Where money is, there are also people Where money is lacking, there is nobody The ability of social empathy among people should be better
František Šulák was born on September 21st, 1928 in Ostrava - Kunčice. His father worked in the Vítkovice Steelworks as a banks man for blast furnaces; his mother, who was of Czech-German heritage, was a housewife. Mr. Šulák completed his elementary schooling, and then continued in his vocational training in the Vítkovice Steelworks, but left after a conflict with a German apprentice. Since his childhood he was an active athlete, he practiced boxing and wrestling. Together with his colleagues from the sports team in Radvanice he took part in the resistance movement. His young age made his awareness of the specific resistance activities very partial. The resistance group was betrayed by an informant. František Šulák was lucky because he did not know much and not many people knew him; he was thus charged not with involvement in the resistance movement, but only with knowing about it. He was arrested in June 1944 and immediately taken to court in Ostrava. After three months, he was transported to the Kounicovy dorms in Brno, where he was assigned to command work. He was supposed to work at Brno University as a bricklayer but was later was assigned to a group which cleaned away corpses that remained in the Kounicovy dorms after a Nazi raid. In December 1944, he along with others transported to the Flossenbürg concentration camp. There he lived in the 19th block and sorted clothes which had belonged to Jewish victims. During this work, he was caught “stealing” a shirt and a cap. One of Nazi overseers saved his life, but he did not avoid transfer to a penalty command which worked in a quarry. On April 20th, 1945 he was in a group of about 5000 people, who were - without being given any food or water - sent on the death march from Flossenbürg to Dachau. Only between 500 and 600 people survived the march. After a week, Mr. Šulák was liberated by Americans. At the age of 17, he weighed only 28 kg. The Americans did not properly estimate the desperate condition of these people, perhaps they submitted to their pleas for food and they gave them something to eat. All of the prisoners then contracted dysentery. František Šulák was terribly lucky because he did not eat much of the food and his case of dysentery was not that serious and after two weeks he recovered. After his return home, he suffered from a very serious case of pneumonia and was saved by a local folk healer. The whole family had to move due to the expansion of the Vítkovice Steelworks. The Šulák family eventually moved to the Bruntál region in the borderland. There he worked in a local textile factory, then in a quarry; he also went through compulsory military training. In 1948, he married and had three children. In 1956, he became employed at Geological Research as an electrician; he worked there until his retirement.