Vikýřovice, Baptist prayer house
Šumperská 272, 788 13 Vikýřovice, Czech Republic
  • Story
  • Place

Arrested preacher

Available in: English | Česky

Already in 1949 the Baptist congregation in Vikýřovice fell under strict state scrutiny. The local preacher, Vilém Pospíšil, was arrested in February 1955, stood before a mock trial and subsequently sentenced to three and a half years of prison and the confiscation of one third of his property. Karel Jersák, a member of the congregation, remembers the event: “They locked up our preacher, Pospíšil, because he wrote to some of his acquaintances in Poland that they should move here, as there are some textile mills in Šumperk. They were weavers and would have easily found employment here. But the communists made it into a case of espionage – that he was passing on information about our factories to foreigners.” Vilém Pospíšil was not allowed to preach for years after his release, instead he worked as a manual labourer in the Eternit Works in Šumperk. “He was only able to get work in Eternit, and that was the death of him – the factory used asbestos. He worked a three-shift system and fell ill.

Hodnocení


Hodnotilo 0 lidí
Abyste mohli hodnotit musíte se přihlásit! 

Routes

Not a part of any route.

Comments

No comments yet.

Karel Jersák

Karel Jersák

Karel Jersák was born in Nowa Wola near Zelow in Poland in 1924. He is the progeny of Czech émigrés after the Battle of Bílá Hora, who settled near Zelow in the early 1800s. He is one of the many of those Czechs who converted to the Baptist Church in the 1890s. After the rise of Czechoslovakia, some of the exiles came back to the home country of their ancestors. The Jirsáks were among them, and they settled in the German community of Vikýřovice (Weikersdorf) along with other families in 1925. They built a Baptist prayer house, which became a hub for Czechs in and around the village during the First Republic. Most of the Baptist families were moved out to the inland during the war. Teofil Malý, the local preacher, perished in Auschwitz. The Jersáks lived with their relatives in Zábřeh from 1941 to the end of the war. In the communist era, the entire community was under careful scrutiny of church secretaries. Local preacher Vilém Pospíšil was arrested in February 1955 and sentenced to three and half years imprisonment in a fabricated trial, and one-third of his property was confiscated. The witness' brother Vilém was also arrested and sentenced; he was a preacher in Kroměříž. Karel Jersák was active in the congregation even during the hard times. He was one of the state-approved laymen preachers, chairman of the congregation, and he led the Sunday school. He recalls having to report any change or visitor to the church secretary. Even though he did not face major problems in his position, living with faith under the communists was always a problem and the family experienced much humiliation imposed by the regime. Daughter Jarmila with family eventually emigrated to Canada. Karel Jersák with wife still live in Vikýřovice today and, as his entire life, he is actively involved in the life of the local Baptist congregation.

Vikýřovice, Baptist prayer house

Available in: English | Česky

The Baptist congregation in Vikýřovice was established by the descendants of Czech Post-1620 exiles after returning to their homeland in 1925, and it became the first Protestant congregation to be established by re-emigrants in Czechoslovakia. The people were exiles coming from Zelowa in Poland and from Volhynia in the Soviet Union, coming back to their forefathers' homeland during the period of the First Republic. A big part in this was played by the Constance Union headed by the Evangelical pastor Bohumil Radechovský, who came from Bohemia and who was pastor of the Czech Evangelical Reformist congregation in Zelow from 1909 to 1919. Shortly after their arrival the exiles built this Baptist prayer house with their own hands - it serves its purpose to this day.

Vikýřovice, Baptist prayer house

On this place

Arrested preacher

Arrested preacher

Karel Jersák
Please enter your e-mail and password
Forgotten password
Change Password