Brno, Běhounská Street
former German offices · Běhounská 6/16, 602 00 Brno-Brno-střed, Czech Republic
  • Story
  • Place

Swasi down!

Available in: English | Česky

During the First Republic, a significant German minority inhabited Brno; they began radicalising themselves after Adolf Hitler’s accession to power, and the city streets were witness to frequent skirmishes, mainly between young Czechs and Germans. During the occupation Brno, Germans became a privileged social group. In November 1939, a Reich celebration was held in Brno to commemorate the German victims of World War I. The German inhabitants were permitted to honor the day by flying the Reich flag, but only on the condition that it would displayed together with the Czech one. Květoslava Musilová set out into the streets with her friends, and together they watched the celebration unfold itself. “We came to St Jacob’s Church, behind which there stood some important German office. The house had the swastika on display, but there was the Czech flag next to it. A lot of people gathered there, mainly young Czechs, who protested and shouted: ‘Swasi down! Swasi down!’ The situation became very tense, and when the police arrived in their uniforms soon after, we decided to leave. We later heard that it had turned into a brawl.”

Hodnocení


Hodnotilo 0 lidí
Abyste mohli hodnotit musíte se přihlásit! 

Routes

Not a part of any route.

Comments

No comments yet.

Květoslava Musilová, née Kolačná

Květoslava Musilová, née Kolačná

Květoslava Musilová was born on 1 May 1921 in Brno. She attended the reformed grammar school in Královo Pole, her classmates included the musician Karel Kraugartner or the poet Jan Skácel. She honoured the ideals of the First Republic and president Edvard Beneš, she was a member of Sokol, the Czechoslovak National-Socialist Party (CNSP) and the Czechoslovak Church. After the war she worked in the secretariat of the CNSP in Brno and studied the Faculty of Law of the Masaryk University. She was personally acquainted with leading figures of the National Socialists, including Milada Horáková. On June 25 1955 she was arrested by State Security and subsequently sentenced to three and a half years in prison for attempting to abandon the republic and for misprision of felony. After her release she worked as a radiography assistant. She did not receive her doctorate in Law until 1990.

Brno, Běhounská Street

Available in: English | Česky

As Květoslava Kolačná recounts, Běhounská Street behind St Jacob’s Church in Brno contained the offices of several German companies. In November 1939, she was witness to a clash between German and Czech youths in front of the building where these offices resided.

Brno, Běhounská Street

On this place

Swasi down!

Swasi down!

Květoslava Musilová, née Ko…
Please enter your e-mail and password
Forgotten password
Change Password