We were not allowed to say goodbye, we were not even given the urn
Alfréd Plocek was born in Prague on 14 July 1933. His father, also Alfréd, ran the “Western” company ISEC (International Standard Electric Corporation), for which he was murdered in a mock trial of the Czech technical intelligentsia in the 1950s. The father was arrested in February 1950 and executed on 10 November 1951. The family suffered persecution thereafter. They lost their apartment, the witness had to live with relatives, his mother had no means to support him. Alfréd Plocek Jr. was expelled from school, and from his youth he had to earn a living in various professions, at first mainly as a labourer. Eventually, despite all the adversity, he became a designer at ZPA. In the 1970s, the State Security tried to get him on their side, but in vain, as he did not want to have anything to do with anybody, he did not get involved on either side. His father and two other executed colleagues were rehabilitated in 1968. However, the formal official act meant little to the family. Far more painful were the real actions and the fact that the family was never able to retrieve the urn with the ashes. Through their research, they discovered that the urn had secretly ended up in a mass grave in one of Prague’s cemeteries. In 2022, the witness lived in Hradištko.