Long live the Republic!
Jaroslav Kozlík, a native of Bystřice pod Hostýnem, is one of the few surviving witnesses who recall the declaration of the Czechoslovak Republic on October 28, 1918. He was 11 years old. “I remember how I and the other boys tore down the flag with the eagle - the hated symbol of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy.” The declaration of the Czechoslovak Republic was preceded by the harsh years of World War I. “These years were marked by poverty and hunger. It all came to a head in 1917 when there was barely anything left to eat. We wouldn’t eat for days at a time and there was no more washing powder so we couldn’t wash our clothes. As a result of the neglect of hygiene, we got scabies.” Another one of his early experiences is associated with his birth town and it precedes the proclamation of the Republic. Jaroslav Kozlík earned his first money at the age of five, in 1912, from a parish priest. “In Hostýn, an important pilgrimage site, a Marian feast took place. The parish priest asked us children to help him with weeding the flower beds in the square in Bystřice so that the town was ready for the festivities. I got five crowns for that and it was the first money I've earned in my life.”
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