Prague, Bartolomějská Street
Former secret police (StB) interrogation and detention prison · Bartolomějská 306/7, 110 00 Prague-Prague 1…
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They bought almost everything I told them

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The agent Milan Nerad was arrested in May 1951 in Prague. The state security investigation at Bartolomějská Street was moved to Pankrác and then back to Bartolomějská, to the local church of St. Bartholomew, where the interrogation continued. He had threatened with the death penalty but he eventually got 20 years in prison: “I was investigated by two investigators and an incredible amount of protocols was produced that I had to sign. Fortunately, I remembered the first protocol and all the following protocols corresponded to it. Thus they bought almost everything I told them.” Milan Nerad was lucky. If his testimonies had differed, he would have been in all probability put under even more pressure and violence on the part of the investigators.

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Milan Nerad

Milan Nerad

Milan Nerad was born on July 18, 1921, in the town of Ledeč nad Sázavou. His father owned a shoe company, his mother died when he was four years old. He only lived a short time in Ledeč nad Sázavou and after he had completed elementary school, he moved to Horní Počernice. His family didn’t even try to conceal its anticommunist views. Milan Nerad studied at a school of engineering in the Českomoravská-Kolben-Daněk (ČKD) in Prague-Libeň, where he then worked as a clerk. In 1946, Milan Nerad started his own company specializing in the repair of boilers, but the post-war development towards communism thwarted his entrepreneurial plans. In May 1948, he was arrested for the dissemination of anti-communist leaflets in Horní Počernice. He was subsequently interrogated at the secret-police station in Bartolomějská Street and briefly imprisoned at Charles Square. The trial took place in Pankrác but thanks to a presidential amnesty of Klement Gottwald of July 18, 1948, he was released. This experience, however, didn’t prevent him from further engaging in anti-communist activities and he thus founded a clandestine organization called “My Fatherland”. The main aim of this organization was to gather news and information. Eventually, he decided to escape to West Germany. In November 1950, he travelled from Cheb to Waldsassen, briefly stayed in the Valka-Lager near Nuremberg and in March 1951 - with the help of his contacts – he became an agent of the CIO (Czechoslovak Intelligence Office) of František Moravec. As an agent, he was given the opportunity to get involved in activities against the communist Czechoslovakia. His task was to secretly cross the border and carry out certain tasks, like carrying secret messages or helping people flee from Czechoslovakia. As an agent - together with two colleagues – he crossed the border in April 1951 in the Domažlicko region and traveled to Prague with the objective to reestablish the My Fatherland anti-communist group that had disintegrated in his absence. He succeeded in carrying out his task but was arrested on May 11, 1951. He was threatened with the death penalty, but eventually he was sentenced to 20 years in prison. In the years 1951-1964, he was imprisoned in Pankrác, Plzeň-Bory, Leopoldov and Bytíz in Opava. In Bytíz, he made plans to escape, but eventually gave them up. He was released in 1964 from Leopoldov and after his return home, he was hired as a stoker, as a janitor and later as the head of the heating plant in Prague-Spořilov. He received a flat from the heating plant and married. He worked even after his retirement. In 1968, Milan Nerad got involved in the K 231 and is currently the vice chairman of the Confederation of Political Prisoners in Prague, where he lives.

Prague, Bartolomějská Street

Available in: English | Česky

The street acquired its oldest name, Benátská, after the poor local neighbourhood and the brothel called Benátky (Czech for “Venice”). The street was known as V Jeruzalémě or Jeruzalémská from the 14th to the early 18th centuries after Nový Jeruzalém – a preacher seminar and refuge for penitent women that Jan Milíč of Kroměříž founded on the parlour house lot in the latter half of the 14th century. Police buildings are in the location today. At the end of the 19th century, the Grey Sisters nuns took care of the sick and abandoned there. The convent was finally evicted in 1949. The detention prison of the StB was set up in the building known as "Kachlíkárna" (tile house) in 1947. In October 1952, it also housed the pre-trial custody prison of Prague I and after further organizational development it was finally shut down in September 1963. In 1950, it had a capacity of 120 inmates but it was grossly exceeded at times. Up to 45 inmates would at times be located in a cell intended for 12. The Kachlíkára also served as the main seat of the StB (Bartolomějská 14). Today, the building serves the Police of the Czech Republic. The administration of the StB housed in Bartolomějská Street 10. After the Velvet Revolution in 1989, the Institute for the Documentation and Investigation of Communist Crimes was established here. The investigation methods of the StB are comparable to those of the Gestapo. Corporal and mental torture was the standard method of interrogation. Tens of thousands of Czechoslovak citizens went through the building.

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