Prague, Central train station
Wilsonova 300/8, 120 00 Prague-Prague 2, Czech Republic
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Vojtěch Klečka Survives Everything!

Available in: English | Česky

Vojtěch Klečka was a successful agent of CIC till June 1949 when he and his Belgian accomplice were arrested at the main station in Prague. “We were coming to Prague; we arrived at the fifth platform. It was Friday, June 17 and right in that moment I saw him – a policeman, a civilian, a policeman, a civilian everywhere in that underpass. And I told to myself: ‛Damn it! It is weird.’ And in that moment I saw something – as I was following that my accomplice and his clothes horse, they were about five or eight metres ahead of me– he got off and they arrested him. And that woman turned around and pointed at me.” Klečka was released from the prison in 1963.

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Vojtěch Klečka

Vojtěch Klečka

Mr. Vojtěch Klečka was born on February 17th 1921 in Luleč village in Vyškov region. He was one of three children. His mom, who was seriously sick, died before the war began. Through his brother's advice, he became a member of one of the most successful espionage nets operating against Nazis - the Soviet Red Band. Thanks to his job as a waiter on the Mitropa trains operating between Germany and Austria to the Protectorate he functioned in the spy net as a connector. He transported important materials, documents or even weapons. In 1943 he got arrested by Gestapo agents, but he managed to escape. After that he was forced to hide under fake ID documents. After the war he cut ties with his brother. Vojtěch fought against the communists (he wasn´t aware of who he was working for during the war) and his brother František remained a communist supporter. By 1948, he had married, and Vojtěch Klečka decided to organize the illegal transfer of emigrants to the West. He performed his job in the Bohemian Forest (Šumava). In the mean time his brother worked as a chief agent of the Czechoslovak Intelligence service; he was caught in West Germany. Vojtěch Klečka received a message about his brother´s arrest and via the Bohemia Forest he came to the CIC. From there he was transported to Nuremberg where his brother František was held at that time. Here Vojtěch Klečka became a CIC agent and returned back to Czechoslovakia to fulfill his espionage tasks as an agent - walker accompanied by Miroslav Dvořáček. He (and also his colleagues' from CIC) moved to the German town Lambach. He was successfully transferring emigrants until June 17th 1949, when he got caught along with a Belgian agent in the main train station in Prague. After a short custody he was sentenced to death on November 16th 1950. However, his verdict was changed later to "life imprisonment" through the merits of his anti-Nazi resistance activities. He was serving his sentence in Bory prison, in Ruzyně prison, in Leopoldov, in Pankrác, in Jáchymov and in Bytíz prisons. As he said, it was extremely difficult to gain some trust in the jail, because his brother was still being held in West Germany prison while Vojtěch Klečka himself was supposed to be a spy of the Western services which have detained his brother. With the help of an eleven day hunger strike he got out of Leopoldov and after some complications he got to Bytíz prison. He was release after fourteen years in 1963. He couldn´t find a steady job for a long time. He graduated from the Hotel school and at the end he found himself a job as the watcher in the National Theater. He retired in 1988. Currently he lives in Prague and to his life story he adds: ´The very best years that I was looking forward to - to be raising my sons, I spent in jail.´ He died on June 26th 2012 in Prague.

Prague, Central train station

Available in: English | Česky

The central train station in Prague was opened in December 1871 and the first trains ran on the route Prague - Vienna. The neo-Renaissance building was rebuilt and expanded into its present Art Nouveau form by the architect Josef Fanta in the early 20th century. Shortly before the outbreak of WW II, the so-called "Winton trains" carrying hundreds of Jewish children into safety in Britain departed from this train station. During the war, the train station was a strategic transportation hub.

Prague, Central train station

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Vojtěch Klečka Survives Everything!

Vojtěch Klečka Survives Everything!

Vojtěch Klečka
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