The communists did not trust us
Oldřich Rosůlek was born on 12 July 1941 in Pilsen, where he lived to see the liberation of the American army. However, he did not stay long in the West Bohemian city. Already in November 1945 the family moved to Kynžvart, where they replaced the displaced Germans. After the communist takeover in February 1948, the parents faced problems. Mainly because of their contacts with their relative Vlasta Veselá, a former inter-brigadist and later victim of political monstrosities. The communists in Kynžvart did not trust the Rosůlek family and everything culminated in their forced eviction from the town in 1955. At that time, at his father’s request, he began to train as a porcelain painter. But he was always attracted by nature. After a year he left his studies and went to work in the forest. Later he graduated from the forestry school in Trutnov. However, he still had to do compulsory military service, which he did in the Cheb region with the border guards. In 1968 he started working as a forester in Druztová. The August occupation of the Warsaw Pact troops caught him there. He therefore went to Plzeň, where he defended the radio building with his body. After that he gave up politics and devoted himself to his hobbies. In 1989, he signed the manifesto A Few Sentences (Několik vět). He was in Prague during the Velvet Revolution. Later he sat on the municipal council in Druztová, where he still lives in 2021.