, had these concrete vats in his cellar that were used to store eggs. They were kept in a lime pit. During the war, of course, there were no more eggs there. So there were boards on top of those tubs, and we slept on those boards during the air raid. And when the war was over, the Russians were already there, and one day somebody called to the cellar. We went upstairs and there was a gentleman and I knew at that moment that it was my father. So I recognized him, and I told him right away what friends I had and so on. And that was the end of the war for me and the beginning of a normal life."

  • "There was a huge lime tree in front of our house, and a German tank was hidden under the lime tree towards the end of the war. I don't know if it was a Panzer or a Tiger, I didn't recognize it at the time. And so, as boys, we danced around the tank. And all I remember is that one of the soldiers gave me a candy. Mom ran over and said, 'Don’t take it from him; it’s going to be poisoned. And the German said in Czech: 'Madam, don't worry, it's good chocolate.' He was some kind of, I don't know, of Sudetenland origin, or he spoke Czech."

  • Full recordings
  • 1

    Brno, 09.07.2024

    (audio)
    duration: 01:04:19
    media recorded in project Příběhy regionu - JMK REG ED
Full recordings are available only for logged users.

Dad will come back from heaven, mommy promised

Josef Otisk at the age of five, shortly after the war in 1945
Josef Otisk at the age of five, shortly after the war in 1945
photo: archive of a witness

Josef Otisk was born shortly after his father’s departure for the foreign army on 3 June 1940 in Brno. He met him at the end of the war. Father Josef Otisk Sr. was the commander of the Wolfram Group, which in September 1944 parachuted into northern Moravia. He was also a graduate of the Commandos special training. After the war, his father worked briefly in Prague at the Ministry of Defense, then was transferred to Sternberg. The family moved with him. In 1948 he was discharged from the army and demoted. The family returned to Brno, where the father worked as a surveyor. The war hero received recognition only after 1989. He did not live to see it, he died in 1986. His son, Josef Otisk, still attends commemorative events and would like the heroism of people like his father to be remembered. In 2024 he was living in Brno with his wife.