The helmets and arms were glittering in the rain
Judita Riffová, (now Judita Diamond), was seven years old when the German troops marched into her hometown of Ostrava. Even after all these years, she recalls the first day of the occupation of Czechoslovakia as a very traumatic experience: “I remember that on March 15, 1939, my mother came home late from the office. She had to take a detour along the new city hall building, which stood in the outskirts of the city center. She had to go this way because the army had marched straight into the city and we lived quite close to the center. She came home crying, visibly very upset from what she'd seen. It had been raining that day and she described the way that the helmets and weapons of the soldiers glistened.” Judita recalls that the city residents were supposed to greet the German soldiers by saluting them. Their teacher Svoboda advised the children how to avoid the salute: “He came to our class room and said: ‘kids, if you don’t want to salute the troops marching around the city, go to a door and stay standing there. Let the troops pass and then you can walk on.’ The Germans quickly put him in jail and he died in a concentration camp. I think they shot him.”
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