Kounicovy koleje - Kounic´ Halls of Residence
Sirotkova 328/20, 616 00 Brno-Brno-Žabovřesky, Czech Republic
  • Story
  • Place

Inspectors from Prague are here

Available in: English | Česky

As a former employee of Brno’s Arms Factory, Emil Pupik was arrested and taken to the Kounic Halls of Residence in May 1945 when she was seventeen years old. He tried to escape but was caught by Jundrov and sent back. “For punishment, I had to press a book against the wall with my nose, with hands tied. If I dropped it I was beaten. One day, thirty other Germans and I were looking forward to finally getting something to eat. They cooked something in the cauldron; then we found it was just boiling water with some vegetables. We had to make a circle round the cauldron. We were given cups. They told us to run around quickly. One of us grabbed the boiling water and was supposed to drink. If you didn’t come close they yelled: ‘You bastard, don’t you want to eat?’ Those who tried burned their lips. What came next I don’t know; I fainted. Also, we had to lie on the top of another German’s belly and they would fire close above us. If you lay on someone who was fat you were shot. But the worst thing was when someone figured that the Germans should erect three gallows poles at Kounic. Seven of us built them. Then the wardens chose one of us to hang. Then one warden said they should hang three because there were three gallows poles. I was chosen as the second one and then they chose the third one. They tied our hands behind our backs and put the nooses on our necks. I was standing on an empty beer keg, struggling not to hang myself. They stood by me, I was ready to be hanged, but then someone ran into the yard and shouted: ‘Inspectors from Prague are here!’”

Hodnocení


Hodnotilo 0 lidí
Abyste mohli hodnotit musíte se přihlásit! 

Routes

Not a part of any route.

Comments

No comments yet.

Emil Pupik

Emil Pupik

Emil Pupik was born in Brno in 1928. He grew up with his mother and two brothers. He was an electrician apprentice at Brno’s Zbrojovka (Arms Factory) during World War II. As a German child, he was a member of the Hitlerjugend. With them, he worked for the military in Slovakia, digging trenches. Returning home, he decided to leave Zbrojovka, but then he had to stay at a German “re-educational facility” in Brno-Královo Pole. The experience made him return to Zbrojovka. There, he was assigned to the machine gun crew and in charge of the floodlight that pointed at the airplanes that bombed Brno. When Brno was liberated by the Red Army, Emil Pupik as a German was summoned to the Labour Authority in Bratislavská Street. From there he was taken to the Kounic Halls of Residence. He was later assigned to a group that worked e.g. at the Lasseker tanner workshop in Křenová Street. He was evicted from Brno to Germany in 1946. The train stopped in Furth im Wald and by accident he met his grandmother who had survived the Brno death march. He then contacted other family members through his aunt in Leipzig.

Kounicovy koleje - Kounic´ Halls of Residence

Available in: English | Česky

The first students moved to the Kounic´ Halls of Residence in 1923 and the building was ceremonially opened in 1925. It was meant for Czech students and its capacity was a little over five hundred beds. The dark side of the history of the building started on November 17, 1939 when the halls of residence were occupied by the SS, (paramilitary organization of Nazi Germany), and Gestapo, (Secret State Police). A hundred and seventy-three students were taken to the concentration camp Sachsenhausen and the others had to move out. The building became a Gestapo prison. About 35,000 participants of different resistance movements, mainly from Moravia, Czechia, and Slovakia, went through it from January 1940 till the end of the war. Besides the brutal interrogations, there used to be executions, either by hanging, shooting, or a gunshot to the back of the head. Many prisoners were also deported to other Nazi prisons and concentration camps.

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