My father was an entrepreneur, therefore I had to go to prison
Marcel Winter was born on March 26th, 1948, in Hradec Králové. His mother, Helena, née Marková, was a company dentist at the Hradec Králové’s Gumokov National Enterprise; his father, Arnošt, was supposedly the only dentist in the country who was allowed to keep his private office after February 1948, working from the Winter’s family flat. Marcel wasn’t allowed to go to college. In 1968, he signed the Two Thousand Word petition; he also witnessed the funeral of Jan Palach in January 1969. Most of his life, he had been working in customer services. As a manager of a supermarket in Hradec Králové, he had been sentenced for two years and six months in prison for an alleged embezzlement of socialist property. While serving his sentence in the Libkovice Prison, he met Václav Benda, a dissident and a Charter 77 petitioner. Due to his unsuitable origins, he often had to change jobs and flats during the totalitarian regime. After the Velvet Revolution, he co-founded the Czech-Vietnamese Association which has been supporting Vietnamese living in the Czech Republic in their integration into the society and striving for greater cooperation between Vietnam and the Czech Republic. He visited Vietnam almost fifty times. Nowadays (2019), he has been serving as an honorary chairman as well as a spokesperson of the Czech-Vietnamese Association.