Marie Wollnerová

* 1936

  • “We lived in the kitchen and one room without running water, without a toilet. We had to walk eleven stairs to go to the toilet and tap water was only in the hallway. We used to go there with a watering can. So this is how we lived. We were poor but I wasn’t hungry. Still, I remember my grandma bringing over a loaf of bread, scraping the flour off so that she could make a roux. Also, there was a ration of 0.5 liters of milk per week. For this reason my mummy went to work in a dairy. It was a private dairy at Arbesovo náměstí. She distributed milk among households, also to German women. They had a purple stamp on the lid, meaning it was whole milk. Us regular people had skimmed milk. But my mum swapped the bottles and I had to wait her somewhere in the house before leaving for school. It was severe frost then. She forced me to drink the cream up. It was icy, I didn’t want to drink it but she slapped me and said: ‘Drink it up, it’s healthy!’”

  • “At first, I liked it. I liked the idea that there would be no rich and poor people and everyone would do the same. But then, with age, I came to see those careerists climbing up the ladder. You know, they informed against each other, writing anonymous letters. I witnessed all of it. I was adult by then and obviously didn’t like that.”

  • “In 1968 my daughter was nine years old. My husband’s factory had organized a summer camp for children where she went. On 21 August it was her birthday. On 20 August I went to the post office and sent her a telegram: ‘Sweetheart, I wish you all the best and there is a present waiting for you at home.’ I bought her a hand sewing machine. She had sewed ever since she was little. In the morning we woke up – it was 21 August, there were tanks below our windows and I thought war broke out. My husband turned pale, he didn’t handle these situations well. I said: ‘Take your shoes on and let’s go pick the girl up.’ They were in Ondřejov, not far from Prague. I thought war had broken out and that I won’t see her again if I don’t get there. By that time we haven’t had a car. ‘Take your shoes on and let’s go there on foot!,’ I said. So we took hiking shoes, backpacks, walk to the Palacký bridge where they turned us back. There were two tanks there facing each other, making a passage for a single person. They haven’t let us through. I was completely mad but luckily the factory made sure that in three days’ time they brought us the kids back.”

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    Praha, 08.02.2016

    (audio)
    duration: 01:07:33
    media recorded in project Stories of the 20th Century TV
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I was poor but knew to enjoy life

Marie Wollnerová, 2016
Marie Wollnerová, 2016
photo: autoři natáčení

Marie Wollnerová was born on 1 February 1936 in Prague into a destitute workers’ family. Her father passed away when she was fourteen. In 1951, right after finishing primary school she took a job in the Motorlet factory. She completed an apprenticeship in aircraft engineering, assembling components for airplane engines. She had done this job up until 1959, meanwhile witnessing the tightening communists’ grip on power and their increased influenced on life in the factory. She had never joined the Communist Party herself. After 1959 she made a living by doing occasional jobs which enabled her to look after her children at home. In 1991 she retired but still made money on the side by cleaning in households.